Aucun message portant le libellé 9.0 Vermont. Afficher tous les messages
Aucun message portant le libellé 9.0 Vermont. Afficher tous les messages

lundi 28 octobre 2024

From invasive weeds to floods, the wood turtle is at risk in Vermont

From invasive weeds to floods, the wood turtle is at risk in Vermont
Klara Bauters - VT Digger - October 27, 2024
... wood turtles could soon be threatened in the state due to land use change ... the state’s Fish & Wildlife Department is watching the species closely before more serious intervention is required. The wood turtle ... is known for the striking orange coloring on its neck and the inside of its legs, creating a unique, easily recognizable pattern. This pattern has also resulted in a growing demand for wild-caught turtles on the international black market ... Invasive species, like Japanese knotweed, are a major hazard, because they overrun sand and gravel bars where wood turtles would typically lay eggs ... , repeated flooding in Vermont has caused the eggs to drown, and since the species has low reproductive rates, that can severely impact local populations ... Due to the longevity of wood turtles — some may surpass 80 years old, as well as their low reproductive rates and slow maturation, their populations are sensitive to any threat that kills adults or removes them from the population ... Federal programs in the U.S. Farm Bill offer financial assistance to landowners and farmers who establish riparian buffers.

jeudi 3 octobre 2024

Franklin County, Vermont resident captures bobcat on trail camera

Franklin County, Vermont resident captures bobcat on trail camera
Michael Cusanelli - NBC 5 - Oct 2, 2024
The videos of the powerful creature were captured on Robert Salter's trail cameras, and Salter said the big cat has been a recurring guest on his property recently.  The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department said bobcats like to wander and are most active during dawn and dusk.

vendredi 14 juin 2024

Missisquoi Paddle-Pedal set for July 13 in Richford

Missisquoi Paddle-Pedal set for July 13 in Richford
Saint Albans Messenger - Jun 10, 2024
The annual Missisquoi Paddle-Pedal is set for Saturday, July 13
This annual family-friendly event, hosted by the Northern Forest Canoe Trail (NFCT), the Upper Missisquoi and Trout River Wild & Scenic Committee (UMATR), and the town of Richford, combines a 6.5-mile paddle down a Wild and Scenic section of the Missisquoi River and 5 miles of cycling on the adjacent Missisquoi Valley Rail Trail.  Participant check-in will be held from 8:15-9:15 a.m. in Richford’s Davis Park, followed by the race and an awards ceremony. Lunch is available by pre-purchase during registration. Advance registration is available along with additional event information online at https://bit.ly/missisquoipaddlepedal. NFCT members get a 15 percent discount with advance online registrations.

Northern Forest Canoe Trail - June 2024
The Missisquoi Paddle-Pedal combines 6.5 miles of paddling down a Wild and Scenic section of the Missisquoi River and 5 miles of cycling on the adjacent Missisquoi Valley Rail Trail. This year’s Paddle-Pedal is set for Saturday, July 13. Click here to register for the 2024 Paddle-Pedal! Scholarships are available for residents of Franklin & Orleans Counties. Please submit this form instead of completing the registration on the right and someone will contact you to discuss participation.  Want to participate but not paddle and pedal? We need volunteers to make this event happen. Volunteers are needed to help with race timing, registration, and staffing road crossings. E-mail noah@northernforestcanoetrail.org for more info.

jeudi 13 juin 2024

The University of Vermont Extension Annual Crops & Soils Field Day

The University of Vermont Extension Annual Crops & Soils Field Day

Join us for our in-person on-farm Annual Crops & Soils Field Day at Borderview Research Farm on Thursday, July 25, 2024, 10am to 3:30pm. You will tour the research trials including perennial grasses, soybeans, small grains, hemp, hops, and other crops, as well as participate in one of the afternoon sessions. Lunch is included and certified crop adviser and water quality education credits available. A detailed flyer will follow. View our Conferences web page for updated information at http://go.uvm.edu/conferences

Registration is now open at https://go.uvm.edu/2024annualfieldday. You can register and pay online. If you cannot access the online registration, please call the UVM Non Credit Registration office at 802-656-8407 to register.

Cost is $25 per person for non-farmers and free to farmers.


