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Why these women say it s time to embrace fat bodies
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New York State Land Title Association Welcomes 2021-22 Officers
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Drought and early heatwaves are laying the stage for a dry, hot summer in the western part of the United States. As of June 22, almost 91 percent of the West was under drought, with 55 percent suffering extreme or exceptional dryness, while two back-to-back heatwaves worsened soil and vegetation drying, raising the risk of wildfires.
(Photo : Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Meanwhile, water supplies are dwindling: according to the Associated Press, Lake Mead, the reservoir built by the Hoover Dam, is at its lowest level since it was initially filled in the 1930s, while California s reservoirs are 50 percent lower than typical for this time of year.
25 hilarious photos of dogs taken at the perfect time at the Westminster Dog Show
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It looks like young sea turtles are not the only marine animals negatively affected by city lights. A new study has come out stating that reef clownfish have been found to have 36% less chance of survival after growing up near coasts filled with man-made lighting.
This is one of the newest studies that indicated the negative effects of artificial lighting on other marine species. Previously, such studies had primarily focused on turtles and how lights often interfered with their ability to navigate towards the sea.
But because of these new findings, more experts are weighing on how other shallow reef species could be responding to the stimulation of lights that are all too common in resorts and high-rise coastal communities.