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Three local attractions get recovery support | Cranbrook, East Kootenay, Elk Valley, Fernie
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COVID-19: More than 80 B C attractions to receive up to $1 million grants for pandemic recovery
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Saturday, Jul. 10, 2021 | As is tradition, dragon heads and tails gilded each boat at the Sarasota International Dragon Boat Festival, held at Nathan Benderson Park on Saturday.Buy this Photo
Saturday, Jul. 10, 2021 | Carla Cwiertnia and JoAnn Moore, Lakewood Ranch residents, row for Survivors in Sync. They competed at the 2021 Sarasota International Dragon Boat Festival. While Moore is a veteran, Saturday s festival was Cwiertnia s first race.Buy this Photo
Saturday, Jul. 10, 2021 | The Sarasota International Dragon Boat Festival s athlete village sprawled across Nathan Benderson Park s Regatta Island on Saturday.Buy this Photo
Saturday, Jul. 10, 2021 | Sarasota s Survivors in Sync 200-meter dragon boat team stretches before a race at the Sarasota International Dragon Boat Festival on Saturday at Nathan Benderson Park.Buy this Photo
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An Israeli startup has developed a new weapon to fight the spread of a killer bacteria that threatens to turn lakes and oceans toxic.
Authorities in Florida called in BlueGreen Water Technologies after two large lakes showed signs of infestation by algal blooms that grow from cyanobacteria and have contaminated bodies of water across the globe. The company has successfully treated similar outbreaks as far away as China, Russia and South Africa.
“We pride ourselves,” said the company’s chief technology officer Moshe Harel, “in taking care of the world’s most precious resource: water.”
Cyanobacteria are present in most lakes and oceans, but a buildup of nutrients from fertilizers and pollution, together with rising temperatures, can accelerate their growth into harmful algal blooms that starve the water of oxygen and turn it toxic. The “alarming increase” is “threatening sustainability of lakes and reservoirs worldwide,” according to researche