Green & indigenous News

125 readers
43 users here now

A community for Green & indigenous news!

founded 1 month ago
MODERATORS
1526
 
 

When Oregon’s short legislative session convenes in early February, conservation advocates will once again try to convince lawmakers to pass a major funding bill that could provide nearly $30 million annually to protect the state’s biodiversity.

The 1% for Wildlife bill, sponsored by state representatives Ken Helm, a Democrat from Beaverton, and Mark Owens, a Republican from Crane, would increase the state’s current hotel and lodging taxes by 1.25 percent, creating a new revenue stream for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to support long-neglected habitat conservation programs. Last session, the bill passed the House, but two Republicans blocked it in the Senate.

Oregon’s federally required State Wildlife Action Plan identifies species at risk of extinction or decline due to habitat loss, climate change, and other threats. In 2025, as the plan was being updated, dozens of species were added, including the Crater Lake newt, the California condor, and the North American porcupine, bringing the total to more than 300.

“It’s a blueprint of the most imperiled species and habitats in the state,” said Sristi Kamal, deputy director of the Western Environmental Law Center, which supports the bill. “But a plan is only as good as the funding to implement it.”

Though Oregon’s Fish and Wildlife Department receives some state funding, most of its budget comes from state hunting and fishing licenses and federal taxes on guns and ammunition via thePittman-Robertson Act of 1937. The majority of Oregon’s federal funds, about $20 million annually, are earmarked for big game species and sport fish. Other federal grants primarily support species already protected by the Endangered Species Act. That means that Fish and Wildlife, like most state wildlife agencies, has little money to prevent species from becoming endangered in the first place. Between 2023 and 2025, it spent just 2 percent of its budget on wildlife conservation programs.

A mat of green foliage stretches across a pond

Dense mats of Ludwigia spp. choke out native vegetation at Horseshoe Lake, Palensky Wildlife Area, Oregon. Lauri Brewster/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

Increasing hotel and lodging taxes would leverage the state’s robust ecotourism industry, which annually attracts tens of thousands of out-of-state and international visitors.

If the bill passes, Oregon’s statewide hotel tax rate would be 2.5 percent — the third-lowest rate in the U.S. and less than half of what Washington, Montana, and Idaho charge. The 1% for Wildlife bill could provide a new model for state-level conservation funding, said Mark Humpert, director of conservation initiatives at the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, which advocates for state agencies at the federal level.

“Ninety-five to 99 percent of species that states are responsible for have no dedicated funding from the federal government. We sometimes joke that state agencies have to offer bake sales to fund this work,” Humpert said. Some sell specialty license plates; others use a small percentage of sales taxes on outdoor equipment. The “gold standard,” Humpert said, is Missouri, where a state constitutional amendment dedicates one-eighth of 1 percent of its sales tax to its Department of Conservation.

According to a 2016 study by the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and its partners, fully implementing every State Wildlife Action Plan in the country would cost around $1 billion annually. But for years, Congress has failed to pass the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act, a bipartisan bill that would bolster states’ conservation funding. Now, as the Trump administration slashes federal conservation and climate funding, advocates say that the 1% for Wildlife bill could provide the stable funding needed to implement Oregon’s wildlife action plan. “The bill is a very innovative concept, and there are probably 49 other states that are watching closely to see if it’s successful,” Humpert said.

Read Next

Salmon, tribal sovereignty, and energy collide as US abandons Resilient Columbia Basin Agreement

Miacel Spotted Elk

In northeast Oregon’s high-desert region, Jamie Dawson, the Greater Hells Canyon Council’s conservation director, hopes the bill can fund wildlife crossings on Highway 82. “This section of the Blue Mountains is an absolutely critical habitat connectivity corridor — of continental importance,” Dawson said. Deer, elk, and other species use it to migrate between the Rocky Mountains and the Cascades Range in western Oregon and Washington. But the route is a wildlife collision hotspot, with hundreds of animals killed by vehicles over the past few years.

Elsewhere, the funding could support studies of migratory bird habitats like eel grass estuaries and wetlands, said Joe Liebezeit, conservation director for the Bird Alliance of Oregon. In spring 2025, local birdwatchers and radar data indicated that half as many birds as usual migrated through the state, though the reasons for this are unclear.

As the state’s general fund waxes and wanes, so does the wildlife department’s budget, which is rewritten every two years. The lack of stable conservation funding prevents it from focusing on long-term solutions for species conservation, said Davia Palmeri, the agency’s federal policy director. “We do monitoring for these species when we can — when there’s a grant or short-term funding — to get pulses on species like reptiles or amphibians.”

For over a decade, advocates have fought to secure state funding for conservation. “At one point, there was a proposal to put a tax on birdseed,” said Danielle Moser, wildlife program manager at Oregon Wild. “There was the idea of a gear tax — things you buy at REI.” But none of these ideas would have raised enough, and ultimately, they fizzled.

Last year, two Republican senators, Daniel Bonham and Cedric Hayden, killed the bill by refusing to allow the final committee vote that would bring it to the governor’s desk. Now, conservation advocates from across the political spectrum are determined to pass it.

