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Celebrity Treasure Island, the latest: Kim Crossman joins Buck Shelford
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Posted by Katie Anastas | Jul 18, 2021
Thomas Olsen-Phillips and Sunny Rice check traps at Sandy Beach. (Photo by Katie Anastas)
One small crustacean is costing New England shellfisheries millions of dollars. The European green crab might be small, but it can destroy vital habitats for animals all along the food chain.
In July 2020, green crab were found in Haida Gwaii, the closest they’ve ever been to Alaska. With the help of volunteers, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game hopes to stay one step ahead of this invasive species.
Katie Anastas reports on the latest efforts in Petersburg.
It’s low tide at Sandy Beach. Sunny Rice and a group of volunteers walk toward a crab trap. They’re on the lookout for an invasive species called the European green crab.
/ 91X FM CJLX
Jul 16, 2021 | 4:28 PM
Photo taken outside of QHC North Hastings. From left: Kim Bishop, Chair of the North Hastings
Hospital Fund Development Committee and representative for MPP Daryl Kramp; Todd
Smith, MPP for Bay of Quinte; Stacey Daub, President and CEO, Quinte Health Care; David MacLeod, President of the North Hastings District Hospital Auxiliary; Tammy Davis, North Hastings Hospital Site Lead and Patient Services Manager; Dr. Alexander Ferreira, North Hastings Hospital physician and Bancroft Family Health Team Physician Lead. Image courtesy of Quinte Health Care.
Quinte Health Care has received over $5.8 million dollars in funding from the provincial government.
40 Healthy Southern Recipes
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Pet owners now have a public way to memorialize their furry or feathered companions, or even a human friend, while supporting the local animal shelter at the same time.
The Tribute Society allows people to remember their pet family members with a commemorative brick or a commemorative tile.
The bricks, which can be inscribed to honor or memorialize a loved one â pet or person â will be engraved with laser technology thatâs durable and weather-resistant.
The bricks will pave a memorial garden walkway to be built at the Washington County/Johnson City Animal Shelter later this summer.
âWe have about 15 or 20 bricks that have been purchased, and we hope to have them engraved within a couple of weeks,â Tammy Davis, the shelterâs director, said.
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