Mark your calendar: Major recreation announcement from Franklin County Trails Alliance set for June 20

Mark your calendar: Major recreation announcement from Franklin County Trails Alliance set for June 20
Saint Albans Messanger - Jun 12, 2024
Franklin County Trails Alliance has big news to share about an upcoming recreation project on Thursday, June 20. The trails alliance is set to make the announcement during a joint mixer hosted with the Franklin County Young Professionals at Hard'Ack Recreation Area.  From 5-6 p.m., enjoy games, hiking, mountain biking and a walking history of Hard’ack/Aldis Hill led by Tim Smith . From 6-7 p.m., stay for hot dogs, salads and beverages from 14th Star and the major recreation announcement. 
Link: FacebookAllEvents(Tickets)

samedi 18 mai 2024

Cyanobacteria: Lake Carmi

State to remove Lake Carmi aeration system after determining it made cyanobacteria blooms worse
Corey McDonald - vtdigger - May 15, 2024
State officials have decided to begin removing an aeration system in Lake Carmi and may soon move forward with an alum treatment after finding the system actually exacerbated conditions creating harmful cyanobacteria in the lake ...  But the system repeatedly malfunctioned, making it difficult for state officials to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the system ... The system worked by sending compressed air through a tube to a “manifold,” which shot the air into 40 different pipes spread out at the bottom of the lake ... Officials found it had “unintended consequences” of mixing phosphorus-rich bottom water with the rest of the lake, according to minutes from an April 16 meeting of the state’s Lake Carmi Coordination Team ... Lake Morey, in Fairlee, had a “very successful” alum treatment in 1986 and is in “better shape” since the treatment ...
Guy Page - Vermont Daily Chronicle  - May 16, 2024
Aeration has been effective in other lakes but does not seem to be good solution for Lake Carmi. The equipment will be removed this fall. A removal plan is in process. 
Amanda Martin-Ryan - NBC5 - May 16, 2024
 ... For the DEC, their plan B is aluminum sulfate treatments. It’s already gone through a feasibility study commissioned by the state, which estimated costs of alum treatments to be $2.6 million. It’s more money coming out of the state’s pockets, but good news, the process is already effective at another lake in the state ... If things go according to plan while following state and EPA regulations, the DEC hopes to start alum treatments by the spring of 2025.

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lundi 25 mars 2024

Vermont Martens

Paige Fisher - vtdigger - August 18, 2023
Elusive, beady-eyed and adorable, the American marten, colloquially known as a pine marten, has a long, tumultuous history. After being practically wiped from Vermont’s landscape in the 1800s, reintroduced in the 1990s and disappearing again, these mammals now scurry among the Green Mountains, intriguing and puzzling researchers. Martens are medium-sized carnivorous animals in the weasel family. In direct competition with fishers, they mostly snack on small mammals like red squirrels. But, if enticed by denser calories, they can take down something as large as a snowshoe hare, said Jill Kilborn, biologist for New Hampshire Fish and Game ... The Endangered Species Act was legislated in 1973 and martens were listed as endangered in Vermont and New Hampshire, said Paul Hapeman, a specialist in small carnivore conservation at Central Connecticut State University. Because Vermont is the southernmost region of marten territory, there’s a good chance the martens that reside in the north are from neighboring states or Canada. And in southern Vermont, there’s a good chance they came from the reintroduction 30 years ago. And sightings of the mammals in the middle area of the state remain a puzzle, he said. His team is working to unravel the mystery by looking at the populations’ genetics, Hapeman said.  Depending on those results, that initial reintroduction effort could be a huge victory for conservationists.
Mikaela Lefrak, Daniela Fierro - Vermont Public Radio - December 18, 2023
Researchers have identified two distinct marten populations in the state—one in the Northeast Kingdom and another in southern Vermont. Brehan Furfey, a wildlife biologist and the furbearer project leader for the state, explains what makes the marten special.

Aylward, Murdoch, Kilpatrick - Nature - 28 Jan 2020
American marten (Martes americana) are a conservation priority in many forested regions of North America. Populations are fragmented at the southern edge of their distribution due to suboptimal habitat conditions. Facilitating gene flow may improve population resilience through genetic and demographic rescue ... circuit theory was used to identify potential movement corridors 

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mardi 13 février 2024

W8banaki Nation and Missisquoi

Shaun Robinson - VTdigger - November 14, 2023
A Canadian tribe maintains that Vermont’s groups are not Indigenous and, instead, are appropriating their identity and culture. Research from leading scholars supports Odanak First Nation’s assertion, though the Vermont groups dispute it.
Darryl Leroux -  American Indian Culture and Research Journal - 14 July 2023
...  I searched for available federal and state records, notably US census returns and State of Vermont vital records, for descendants of six of the most common ANM primary families ...  these six primary families account for just over 60 percent of the ANM’s 2005 membership. I identified 165 of these six families living in Vermont in 104 separate census and vital records between the 1830 US census for Swanton and a 2007 State of Vermont death certificate (see Appendix 2). In every archival document, these  individuals were only ever recorded as “White” (see Appendix 3). While descendants of these key ANM families were only ever recorded as white, Native American individuals were clearly recorded in every census in Vermont from 1860 to 1950, though none of them was related to the ANM’s main primary families ...  97.8 percent of their membership has no Abenaki ancestry.