Read Next

NORTH SLOPE BOROUGH, ALASKA - MAY 9: A grizzly bear walks on the tundra underneath a portion of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) near the Dalton Highway on May 9, 2025 about 10 miles north of Atigun Pass in North Slope Borough, Alaska. The Dalton Highway (Alaska Route 11) stretches 414 miles across northern Alaska from Livengood (53 miles north of Fairbanks) to Prudhoe Bay. The 800-mile-long pipeline pushes oil from Prudhoe Bay to the port of Valdez. (Photo by Lance King/Getty Images)

Dismantling the Endangered Species Act will hurt a lot more than just wildlife

Sophie Hurwitz & Matt Simon

“You won’t always see all these logos on the same page,” says Amy Patrick, policy director at the Oregon Hunters Association, which is working with conservation groups like Oregon Wild to shape the bill. “The goal of this funding is to keep common species common, and that’s something sportsmen can get behind. There’s a real sense that this is an investment that will benefit all of our wildlife and habitats.”

The current 1.5 percent tourism tax funds the $45 million annual budget of Travel Oregon, which promotes the state’s tourism industry. Travel Portland, an independent nonprofit that works with Travel Oregon, opposes the bill, arguing that the additional tax would discourage large conferences and events. (Update: Travel Oregon did not respond to a request for comment before publication, but in a later statement, the agency said that it does not take positions on bills.)

The Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association called the bill a “Pandora’s box” of future tax increases. “We don’t see an end in sight, with all the other state agencies that would love a new revenue source,” said Jason Brandt, the association’s president. Brandt and others note that the bill’s original text only provided a 1 percent tax increase for the wildlife agency, but amendments tacked on 0.25 percent for conservation efforts by other departments, including the Department of Agriculture’s invasive species management and anti-poaching efforts at the Department of Justice.

The association’s political action committee donated over $17,000 to Bonham during his time in state office. Bonham, who resigned from the Senate in October when he was nominated to a federal position, did not respond to a request for comment.

Kamal and other advocates say the tourism industry’s opposition is ironic, given that revenue from the new tax would be reinvested in some of the state’s most popular attractions. Travel Oregon’s surveys show that scenic beauty is the top draw for 90 percent of out-of-state visitors.

“A lot of people come to Portland for business, but then they go to our beaches, or the mountains,” said Kamal. “The tourism industry is standing on the back of these natural resources. If you don’t invest in it, the pressures on these resources will make that legacy crumble.”

This story is part ofHigh Country News’ Conservation Beyond Boundaries project, which is supported by the BAND Foundation.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Visiting Oregon? You may soon have to pay a tax to protect its wildlife. on Feb 1, 2026.


From Grist via This RSS Feed.

1527
 
 

Sandra Hale Schulman
Special to ICT

Set in the near future with razor thin connections to today’s alarming headlines, “Mercy,” a new sci-fi political thriller starring Kali Reis, Seaconke Wampanoag Tribe, plays Detective Jaqueline “Jaq” Diallo alongside her under fire partner Detective Chris Raven, played by Chris Pratt.

Raven is accused of murdering his wife and in a lightning fast justice system he himself helped develop called Mercy, is strapped to a chair before a looming AI judge and has only 90 minutes to prove his innocence using footage from cop body cams, door cams, social media apps and database history.

As today’s headlines show, that type of image discovery can instantly change the guilt or innocence of a crime scene.

Reis’s Diallo jumps on her futuristic Quad Copter to help track down suspects and clues as her character goes from doubting her partner’s innocence, to save the day, to coming under fire herself in a riveting finale.

Directed by Timur Bekmambetov, the big budget film is from Amazon MGM. During the press interviews, Reis sat patiently in a luxury makeshift studio at a Beverly Hills Hotel, decked out in braids, tattoos, piercings and upscale denim, happy to “hang with the big boys”.

A former boxer, a world champion in two weight classes, Reis held the WBC female middleweight title in 2016 and the WBA, WBO, and IBO female light welterweight titles between 2020 and 2022.

Credit: Kali Reis arrives at the premiere of "True Detective: Night Country" on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, at the Paramount Theater in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

In 2021, Reis made their acting debut as the star of the American thriller film Catch the Fair One, which was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead.Reis has since starred in the acclaimed spooky mystery series True Detective: Night Country (2024) with Jodie Foster  and had nominations for a Primetime Emmy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Critics Choice Award.

Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Reis has Cape Verdean heritage and is a member of the Seaconke Wampanoag Tribe. Reis incorporated the name Mequinonoag, given by their mother, which translates as “many feathers” or “many talents”, into their boxing nickname, “K.O. Mequinonoag.”

So what drew her to the role in ‘“Mercy’?

“First and foremost it was the script that attracted me,” Reis told ICT in the interview. “And what it was based on from the opening page. I thought okay, what is this? What is going on here? We get dropped right in the middle of this entire thing without any back story. But my specific character, you don’t know what angle she’s coming from at first. She’s a partner, this whole scenario is happening, but there’s so many layers. She’s faced with so many different decisions to make and you really don’t know where she’s making these decisions from.”

