News

Protecting urban oysters and Canadian wilds

1. Canada

Canadian First Nations have set aside millions of acres of land and ocean for protection. From the Nááts’įhch’oh National Park Reserve in the Northwest to the Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area in the eastern Arctic, more than 90 million acres are slated for or are under conservation, some in collaboration with the Canadian government.

Since 2018, more than 170 Indigenous Guardian initiatives across the country have been funded by Canada to aid in Indigenous management.  

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, Hong Kong oyster reefs are coming back to yield benefits beyond seafood. And in Canada, Indigenous groups are conserving millions of acres of land and water, both with and without the government’s help.

The Indigenous preservation movement got its start in the 1970s, but the road hasn’t always been smooth. Some conservation cases, especially when oil and gas interests have been at stake, were won only through Canada’s court system. Over the years, partnerships between Indigenous communities and scientists have become more common, facilitating research on issues ranging from mercury contamination to the sustainable management of hunting. For Dieter Cazon, director of lands and resources for Łíídlįį Kų´ę´ (hlih-dlinh-kwenh) First Nation, “this collaborative work is going to be the only way we’re going to figure a lot of these answers out.”

Dennis Fast/VWPics/AP/File

A barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus) is seen on subarctic tundra in Canada’s Northwest Territories.

Source: Yale Environment 360

2. United Kingdom

The European Space Agency (ESA) recruited Britain’s John McFall as the world’s first disabled astronaut. The agency’s new class, the first in over a decade, was selected late last year, comprising 17 individuals chosen from over 22,500 applications. Mr. McFall lost a leg following a motorcycle accident as a teenager but went on to become a professional runner and won a bronze medal in the 2008 Paralympics in Beijing.

Francois Mori/AP

While not guaranteed to go into orbit, John McFall will help determine standards for future astronauts with a disability.

The athlete was selected as part of a feasibility program to determine the requirements for sending someone with a physical disability into space. ESA will study safety needs and possible adaptations for space vehicles. “Space is indeed the new frontier,” said U.K. science minister George Freeman. “It’s where humanity comes together, and it’s where we destroy the barriers that are holding back this planet and mankind.”
Sources: BBC, Deutsche Welle

3. Africa

Countries across Africa are taking steps to protect child safety. Corporal punishment was prohibited in schools in Comoros, and banned outright in Zambia and Mauritius, the latter two of which are now among the 65 countries where violent punishment of minors is illegal. In Zambia, the Children’s Code also enshrined a list of social rights for children, including the right to parental and health care, privacy, education, leisure, and protection from sexual harassment. The Children’s Act in Mauritius includes provisions to protect children from online exploitation and abuse.

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