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mercredi 6 décembre 2023

Victory Hill property becomes permanent conservation area

Victory Hill property becomes permanent conservation area
Abegael Giles - Vermont Public - December 6, 2023 
Parts of the newly protected land at Victory Hill will be restored as habitat for the state-endangered American marten, a member of the weasel family ... Two big swaths of land — roughly 600 acres — on Victory Hill in the Northeast Kingdom will now be permanently open to the public and protected from development. Shelby Semmes, who leads the Trust for Public Land in Vermont, says big stretches of conserved land are critical as plants and animals move north to adapt to climate change. "The Appalachian Mountain region is one of the most important corridors of movement for successful migration of species really in North America," Semmes says. The Trust for Public Land says they'll work to restore important habitat there for the state-endangered American marten, a member of the weasel family. Researchers have found marten populations in the Northeast Kingdom and part of the southern Green Mountain National Forest.

The North Star Monthly - Dec 13, 2023
Two key portions of Victory Hill, a remarkable 1,230-acre property in the Northeast Kingdom known for world-class recreation opportunities and its role within a surrounding “biological hotspot” have been permanently protected as of November 16, 2023.

samedi 8 avril 2023

Richford walking trail

Richford to plan for new walking trail; state grant to help with cost
John Custodiao - Saint Albans Messenger Apr 6, 2023
Richford’s walkability will be going up, but not any time soon. Gov. Phil Scott announced March 24 that 29 towns and villages across the state are receiving funds for a variety of municipal projects. Richford received $24,165 for a project estimated to cost $26,850. The project will focus on developing a plan and preliminary engineering to create a walking trail network around Richford’s downtown.

lundi 5 juillet 2021

Crédits de charbon et forets/Carbon credits and forests


Emma Cotton - VTDigger - Jul 5 2021
Glebe Mountain, seated between 1,400 and 2,600 feet in elevation and surrounded by more forest, is an ideal place for wildlife to roam. It could become more important as the climate warms, sending cold-seeking animals like moose to the upper and northward reaches of Vermont’s landscape ... That’s why the Conservancy decided to purchase the 3,500-acre parcel ... The carbon market, which has existed for about a decade, allows companies, colleges and even countries to buy and sell credits with the ultimate goal of reducing carbon in the atmosphere. When an organization like the Nature Conservancy can prove that their work is reducing measurable amounts of atmospheric carbon... they are awarded credits through the American Carbon Registry, which become available for purchase.

Christine McGowan - Vermont Business Magazine - August 6, 2020
Consulting forester Charlie Hancock was instrumental in launching the Cold Hollow Carbon project in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. The pilot, which is now being viewed as a model for other parts of the country, is the first aggregated parcel to be purchased on the carbon marke ...  forests collect and store different amounts of carbon at various stages of growth. While younger forests (30 to 70 years old) will have a high rate of carbon sequestration— i.e. the process of pulling carbon dioxide from the air through photosynthesis to support growth—a forest’s ability to store carbon increases with age, peaking at around 200 years. Estimates of the carbon stored in old-growth forests range from 100 to 120 metric tons of carbon per acre. Vermont’s forests, which were largely clear cut in the 1800s to create agricultural land, are relatively young, averaging around 100 years old, and store approximately 60-80 metric tons of carbon per acre.

Smaller Trees Stump Nature Conservancy's Carbon Project
John Dillon - VPR - Dec 11 2019 
Conservancy says its innovative plan to use a Vermont forest to help reduce greenhouse gas pollution in California did not turn out as hoped after a timber inventory showed the project was not economically feasible. The Vermont chapter of the conservancy had hoped to enroll its 5,400-acre piece of northern Franklin County into a California market aimed at reducing greenhouse gas pollution ... “What we found was that there just wasn't enough carbon there above the regional average to make a financially viable project,” ... the conservancy now plans to enroll the land in a separate market in which companies or individuals voluntarily buy carbon offsets.