Diallo is investigating her partner Raven’s home and murder crime scene, it all looks bad for him as door cam footage shows him banging on the door and arguing with his wife before storming out minutes later to get drunk at a bar.

“Yeah first you think, oh, that’s his partner,” Reis says. “But she tells him straight out, listen, I have to do my job. So it was very attractive, as a role, especially getting a long way to the end and realizing now I see why she had to make these decisions. It was very attractive to actually work off of the baseline that they had for her too, and I love creating back stories. They gave me such a great character to work with in my own back story, especially being Chris’s partner, but not sharing the same space physically, we had to communicate just like in the movie, for real, just over screens and over audio. I had to really build my back story of this very layered character.”

Since Raven is in the Mercy court chair with the clock ticking down in the screen’s corner, Diallo had to be the one doing the outside detective work for him.

“Me and Chris discussed our back story, so we understood where we were communicating and what my character was willing to do to help Chris try to solve this entire 90 minute fiasco.”

How difficult was it for her to act with someone she is not physically in a scene with until the very end?

Reis says “It wasn’t difficult because it was relevant to what we were actually really doing in reality in the film, we were only communicating via FaceTime and through the phones and audio. So building our rapport and him explaining his back story and how we, us, discussing and brainstorming, how do you think they became partners? What do you think their relationship is? How long have they been partners? What does she think about this?  Building that made it really easy for us to have a conversation we would normally have, either in person or on the phone. Building that bond outside of that made us communicating on the screens and just through the phone, just like the film, really easy actually.”

Reis has the coolest vehicle — as she zips around Los Angeles on a Quad Copter — a  real LAPD motorcycle that they made into the quad copter with four helicopter blades.

Kali Reis stars as Detective Jaqueline “Jaq” Diallo and rides an air chopper in MERCY (Photo from Amazon MGM Studios)

“It was a real thing,” Reis says “on a lift with everything so I was really on that thing. It’s really cool. I am still trying to get it home,” she added with a laugh.

“But no, that was really fun and it gave me the sense, especially being in the  stage where we shot it, there’s a 360 screen from the ceiling, with walls of downtown LA and me flying through these different places and the technology that we use to film made it seem real. It seemed like I was on a ride. I felt right at home sitting on that thing. I spent a lot of time on that. Yeah, it was really cool, I selfishly was like, can we do another take?”

Swift justice

With so many contemporary parallels, with the way that information from body cams and door cams and TikTok and Instagram get seen so fast, everyone feels that justice should be speeded up, but then the film shows that mistakes can be made and it’s hard to be thorough as Raven’s guilt level goes up and down with each new byte of info. What are Reis’s feelings on that?

“I believe this is such a common, moving question” Reis says  “but such a good question because you ask yourself, would you want to be in front of an AI judge? I think the fact that when it comes to different people not having the resources, the funds to represent themselves, they have all the information in Mercy court, you’re provided with every single tool that the AI judge can find to prove yourself innocent. In our real world, if there was a system that was based to give everybody the tools to help themselves, if they were ever in that predicament, I feel that could be helpful. Also, there are some human biases that I think we need to hold on to, but I’ve seen in real time, can hinder a decision by an actual judge.”

Actor Kali Reis, director Timur Bekmambetov and actor Chris Pratt on the set of their film MERCY (Photo from Amazon MGM Studios)

“Say a judge comes across somebody and they just had a bad day. They really don’t want to be there. They get reminded of a case they had maybe five years ago, so they have this bias, or  something like that. I feel as though it can be very helpful and the speed as well, because things get prolonged, judges get sick, lawyers drop out, things happen. For the victims in these different circumstances where justice needs to be served, something like that could definitely be helpful. Do I think it should just be AI? No, it should also be humans. A  happy balance would be ideal. But remember AI, all these machines are man-made, so there are mistakes that are being made as well.”

We live in a visual culture, Reis says it gets a little scary to not have your own thoughts when things look so real that aren’t.

Bringing representation

Being mixed race African and Native American, Reis says she feels just her presence, her overall look, is powerful.

“That’s always been my hope getting into this industry is that having representation, whether it’s an indigenous story or not, I’m still a mixed Indigenous human being that is in this industry. And I’m doing the best I can to swing these doors open and leave them open for the next generation of other people who want to get into storytelling. It’s in my blood storytelling.”

“So as far as Diallo’s backstory, she did have some heritage, but that wasn’t something that I wanted to nail in on. It wasn’t part of the story, but as far as my backstory for the reasons why she made decisions, I love creating backstories, especially with such a complex character like this, you have to make sure that these are the decisions she would make. These are the decisions that Jaq Diallo would make. So I am always very aware of what I look like, especially if I’m able to have tattoos like that showing.”

While Reis’s cheek piercings are removed, she has very visible floral neck tattoos showing throughout the film.

