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Rewilding our OCEANS will be as important as reforestation

Rewilding the oceans is as important to achieving net zero climate change targets by 2050 as reforestation efforts, according to conservation campaigners.  In a new report, the Marine Conservation Society (MCS) and Rewilding Britain highlight that Britain s coastal waters store more carbon than UK forests. Britain s coastlines cover an estimated 193,000 square miles and store about 205 million tonnes of carbon, 50 million more than the carbon locked up within all of the standing forests within the UK, the report found. Britain s coastal ecosystems, including saltmarshes and kelp forests have been destroyed through intense fishing methods such as bottom trawling or dredging over the past few decades, reducing the amount of carbon they can store. 

In Memoriam: Death notices in the Colchester Gazette this week

. HERE are the death notices published in the Gazette this week: NAOMI LOUIE BENNETT: Passed away at home on 1st April 2021 after a long illness, aged 78 years. A much loved mother to Joe. Dearly loved sister to Cynthia, Violet and Allister. Will be greatly missed by all the family and her many friends from the social groups she belonged to, plus her numerous pen pal friends worldwide. A celebration of life service will be held on Thursday 20th May, at St Lawrence Church, Rowhedge at 11.30am. The cortege will leave her home in Rowhedge at 11.10am. The committal will take place at Colchester Crematorium at 12.30pm followed by light refreshments at the Starlight Tea Chapel. Funeral service will be available in a live online webcast, email Joe at joebennett00@gmail.com for details and link. Flowers can be sent to the East of England Co-op Funeral Services 89 Wimpole Road, Colchester, CO1 2DB Donations may be made to either the East Anglian Children s Hospice or Cancer Research.

How can I encourage bees in my garden? | East Anglian Daily Times

Avid beekeeper Bill Turnbull at his home in Suffolk with one of his hives - Credit: Sonya Duncan As we approach warmer weather and longer days, there’s no doubt we’ll be spending more time in our gardens and immersing ourselves in nature once again.   And as you venture outside, you’ll certainly notice the abundance of bees that come with this time of year.   Active from early spring through to autumn, bees are arguably the most important animal in our ecosystem – but with their population numbers on the decline, it’s time to take action and help save them.  

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