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lundi 28 décembre 2020

Seeing grocery store in danger of extinction, small-town health clinic steps in

Seeing grocery store in danger of extinction, small-town health clinic steps in
Anne Wallace Allen - VT Digger - Oct 4 2020
A solution to some of the health access problems arrived in 2002 with the establishment of the Northern Tier Center for Health, or NOTCH, a not-for-profit health center that provides family medicine, behavioral health, a pharmacy, a lab, and dental services ... It’s unusual for a health center to operate a grocery store, said Robert Ostermeyer, director of Franklin/Grand Isle Community Action. But it fits into recent thinking about using community solutions for wellness.

Links: NOTCH Richford
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jeudi 9 juillet 2020

White pines in peril

White pines in peril
Paul Hetzler - North Country Public Radio - Mar 07, 2020
 Starting around 2009, needles began to turn yellow and drop early, and new growth was stunted. At first these symptoms were restricted to sites with shallow soil, and along highway corridors  where trees were already stressed by deicing salt, which burns foliage as well as roots. The droughts of 2012 and 2016, unprecedented in terms of low soil moisture, set pines back even further. By 2018, even pines on better sites were looking sick.

jeudi 29 août 2019

Why doctors are increasingly prescribing nature

Why doctors are increasingly prescribing nature
PBS Newsour - Aug. 28 2019
As rates of chronic disease among children have skyrocketed over the past few decades, pediatricians have increasingly looked for solutions beyond the clinic. Sometimes that means actually prescribing time outside. Special correspondent Cat Wise reports from Oakland on the medical evidence that indicates escaping modern urban life, even temporarily, can yield health dividends.

samedi 28 juillet 2018

Mountain biking in the Green Mountains

L'impact environnemental du vélo de montagne
Radio-Canada - 27 Juillet 2018
Des investissements de plusieurs milliers de dollars ont été annoncés pour développer ce sport à Owl's Head. Cette offre supplémentaire s'ajoute déjà aux pistes offertes dans plusieurs parcs de la région, dont le Mont Bellevue à Sherbrooke, à Bromont et à Orford ... mais pratiqué hors des sentiers battus, le sport peut avoir des effets néfastes sur l'environnement.

Photo Credit: Erica Houskeeper
Landowners are Essential Partner in Vermont’s Forest Products Economy: An East Haven case study
Christine McGowan, Forest Program Director, Vermont Sustainable Jobs Fund - June 19, 2018 
 “People need a connection to the forest to be interested in forestry,” said Dave Senio of Kingdom Trails. “Trails offer that connection.”

lundi 23 juillet 2018

Cyanobacteries: Lac Champlain

Rep. Peter Welch tours St. Albans Bay, talks water quality issues
News summary by Amis du Pinacle - Jul 23, 2018
Peter Welch, D-Vt toured the bay on a two-boat flotilla, with the head of the Lake Champlain Basin Program, a representative from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and a handful of life-jacket-sporting reporters.   “We want to adjust things so that the way we develop, the way we plow our roads, the way we do our agriculture — those systems have to be ones that respect the obligation all of us have for a sustainable planet.”

Story image for Burlington sewage stormwater Lake Champlain from vtdigger.orgBurlington sewage dumped into Lake Champlain
News summary by Amis du Pinacle - Jul 23, 2018
Burlington has a combined sewer system, designed to collect both sewage and some stormwater runoff from the street in one pipe. Heavy rains can overwhelm the system, leaving the treatment plants unable to store or fully treat the torrent.

Story image for Pollution du lac Champlain: l’OBV de la baie Missisquoi en mode solution from L'Avenir et des Rivières - FarnhamPollution in Lake Champlain: Watershed Organization of Missisquoi Bay looking for solutions
Translated by Werner Wintels - Amis du Pinacle - 18 July 2018
Interviews, literature searches, evaluating best practices across Canada and the world:  the Watershed Organization of Missisquoi Bay (French: OBVBM)  taken on a big task  at the request of  the International Joint Commission (IJC). "We've identified almost 500 documents in Quebec alone on pollution problems in Missisquoi Bay and other water bodies. We're talking cyanobacteria, water quality, governance, regulatory structures, financing programes, etc. That's a lot of literature to plow through," says the OBVBM vice-president Pierre Leduc.
Claude Hebert -  L'Avenir et  des Rivières - 13 juillet 2018
Entrevues, survol de la littérature, évaluation des bonnes pratiques au Canada et ailleurs dans le monde, l’Organisme de bassin versant de la baie Missisquoi effectue un véritable travail de moine à la demande de la Commission mixte internationale (CMI). «Nous avons identifié près de 500 documents au Québec seulement traitant des problèmes de pollution à la baie Missisquoi et dans certains autres plans d’eau. On y parle des cyanobactéries, de la qualité de l’eau, des modes de gouvernance, des cadres réglementaires, des programmes de financement, etc. Ça fait beaucoup de littérature à éplucher», précise le vice-président de l’OBVBM, Pierre Leduc.