“Yeah, I did,” she smiles. “That’s how I get noticed. That’s representative of a lot of things I am. So I am always, no matter what, an indigenous character on purpose even if it’s just a character in a movie that I play, I’m always me as a person. We know that going in. I’m very, very aware of how much and who and what I represent. I’m very proud to do that. Even if I’m the only one on set, that’s a testament of time, especially being in such a mega very relevant film like ‘Mercy’, and right now I’m very proud to say that I can hang with the big boys in a big screen film.”

“Mercy” premiered January 23rd nationwide.

The post Kali Reis brings the heat in Sci-fi thriller ‘Mercy’ appeared first on ICT.


From ICT via This RSS Feed.

1528
 
 

A major breakthrough has been achieved in the fight against the invasive polyphagous shot hole borer (PSHB), Euwallacea fornicatus in Western Australia. Researchers at Murdoch University have successfully established the first stable laboratory colony of PSHB in the state.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1529
 
 

Division was four years old when he died, a young age even by the shortened standards now applied to North Atlantic right whales. His body was found in late January, adrift off the coast of North Carolina, partial and unrecoverable. The weather was too dangerous for anything more than confirmation. By then, the cause was already understood. He was first seen entangled in early December, fishing line wrapped tightly around his head and mouth. It cut into his blowhole and lodged in his upper jaw. Some of the gear was removed. Enough remained to slow him, to feed infection, to drain energy from a body still meant to grow. Scientists who tracked him afterward saw what they had learned to recognize: weight loss, altered swimming, the steady signs of decline. They followed his movements as best they could. Distance and storms intervened. He was last sighted alive on January 21st, off Cape Hatteras. Six days later, he was dead. Division’s catalog number was 5217. His name came from the pale markings on his head, callosities arranged in a pattern that resembled a mathematical symbol. To those who knew him only through photographs and survey logs, he was one of many. Sixty-eight recorded sightings. Twenty-three photographs. A few notes about tooth decay in the bonnet. One image shows him leaping, much of his body briefly clear of the water. He was born in December 2021 to a female known as Silt, herself a survivor in a diminished lineage. He was her…This article was originally published on Mongabay


From Conservation news via This RSS Feed.

1530
 
 

Blue carbon refers to organic carbon captured and stored by the marine and vegetated coastal ecosystems such as mangrove forests, salt marshes, and seagrass meadows. These ecosystems act as powerful carbon sinks, sequestering carbon from the atmosphere efficiently like terrestrial forests.


From Earth News - Earth Science News, Earth Science, Climate Change via This RSS Feed.

1531
 
 

Protesters in Minneapolis, Minnesota stand and sit. Officers stand in opposition wearing gas masks, vests, and holding truncheons.

https://youtu.be/lVFrUayoglA

The ICT Newscast for Friday, January 30, 2026, covers continued coverage of ICE in Minnesota. Check out the ICT Newscast on YouTube for this episode and more.

  • An echo of history for ICT’s Stewart Huntington as he reports on Minneapolis protests against ICE.
  • Dakota historian Kate Beane gives a personal historical account of Fort Snelling and a concentration camp that once housed her ancestors.
  • “Mercy” is now in theaters and Indigenous actor Kali Reis gives us a sneak peek into her meaty character.
  • Tribes across the country are embracing technology and AI in unique ways.
  • From Wisconsin PBS,  Hunter Vanzile, Forest County Potawatomi citizen, takes the wheel in competitive racing.
  • High fashion meets traditional values at the Hocokata Ti cultural center.

View previous ICT broadcasts here every week for the latest news from around Indian Country.

The post ICT NEWSCAST: The Minneapolis urban Indian community unites against ICE, a history lesson at the Fort Snelling concentration camp and more appeared first on ICT.


From ICT via This RSS Feed.

1532
 
 

Across large parts of northern Tanzania, gully erosion—soil erosion caused by flowing water—is cutting deep scars through fertile farmland, grazing areas, roads and even villages. These gullies grow faster every year and what was once a slow environmental process has accelerated into a humanitarian threat. It has serious consequences for food and livelihood security, infrastructure and biodiversity.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1533
 
 

Invasive species, pathogens, and parasites can have serious ecological consequences for aquatic ecosystems and also put human health and economies at risk. Early detection of these biological threats is vital for mitigating their impact. A new low-cost autonomous robot expands access to MBARI's engineering innovation, providing resource managers, decision-makers, and communities a tool for monitoring aquatic environments and mitigating the ecological and economic impacts of biological threats.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1534
 
 

Ilana Newman
The Daily Yonder

Brandon Small’s pickup squeezes down a narrow dirt road lined with trees and bushes as we drive down the hillside towards the buffalo. We’re on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation in southeastern Montana, a landscape full of yellow grasses and hillsides lined with small pine trees. Small runs the buffalo restoration program here on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation.

Here on the reservation, where food and energy sovereignty are inextricably linked, a new solar installation is helping the tribe become more self-sufficient.

Brandon Small drives across the Northern Cheyenne buffalo pasture near Lame Deer, Montana to fix some water troughs for the animals. He points out where buffalo look like tiny specks on the horizon. Photo by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

The buffalo pasture we’re traversing is huge—15,244 acres, to be exact—and Small said they’re working on expanding even further. Small drove us out here from nearby Lame Deer, Montana, to check on the water infrastructure and give us a tour of the buffalo habitat and the brand new solar installation that will allow them to grow their buffalo operation.

