UK funded projects have helped communities in La Moskitia to tackle the trafficking of the scarlet and green macaws (Ara macao and Ara ambigua), whilst providing sustainable livelihoods and protect the environment.
UpdatedThu, Apr 8, 2021 at 9:33 am ET
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The cause of hundreds of dead fish in Monmouth County can be traced to an “undetermined species of bacteria in the water, officials said. (Google Maps)
RED BANK, NJ - The cause for hundreds of dead fish washing ashore in Monmouth County in recent weeks can be traced to an undetermined species of bacteria, state environmental authorities said Wednesday.
Since last week, hundreds of dead menhaden - otherwise known as mossbunker - have been spotted floating in the Raritan Bay and Navesink and Shrewsbury rivers, with similar instances occurring in New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island as of last autumn. State environmental authorities like the New Jersey Department of Environmental Prosecution are currently working to identify a bacteria known as Vibrio that seems to be the likely culprit.