The Coral
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Members | Bill Ryder-Jones |
---|---|
James Skelly | |
Paul Duffy | |
Lee Southall | |
Nick Power | |
Ian Skelly | |
Career start | Hoylake, United Kingdom |
Skos genre | Reggae |
Alternative/Indie | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 995767 |
About The Coral
The Coral are an English rock band, formed in 1996 in Hoylake on the Wirral Peninsula, Merseyside. The band emerged during the early 2000s. Their 2002 debut album The Coral, from which came the single "Dreaming of You", was nominated for the Mercury Music Prize and listed as the fourth best album of the year by NME.
Sudan fighting: Bittersweet ending for one family fleeing conflict
...By Paul AdamsBBC News, NairobiThe mobile phone footage is wobbly as Azza weaves her way through the crowd to the door of The Coral Hotel in Port Sudan...
Living on the frontlines of a US-China flashpoint
... The colour of the water hugging the land is a deep turquoise - and so clear you can watch small fish play amongst The Coral...
Biodiversity: 'Magical marine species' pushed to extinction
... The Coral is dying due to disease, climate change and pollution...
COP27: Why the latest UN climate conference matters
... If they want to remind themselves of what is a stake, they should take a swim over The Coral reefs that lie just off the coast...
Rare pink handfish spotted in Australia for first time in decades
... In February, his team had dropped a baited camera on the seabed of the Tasman Fracture Marine Park to survey The Coral, lobster and fish species down there...
After the coral ban, I lost everything'
... in Front of the Indonesian ban, it was completely legal, export, grown diversity, and the Land was sold to the world s largest supplier, accounting for 70% of The Corals, the £13 billion-£15bn global marine aquarium market...
Coral dredging: 'It's going to cause irreversible damage'
... I fear that it s going to cause some irreversible damage that we can t ever change, take back or fix in the future, says Michelle Lockwood, one of those opposed to The Coral dredging that will be needed to enlarge the port...
Such as the Great Barrier Reef was saved in the 1960s
... Eddie Hegerl thus spent, to protect his life trying to reach The Coral reef from destruction and says every time he goes there he finds something new...
Biodiversity: 'Magical marine species' pushed to extinction
By Helen BriggsEnvironment correspondent
A " sea cow" that evoked tales of mermaids is being driven to The Edge of extinction, conservation experts warn.
According to an update of the official extinction list, the dugong is almost wiped out in some parts of The World .
Scientists have also sounded alarm over The Loss of other marine creatures, including exotic coral and shellfish.
They said humans had created a " perfect storm" that threatens Marine Life across the globe.
The International Union for Conservation for Nature (IUCN), which compiles the official Red List of Endangered Species , revealed the latest findings at the UN biodiversity conference, COP 15.
" We simply cannot afford to fail, " said Dr Bruno Oberle, head of the IUCN.
He warned of the urgent need to address the linked climate and biodiversity crises, or " risk losing the crucial benefits the oceans provide us with".
The latest update to The List , which has now assessed More Than 150,000 species, revealed " a perfect storm of unsustainable human activity decimating Marine Life around the globe, " He Said .
Countries are meeting in Montreal, Canada, to try to agree targets for addressing The Loss of nature amid an extinction crisis threatening A Million species on Earth.
High on their agenda is a plan to protect 30% of land and sea for nature across the globe by 2030.
The latest extinction list highlights risks to a type of Pillar Coral that forms finger-like structures found throughout The Caribbean . It is now classed as critically endangered. The Coral is dying due to disease, Climate Change and pollution.
Meanwhile, many species of abalone, The World 's most expensive seafood, are threatened with extinction, due to poaching and unsustainable harvesting, made worse by disease, pollution and Climate Change .
Marine biologist, Prof Amanda Vincent , of the University of British Columbia , Canada, said the " awful status" of these species should shock us and engage us for urgent action.
" These magical marine species are treasured wildlife, from the wonderful abalone to the charismatic dugong and the glorious Pillar Coral , and we should safeguard them accordingly, " she added.
Dugongs belong to the Sirenia, an order of aquatic mammals sometimes known as " sea cows". The Sirenia family also includes manatees.
In 2015, the IUCN classified dugongs as vulnerable to extinction worldwide due to a myriad of threats, including being Caught Up in fishing gear or struck by boat propellers, ocean pollution and The Loss of The Sea grasses on which they graze.
They are now particularly concerned about two populations. One, living in waters off Mozambique, is down to just 250 individuals and is regarded as critically endangered. The Other , in New Caledonia , east of Australia, is deemed endangered.
There are still dugongs living in The Waters off around 40 countries. Australia has The World 's largest population of dugongs today, largely thanks to having a sparsely populated coast with lots of sea grasses.
Earlier this year the dugong was declared functionally extinct in China. " Functional extinction" means that even if some dugongs are Still Alive off China's coast, their numbers are too small to maintain a viable population.
Follow Helen on Twitter
Source of news: bbc.com