The buffalo enclosure has no transmission lines crossing it, meaning there’s no way to get electricity out to the land unless the electricity is completely off the grid.

Last year, in partnership with Indigenized Energy, a native led nonprofit focused on energy sovereignty, the Northern Cheyenne buffalo program received a solar array that will allow Small to expand the herd and processing capacity of the facility. The 36kW solar array and 57.6kW battery was funded by the Honnold Foundation and Empowered By Light and constructed by Freedom Forever and Jinko Solar in collaboration with Indigenized Energy.

This 36 kW solar and 57.6 kW battery system was installed in 2025 by Freedom Forever in collaboration with Indigenized Energy with donations from Jinko Solar. It was funded by the Honnold Foundation. Photo by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

Cody Two Bears, the founder of Indigenized Energy, sees energy sovereignty as inextricable from food sovereignty. “ We need energy sovereignty to flourish because that’s what’s gonna support all the other initiatives that are so important to tribal people moving forward,” Two Bears said in a Daily Yonder interview.

Tribal nations are supposed to be sovereign nations, self governing and independent from the United States government. But many factors, like broken treaties and stolen traditional homelands, have forced tribal communities into continued reliance on federal subsidies, impeding full sovereignty. But sovereignty is still the goal for every tribal nation. And asserting independence around how they manage their food, health, and energy are some main ways indigenous communities are reclaiming sovereignty.

The Importance of Buffalo

Buffalo are the keystone species of the northern plains, an animal who shape the prairie ecosystem, but they’ve been nearly extinct for a century. Now, tribes and researchers are proving that buffalo are the key to healthier ecosystems and food sovereignty for northern plains tribes like the Northern Cheyenne.

“Having bison on the landscape, especially at really large scales, is likely to increase sort of diversity of vegetation, conditions, and habitat and likely to increase biodiversity,” said Andy Boyce-Pero, a Great Plains researcher for the Smithsonian Institute.

Brandon Small wades through a buffalo water trough that he just performed maintenance on while he takes us on a tour of the Northern Cheyenne buffalo habitat. Photos by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

Before Small started running the buffalo restoration program, he worked at the Rosebud Mine, a coal mine in Colstrip, Montana. The buffalo program has existed since the tribe was given a herd of buffalo in the 1970s, but those buffalo were left relatively unmanaged until Small got involved and created a new management plan.

When Covid-19 hit, Small started to think about how he could help. He saw the currently unmanaged buffalo—who were in the habit of breaking through their fences onto the highway—as a resource the tribe was neglecting, and an important piece of their journey towards self-sufficiency.

He started spending time out with the buffalo, fixing fences and supplying food, while he petitioned tribal council with a management plan for a buffalo program. “I spent a lot of time out there on my own, out of my own pocket,” said Small as we drove on a ridge overlooking the buffalo enclosure.

Brandon Small wades through a buffalo water trough that he just performed maintenance on while he takes us on a tour of the Northern Cheyenne buffalo habitat. Photos by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

It’s obvious how much Small cares about the animals that we eventually find, munching on grass on either side—and in the middle of—the dirt road we are slowly driving along.

Small’s five year goal was to form a “tribal buffalo program that was self-sufficient, where I didn’t need any money from the tribe or federal government,” he said.

He said they’re currently on track with that goal, but it’s not cheap to take care of a herd of more than 300 buffalo. “This year we’re spending 32,000 [dollars] on hay alone,” said Small.

The solar array also brings the buffalo program closer to self-sufficiency. It currently powers a small bunkhouse with a mini split that, during our September visit, provided welcome relief from the hot sun, Starlink internet, and a freezer that holds processed bison meat. It also powers electric fences and gates to keep out intruders. Small said that they have had issues with poaching in the past.

The solar array allows for electricity and internet access on the remote landscape of the buffalo habitat which helps with processing the animals and allows for operations to grow over time. Photo by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

In December 2025, the Northern Cheyenne buffalo solar array was named one of Solar Builder Magazine’s projects of the year, highlighting the remote location of the project and how it builds capacity and sustainability for the tribe’s buffalo program.

Eventually, Small wants to have a small processing facility onsite. The solar array was built to be expandable to grow with the program.

The buffalo are both a source of food and economic development for the tribe. In November 2025, Small and the buffalo program handed out 5,414 pounds of buffalo meat. But they also sell the animals to other buffalo ranchers. The first year, Small said they sold 103 animals for around $126,000 to a rancher in South Dakota.

The processed buffalo meat sits in a freezer that would be impossible without the solar array. Small and the buffalo restoration program donate the processed meat to the tribe in regular giveaways. Photo by Ilana Newman/Daily Yonder.

There is a fine line between running a successful business and providing for the community, said Small. “We wanted to do it in such a way that we could still get meat processed and donated out to the communities, but still have enough money to keep our operation going and keep growing and expanding.”

