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Event: NatureWatch/IWA Young Water Professionals Conference/2008 Call for Paper(On-going)

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NatureWatch (On-going)
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NatureWatch is a suite of community-based "citizen science" monitoring programmes including FrogWatch, WormWatch, IceWatch, and PlantWatch.  Through these programmes, Environment Canada collects national information on indicators of ecosystem health.  New "citizen science" programmes will soon be available on lichens, tree health and benthic macroinvertebrates.

We need your help to collect environmental information on plants and animals so that our scientists can quickly identify ecological changes in our country. We do not yet fully understand how environmental stressors such as global warming, acid rain, and invasive species will affect our Canadian ecosystem. This information will help decision makers to make better choices for our future! Working together, we can learn how the natural environment is changing in our local communities, regions, provinces and in our country.

To get involved, please visit:
http://www.eman-rese.ca/eman/naturewatch.html


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Check Your Watershed Day 2008 (July 19)
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Celebrate your Watershed with Citizens Environment Water (CEW) on Saturday July 19, 2008!  Check Your Watershed Day is an annual, one day event where you can get your feet wet and learn first hand about your watershed.

This year the event will take place in Cobourg Creek and Bronte Creek watersheds.  Cobourg Creek includes portions of the Town of Cobourg and the Township of Hamilton and Alnwick/Haldimand in Northumberland County.  Bronte Creek includes portions of Wellington County, and the City of Hamilton, Burlington, Oakville and Milton.

We are looking for volunteers to be Stream Team Leaders and Members.  Please register by Friday, July 11, 2008. Lunch and refreshments will be provided.  To register, please visit:
http://www.monitoringthemoraine.ca/cywd/index.htm

If you live in Durham region and would like to find out about other stewardship events in your area, please contact:
cywd@citizensenvironmentwatch.org.


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IWA Young Water Professionals International Conference (July 16-18)
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The 4th IWA Young Water Professionals International Conference (16-18 July 2008, Berkeley, USA) will provide a forum for young researchers and professionals working in water and wastewater research, technology and management to present their work and meet their peers from all over the world.

To register, please visit:
http://www.iwa-ywpc.org/templates/ld_templates/layout_654239.aspx?ObjectId=654242


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2008 Call for Paper (On-going)
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The excellent reputation of the WIT Conference Programme in different parts of the world continues to grow and serves as an ideal medium to achieve the Wessex Institute's International knowledge transfer objectives. The Institute is committed to acting as a link between professional and academic bodies and encouraging trans-disciplinary research.

To review a listing of 2008 Conferences & to submit an abstract, please visit:
http://www.wessex.ac.uk/conferences/2008/


June 8, 2008 | 5:06 AM Comments  0 comments



australian Coastal and Marine Experts answering questions

just thought i'll share it with everyone here, if you would like to ask a coastal or marine expert a question


click here to join in the conversations : http://www.coastcare.com.au/Page/Expert+Panel.aspx

June 8, 2008 | 4:06 AM Comments  0 comments



Warning: Cellphone Use During Pregnancy can Seriously Damage Your Baby

Study of 13,000 children exposes link between use of handsets and later behavioural problems

Women who use mobile phones when pregnant are more likely to give birth to children with behavioural problems, according to authoritative research.

A giant study, which surveyed more than 13,000 children, found that using the handsets just two or three times a day was enough to raise the risk of their babies developing hyperactivity and difficulties with conduct, emotions and relationships by the time they reached school age. And it adds that the likelihood is even greater if the children themselves used the phones before the age of seven.

The results of the study, the first of its kind, have taken the top scientists who conducted it by surprise. But they follow warnings against both pregnant women and children using mobiles by the official Russian radiation watchdog body, which believes that the peril they pose "is not much lower than the risk to children's health from tobacco or alcohol".

The research – at the universities of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and Aarhus, Denmark – is to be published in the July issue of the journal Epidemiology and will carry particular weight because one of its authors has been sceptical that mobile phones pose a risk to health.

UCLA's Professor Leeka Kheifets – who serves on a key committee of the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection, the body that sets the guidelines for exposure to mobile phones – wrote three and a half years ago that the results of studies on people who used them "to date give no consistent evidence of a causal relationship between exposure to radiofrequency fields and any adverse health effect".

The scientists questioned the mothers of 13,159 children born in Denmark in the late 1990s about their use of the phones in pregnancy, and their children's use of them and behaviour up to the age of seven. As they gave birth before mobiles became universal, about half of the mothers had used them infrequently or not at all, enabling comparisons to be made.

They found that mothers who did use the handsets were 54 per cent more likely to have children with behavioural problems and that the likelihood increased with the amount of potential exposure to the radiation. And when the children also later used the phones they were, overall, 80 per cent more likely to suffer from difficulties with behaviour. They were 25 per cent more at risk from emotional problems, 34 per cent more likely to suffer from difficulties relating to their peers, 35 per cent more likely to be hyperactive, and 49 per cent more prone to problems with conduct.

The scientists say that the results were "unexpected", and that they knew of no biological mechanisms that could cause them. But when they tried to explain them by accounting for other possible causes – such as smoking during pregnancy, family psychiatric history or socio-economic status – they found that, far from disappearing, the association with mobile phone use got even stronger.

They add that there might be other possible explanations that they did not examine – such as that mothers who used the phones frequently might pay less attention to their children – and stress that the results "should be interpreted with caution" and checked by further studies. But they conclude that "if they are real they would have major public health implications".

Professor Sam Milham, of the blue-chip Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, and the University of Washington School of Public Health – one of the pioneers of research in the field – said last week that he had no doubt that the results were real. He pointed out that recent Canadian research on pregnant rats exposed to similar radiation had found structural changes in their offspring's brains.

The Russian National Committee on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection says that use of the phones by both pregnant women and children should be "limited". It concludes that children who talk on the handsets are likely to suffer from "disruption of memory, decline of attention, diminishing learning and cognitive abilities, increased irritability" in the short term, and that longer-term hazards include "depressive syndrome" and "degeneration of the nervous structures of the brain".

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/warning-using-a-mobile-phone-while-pregnant-can-seriously-damage-your-baby-830352.html


June 4, 2008 | 8:06 AM Comments  0 comments



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