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Welch tours St. Albans Bay

Welch tours St. Albans Bay (In depth)
Mike Frett - Saint Albans Messanger - Jul 23, 2018
A day-long tour of St. Albans found Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., joining members of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Lake Champlain Basin Program aboard a pontoon in the middle of St. Albans Bay, where the Representative saw first hand the Bay’s struggles with water quality.

Renee Wunderlich - NBC5 - Jul 20 2018
The Vermont democrat boated around St. Albans Bay with state wildlife officials.

Story image for Welch Missisquoi Bay from vtdigger.orgWater quality experts warn Welch about lake conditions
Elizabeth Hewitt - VT Digger - Jul 20 2018
Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt toured the bay on a two-boat flotilla, with the head of the Lake Champlain Basin Program, a representative from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and a handful of life-jacket-sporting reporters.  Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge director Ken Sturm recalled a decades old wastewater slogan: “Dilution is the solution to pollution.” “That’s not really what we like to talk about though,” he said. “The solution to pollution is stopping pollution.” “I think the long-term approach is not about penalties, it’s about practices,” Welch said. “We want to adjust things so that the way we develop, the way we plow our roads, the way we do our agriculture — those systems have to be ones that respect the obligation all of us have for a sustainable planet.”

Richford drinking water tests positive for possible carcinogen


Story image for Richford Water Vermont from vtdigger.orgRichford drinking water tests positive for possible carcinogen
Elizabeth Gribkoff - VT Digger - Jul 20 2018
... water quality tests from the end of June show increased concentrations of haloacetic acids, collectively known as HAA5, in the municipal drinking water. HAA5 are a group of chemicals that can form as a byproduct of water treatment, especially under conditions of higher than normal water temperatures and acidity levels ... The state determines whether a town’s drinking water meets federal standards by averaging contaminant levels from water quality tests from the previous year, said Ben Montross, head of compliance for DEC’s drinking water division ... “It’s not an acute contaminant,” he said ... Animal studies also have shown that long-term exposure to some of the acids in the group may increase the risk of developing cancer ...

Cancer-causing chemical found in Franklin County town's water
WCAX 3 - Jul 19, 2018

Burlington sewage dumped into Lake Champlain

Story image for Burlington sewage stormwater Lake Champlain from vtdigger.orgBurlington plots wastewater upgrades
Elizabeth Gribkoff - VT Digger - Jul 22 2018 
For now, the plant’s computer system has been rewired to bypass the faulty component and the city is making arrangements to add staff when rain storms are in the forecast. The city has put out a bid to replace the entire computer system ...
Old Systems, Equipment Failures Contribute To Sewer Overflows ...
John Dillon - Vermont Public Radio - Jul. 16, 2018
Unintended releases from sewage treatment plants are happening all over the state ... State and local government are working to upgrade sewer and stormwater systems, but progress can be slow and upgrades are expensive.
Efforts to fix Burlington's combined sewage overflow problem
WCAX - Jul. 6, 2018
Jeff Munger has been living on North Street with his wife for more than 30 years. He's seen his fair share of stormwater issues. Munger was thrilled when the city of Burlington decided to install a nearby rain garden five years ago specially designed to capture excess water.
Story image for Burlington sewage stormwater Lake Champlain from Seven DaysMuddied Waters: No Clear solution for Burlington's Wastewater Problem
Katie Jickling - 7 Days - June 13, 2018
Burlington has released 8 million gallons of dirty water since the start of 2018 — more than triple the total from last year ... Burlington has a combined sewer system, designed to collect both sewage and some stormwater runoff from the street in one pipe. Heavy rains can overwhelm the system, leaving the treatment plants unable to store or fully treat the torrent.
Wet weather tests Burlington rain gardens
Joel Banner Baird - Burlington Free Press - Aug. 15, 2017
Storm runoff is best behaved when it dilly-dallies on its way downhill ... When stormwater is allowed to seep into underlying soil, much of rain's payload of phosphorus and other mineral nutrients becomes trapped — and is less likely to spur excess algae and plant growth in ponds and lakes.
Link:  The Vermont Rain Garden Manual

Other Links:  Water, Watewater, and stormwater in the Queen CitySewage Overflows and Incidents Reported in Date Range,

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