This solar array, as well as the buffalo program overall, helps the Northern Cheyenne tribe become more sovereign and self-sufficient in every way. “Energy policy is really health policy because of what energy extraction has continuously done to our water, our air, our land, and our animals,” said Two Bears.

The post The Northern Cheyenne Tribe reclaims sovereignty through solar energy and buffalo restoration appeared first on ICT.


From ICT via This RSS Feed.

1535
 
 

Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen. The study was published in Nature Communications on 26 January 2026.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1536
 
 

A new University of Oxford study finds that almost half of the global population (3.79 billion) will be living with extreme heat by 2050 if the world reaches 2.0°C of global warming above pre-industrial levels—a scenario that climate scientists see as increasingly likely.


From Earth News - Earth Science News, Earth Science, Climate Change via This RSS Feed.

1537
 
 

Cold spray whipped off the ropes as a diesel engine throbbed in the background. One by one, empty shellfish pots came over the side of the fishing boat, occasionally containing the remnants of crab and lobster claws and carapaces. Something strange was going on.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1538
 
 

An upside-down jellyfish drifts in a shallow lagoon, rhythmically contracting its translucent bell. By night that beat drops from roughly 36 pulses a minute to nearer 30, and the animal slips into a state that, despite its lack of a brain, resembles sleep.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1539
 
 

Blood tests are useful tools for doctors and scientific researchers: they can reveal a lot about a body's health. Usually, a blood sample is taken to get a picture of the large molecules that are present, such as cholesterols, lipids and proteins. This is called a metabolic profile.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1540
 
 

Desertification is accelerating under climate change, threatening biodiversity, food security, and human well-being across the Mediterranean Basin, southern Europe, and the Middle East. Water scarcity and land degradation reduce carbon sequestration, increase soil erosion, and undermine rural livelihoods, pushing many dryland ecosystems into long-term decline.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1541
 
 

Aging muscles heal more slowly after injury—a frustrating reality familiar to many older adults. A UCLA study conducted in mice reveals an unexpected cause: Stem cells in aged muscle accumulate higher levels of a protein that slows their ability to activate and repair tissue, but helps the cells survive longer in the harsh environment of aging tissue.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1542
 
 

Mary Annette Pember
ICT

The remains of a man found in Pinal County, Arizona, have been identified through DNA testing as 35-year-old Glenn Thomas Tate Jr., who disappeared in 2020.

Tate, a citizen of the Gila River Indian Community and a descendant of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, was last seen on July 22, 2020, in Sacaton, Arizona, where he was seeking medical treatment at a facility on the Gila River Reservation.

His skeletal remains were found in 2024 in a desert area a few miles from Sacaton. His family could not be reached for comment.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs Missing and Murdered Unit and the Pinal County Medical Examiner’s Office teamed with the Texas-based Othram company to use DNA testing to positively identify the remains.

Othram, which works with the BIA as part of its Operation Spirit Return, announced the findings this month.

Scientists at Othram developed a DNA extract from Tate’s remains and then used Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing, known as FGGS, to build a comprehensive profile.

Othram’s in-house forensic genetic genealogy team used the profile to develop investigative leads that were turned over to law enforcement.

“FGGS allows us to create a highly detailed DNA profile even from old, degraded or tiny evidence,” David Mittleman, CEO of Othram, told ICT in a previous interview about its work with the BIA.

Othram began working with the BIA Missing and Murdered Unit in 2022 as part of Operation Spirit Return, which was launched by the BIA Office of Justice Services and handled by the Missing and Murdered Unit,

Operation Spirit Return seeks to identify unknown human remains that have been located within or close to Indian Country and that are believed to belong to either American Indian or Alaska Native persons.

The identification of Tate represents the 15th case in Arizona where officials have publicly identified an individual using technology developed by Othram, according to a statement released by the company.

Based on forensic evidence found with Tate’s then-unidentified remains in 2024, the Pinal County Medical Examiner was unable to determine a cause of death.
The investigation is being handled by the BIA’s Missing and Murdered Unit, which did not reply to ICT’s email regarding the status of the case.

The post DNA tests identify remains of missing Gila River man appeared first on ICT.


From ICT via This RSS Feed.

1543
 
 

  Today Christ Jacob Belseran received the Oktovianus Pogau Award for courage in journalism from Pantau Foundation. The citation is usually reserved for reporters who continue their work despite adversity and, at times, direct threats. Belseran is a contributor to Mongabay Indonesia and the editor and founder of Titastory, a local outlet he established in Ambon in 2020. His reporting has tracked how mining, land claims, and state decisions land on the lives of Indigenous communities across the Maluku islands and North Maluku— where forests underpin livelihoods and culture. Pantau credited him with explaining how large companies seize land, degrade forests, and pollute coastal waters, and with covering protests and community aspirations that some would prefer remain unrecorded. In Pantau’s telling, the work is not performed from a safe distance. Belseran travels by boat and on foot, sleeping where he can—sometimes in village houses, sometimes alongside the communities he is covering. He has described it, with a characteristic understatement, as “nomadic journalism.” In practice, it involves carrying a machete to clear paths, foraging for food, setting small fires to keep biting insects at bay, and sleeping on makeshift beds of branches. The greater dangers, as he notes, come from people. Pantau recounts an episode in East Halmahera in which police tried to prevent him from filming a meeting between an Indigenous community and local officials. The community responded by threatening to walk out if the journalist was expelled. For Belseran, it was a practical lesson about the role a reporter…This article was originally published on Mongabay


From Conservation news via This RSS Feed.

