Outdoors - Cold winter affected speckled trout | StarNewsOnline.com
all it would take would be a prolonged period of bitterly cold weather with subfreezing conditions to wipe out most of North Carolina's population of the fish.Viscount Monckton answers Megan Clement of “Conversation” « JoNova: Science, carbon, climate and tax
During the winter of 2010-11 a couple of severe cold snaps resulted in documented cold stun events in Pamlico Sound, resulting in the closure of fishing for speckled trout statewide.
...If there's a species that may benefit from global warming, it could be North Carolina's speckled trout.
All of the questions and answers herein must be reproduced in full: otherwise none of my answers may be disseminated in any form, in whole or in part.Who do these kids think they are? | Zanesville Times Recorder
What's happening to kids? They don't seem to know their place any more. They keep showing up at public hearings and blabbing about what's right and wrong, as if they have a clue -- or a right.Shouldn't we carefully write down every one of her suggestions, then immediately implement all of them, since she cares about the future and no older person does?
It happened again last week when a 13-year-old girl had the audacity to give a PowerPoint presentation on global warming at a meeting of the Iowa Environmental Protection Commission. Naturally, she had to be put in her place.
The kid is Gloria Deia Filippone. She's the Iowa spokesperson for iMatter, Kids vs. Global Warming.
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