Flowering Plants
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | 1998 |
Authors | Chris Oxlade |
Illustrators | Stuart Lafford |
Shirley Tourret | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3054604 |
About Flowering Plants
This resource for National Curriculum Key Stage 1/2 offers an introduction to basic scientific concepts associated with flowering plants. Includes a number of activities and experiments. Part of the STEP-BY-STEP series. Illustrated with colour photographs and artwork.
Pressure on nature threatens many flowering plants with extinction
...By Claire MarshallBBC Environment & Rural Affairs CorrespondentForty-five per cent of the world s known Flowering Plants could be threatened by extinction, scientists have warned...
UK weather: hottest June since records began - Met Office
... The dry and warm weather last month affected wildlife and nature with environment groups and Flowering Plants wilting...
Hottest June kills UK fish and threatens insects
... Many Flowering Plants, including orchids, wilted in the high temperatures, meaning insects like bees and butterflies that feed on nectar and pollen will have less to eat, Ali Morse from the Wildlife Trusts told BBC News...
Non-native plants outnumber British flora, major report finds
......
EK Janaki Ammal: The 'nomad' flower scientist India forgot
... In a career spanning almost 60 years, Janaki studied a wide range of Flowering Plants and reworked the scientific classification of several families of plants...
Is it the end for the lush lawns of Los Angeles?
... There would also be more Flowering Plants...
UK allows emergency use of bee-harming neonicotinoid pesticide
... To minimise risks to bees, farmers will be banned from growing Flowering Plants for 32 months after the sugar beet crop...
UK allows emergency use of bee-harming neonicotinoid pesticide
The UK government has authorised The Emergency use of a type of pesticide almost entirely banned in the EU because of the harm it can cause bees.
A Defra spokesperson Said the use of one type of neonicotinoid on Sugar Beet was " based on robust scientific assessment".
The use would be subject to strict conditions, Defra Said .
But The Chief Executive of the Wildlife Trusts, Craig Bennett, called it " scandalous".
Studies have shown that The Group of pesticides damage the nervous systems and navigational abilities of bees and other pollinators. The pesticides can also end up in streams and rivers and harm aquatic life, and can for a long Time In The Environment .
Their outdoor use was banned in almost all EU countries in 2018. At the, Michael Gove , then environment secretary, Said the UK was in favour because it couldn't " afford to put our pollinator populations at risk".
The government is now one type, thiamethoxam, to be used on Sugar Beet in England in 2022 because of the of yellows viruses, spread by aphids, which can severely damage crops. It estimates that almost 70% of The National Sugar Beet crop could be affected.
A Defra spokesperson Said that the decision " was not taken lightly".
" We evaluate the risks very carefully and only grant temporary emergency authorisations for restricted pesticides in special circumstances when strict requirements are met and there are no alternatives. "
The Chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, Craig Bennett, criticised the decision.
" The Government has outlined ambitions to restore nature, promising to protect 30% of land by 2030 and reverse declines of precious Wildlife - But at the same time, it is giving a Green Light to use a highly toxic chemical that could harm pollinating insects and pollute soils and rivers, " He Said .
According to The National Farmers' Union (NFU), there are 3,000 farmers who grow Sugar Beet , and the wider industry supports around 9,500 jobs in England, largely in The East . To minimise risks to bees, farmers will be banned from growing Flowering Plants for 32 months after the Sugar Beet crop.
Stephanie Morren from the RSPB Said , " We Are in a nature and climate emergency, and with farming accounting for 75% of The Land in England we cannot reverse nature's decline without the support of our farmers. But highly toxic pesticides like neonicotinoids have No Place in a sustainable farming system.
" Questions must be raised about how approving even temporary use of these chemicals and endangering our declining bee populations is in any way consistent with halting Wildlife decline. Instead, farmers must be supported to reduce our reliance on these harmful chemicals, " She Said .
Source of news: bbc.com