1544
 
 

University campuses are often places of learning and discovery, but rarely do researchers find a new species living right on their doorstep. However, that is exactly what happened when a research team from Kyushu University discovered a new species of ladybird beetle, Parastethorus pinicola, on a pine tree at Kyushu University's Hakozaki Satellite.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1545
 
 

Agricultural waste that is usually burned or left to rot could play a far bigger role in tackling climate change if it were instead used in long-lasting building materials, according to new research from the University of East London (UEL).


From Earth News - Earth Science News, Earth Science, Climate Change via This RSS Feed.

1546
 
 

Southern Africa is world renowned for its fossil record of creatures that lived in the very distant past, including dinosaurs. But, about 182 million years ago, a huge eruption of lava covered much of the landscape (the inland Karoo Basin) where most of the dinosaurs roamed. After that, the dinosaur fossil record in the region goes abruptly quiet for the Jurassic Period (which lasted from 201 million to 145 million years ago).


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1547
 
 

Ashwagandha is a small shrub that's having a big moment. Used in traditional Indian medicine for thousands of years, ashwagandha is now one of the most popular herbal supplements in the U.S. because of its professed benefits for sleep and stress. In the U.S. alone, ashwagandha was the third-most purchased herbal supplement, with sales totaling $144 million in 2024, according to the American Botanical Council. It's also one of the precious few medicinal herbs that has received the National Institutes of Health's stamp of approval.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1548
 
 

DNA can be thought of as a vast library that stores all genetic information. Cells do not use this information all at once. Instead, they copy only the necessary parts into RNA, which is then used to produce proteins—the essential building blocks of life. This copying process is called transcription, and it is carried out by a molecule known as RNA polymerase II.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

1549
 
 

New Hampshire Republicans are attempting to do away with a 50-year-old property tax exemption for households and businesses with solar, contending that the policy forces residents without the clean energy systems to unwittingly subsidize those who have them. Supporters of the exemption, however, say this argument is misleading, insulting, and at odds with New Hampshire’s tradition of letting communities shape their own local governments.

The focus of the debate is a bill proposed in the New Hampshire House this month by Republican Representative Len Turcotte and several co-sponsors in his party. The measure would repeal a law, established in 1975, that authorizes cities and towns to exempt owners of solar-equipped buildings from paying taxes on whatever value their solar systems add to their property. As of 2024, 153 of the state’s municipalities — roughly two-thirds — had adopted the exemption, one of the only incentives offered in support of residential solar power in the state.

The exemption means that homeowners without solar must pay more property tax to make up for the money not being collected from the ​“extreme minority” who have solar panels, Turcotte said while presenting his legislation at a hearing of the House Science, Technology, and Energy Committee last week. This ​“redistribution” of the tax burden is unfair, he said.

The solar property tax exemption is a fairly common policy: Nationally, 36 states offer some version of it. While legislators in many states have targeted pro-solar policies like net metering, property tax exemptions have so far avoided similar attacks. New Hampshire, therefore, could end up as a proving ground for whether this approach can find traction.

Read Next

A technician at heating, cooling and plumbing company John G. Webster, removes a gas water heater from a home in Washington, DC, on August 28, 2024.

Illinois families are going electric — for free

Kari Lydersen

New Hampshire does not have a sales tax or an income tax and leans heavily on local property taxes for revenue; its rates are among the highest in the country. That makes changes to property tax policy a particularly sensitive subject. The solar exemption bill has Republicans, who are typically tax averse, walking a fine line between championing what they say is fairness for all and pushing a policy that will inevitably raise taxes for some.

The state authorizes 15 other property tax exemptions — including for elderly residents, veterans, and those with disabilities — but Turcotte’s bill targets only the one for solar.

The exemption is a ​“local option” policy, meaning cities and towns must opt in through a vote in each municipality. Turcotte, however, doubts the average resident realized that they were signing up to pay more on their own taxes.

“They see a feel-good measure,” he said. ​“Do they truly understand? I don’t believe they do.”

After Turcotte presented his bill, the remaining speakers — about a dozen clean energy advocates, lawmakers, business leaders, and local solar owners — uniformly opposed his proposal.

Read Next

A power plant with smoke stacks belch smoke against an evening sky

New England’s final coal plant shuts down years ahead of schedule

Sarah Shemkus, Canary Media

Removing the exemption would be an unfair rule change after homeowners invested in solar systems with the understanding they’d be getting a tax break, many argued. Businesses using solar could face a ​“significant tax increase,” said Natch Greyes, vice president of public policy at New Hampshire’s Business and Industry Association. The change could cost homeowners with solar hundreds of dollars per year while barely reducing the property tax rate for everyone else, others said.

In the town of Hudson, for example, $2.2 million in property value isn’t taxed because of the exemption, out of a tax base of $5.1 billion, its chief assessor, James Michaud, testified. Removing the exemption would have virtually no effect on the tax rate, he said.

“It’s almost incalculable how small it is,” he said.

Whatever tiny tax shift the exemption creates is worth it, others argued, saying that it provides an incentive for the public good: More solar means lower greenhouse gas emissions and less burden on the grid. Turcotte countered that these broader benefits of solar — many of which have been well documented — are ​“subjective.”

The question of local control also loomed large in the testimony. In New Hampshire, whose motto is ​“Live Free or Die,” the right of individual towns to decide on their own rules and regulations has long been a point of pride. Repealing the exemption would mean overriding decisions made by voters. Turcotte’s claim that residents didn’t understand what they were getting into is not only condescending but also just plain wrong, several witnesses said.

“You are essentially, with this bill, substituting your judgment about what is proper at the level of local taxation for that of town meetings and city councils throughout the state,” said Representative Ned Raynolds, a Democrat, while questioning Turcotte.

The bill now awaits a vote in committee before it can face a floor vote from the full House. It would then advance to the Senate. Republicans control both chambers of the state Legislature and the governor’s office.

But the bill’s opponents hope that lawmakers will heed their arguments and give weight to the mass of voters who have approved the exemption across the state.

“This is the reason two-thirds of the towns have adopted it: They can see it’s a good thing,” testified David Trumble, a solar owner from the town of Weare. ​“Solar is a good thing.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline New Hampshire Republicans want to raise taxes on homes with solar on Jan 31, 2026.


From Grist via This RSS Feed.

1550
 
 

Miles Morrisseau
ICT

Indigenous music continues to rise and be recognized at Canada’s annual celebration of music, the Juno Awards.

Once relegated to the Indigenous-only categories at Canada’s version of the Grammys, Indigenous musicians are once again competing for prizes in a variety of genres including folk, blues, rap and classical.

This year will mark the 55th anniversary of the awards handed out by the Canadian Academy of Records Arts and Sciences. The 2026 award ceremony is set for Hamilton, Ontario, on March 29 and will be broadcast live on CBC and CBC Gem.

Some of the artists, like Cree singer-songwriter Siibii, are first-time nominees. Others, such as William Prince, Tia Wood, Aysanabee and Snotty Nose Rez Kids are returning to the show for another chance to bring home a trophy.

Here are the Indigenous nominees at the 2026 Juno Awards.

Classical Album of the Year
‘Where Waters Meet’
Canadian Chamber Choir featuring Sherryl Sewepagaham
In the category of Classical Album of the Year (Large Ensemble), the album, “Where the Waters Meet,” by the Canadian Chamber Choir features Sherryl Sewepagaham. Sewepagaham is a Dene/Cree singer and composer from the Little Red River Cree Nation in Northern Alberta.

Blues Album of the Year
Sing Pretty Blues
Crystal Shawanda
Crystal Shawanda, Wikwemikong First Nation, is nominated for Blues Album of the Year for “Sing Pretty Blues,” which she released on her own label New Sun Records.

Traditional Roots Album of the Year
Heal the Divide’
Morgan Toney
Morgan Toney, Mi’kmaq, is nominated for Traditional Roots Album of the Year for his release, “Heal the Divide.”

Contemporary Roots Album of the Year
‘Further from the Country’
William Prince
William Prince, Peguis First Nation, is nominated in the category of Contemporary Roots Album of the Year for his latest release, “Further from the Country.” Prince won this award in 2023 for his album, “Stand in the Joy.”

Alternative Album of the Year
‘Edge of the Earth’
Aysanabee
Aysanabee, Sandy Lake First Nation, received a nomination for Alternative Album of the Year for his latest release, “Edge of the Earth.” He took home the prize in this category in 2024 for his album, “Here and Now.”

Rap Single of the Year
‘Dumb
SonReal featuring Snotty Nose Rez Kids
Snotty Nose Rez Kids, in collaboration with SonReal, are up for Rap Single of the Year for “Dumb.” The Haisla duo from Kitimat Village took home the award for Rap Album of the Year for the record, “Red Future,” at the 2025 Juno Awards.

Traditional Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year
Traditional Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year nominees are Bad Eagle for “Battle At The Beach,” Bear Creek for “On the Move,” Manitou Mkwa Singer for “Me & You,” Piunguataq for “Arnirniliit Suli,” and YB Nakota for “Nakota Tayhunyabi.”

Contemporary Indigenous Artist or Group
In the category for Contemporary Indigenous Artist or Group, the nominees are Aysanabee for “Edge of the Earth,” Sebastian Gaskin for “LoveChild,” Shawnee Kish for “Chapter 1,” Siibii for the self-titled album, “Siibii,” and Tia Wood for “Sage my Soul.”

The post Indigenous music rising at annual Juno Awards appeared first on ICT.


From ICT via This RSS Feed.

view more: ‹ prev next ›