EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"Modified Wheat Is Discovered in Oregon"
NY Times, 05/30/2013"Unapproved genetically engineered wheat has been found growing on a farm in Oregon, federal officials said Wednesday, a development that could disrupt American exports of the grain."
"Long-Lived Insects Raise Prime Riddle"
Nature, 05/29/2013"Drivers who end up behind John Cooley this week will quickly lose their patience. Cruising around the eastern United States with his car window open, he slows down or stops every few hundred metres, cocks an ear and taps on a data-logger strapped into the passenger seat."
"Beneath A Glacier's White, Researchers See Green"
NPR, 05/29/2013"In the news business, an evergreen is a story that doesn't have to run on a particular day, but can stay fresh for a long time."
"Global Protests Target Monsanto, Genetically Modified Food"
AP, 05/28/2013"Organizers say 'March against Monsanto' protests held in 52 nations and 436 cities. Anti-Monsanto rallies sparked by a Facebook page in February."
"Decline In Biodiversity of Farmed Plants, Animals Gathering Pace"
Reuters, 05/28/2013"A decline in the diversity of farmed plants and livestock breeds is gathering pace, threatening future food supplies for the world's growing population, the head of a new United Nations panel on biodiversity said on Monday."
"How Pesticides Pushed Cockroaches Into Rapid Evolution"
io9, 05/24/2013"In the 1980s, manufactures began making cockroach baits that combined sweet glucose with deadly insecticides. By 1993, many cockroach populations somehow developed an aversion to the bait. Now, 20 years later, scientists finally understand how the roaches beat these traps."
"Irish Potato Famine Pathogen Identified"
BBC, 05/23/2013"Scientists have used plant samples collected in the mid-19th Century to identify the pathogen that caused the Irish potato famine."
"Frog, Toad and Salamander Populations Plummeting, U.S. Survey Finds"
Wash Post, 05/23/2013"Frogs, toads and salamanders continue to vanish from the American landscape at an alarming pace, with seven species — including Colorado’s boreal toad and Nevada’s yellow-legged frog — facing 50 percent drops in their numbers within seven years if the current rate of decline continues, according to new government research."
"California Frogs Once Used for Pregnancy Tests Carry Deadly Fungus"
LA Times, 05/16/2013"Frogs that were imported for pregnancy tests and set loose in California carry a deadly fungus responsible for wiping out vast numbers of amphibians worldwide, scientists have found."
"U.S. Tax Dollars Promote Monsanto's GMO Crops Overseas: Report"
Reuters, 05/15/2013"U.S. taxpayers are footing the bill for overseas lobbying that promotes controversial biotech crops developed by U.S.-based Monsanto Co. and other seed makers, a report issued on Tuesday said."
Supreme Court rules for Monsanto in Farmer's GM Soybean Seed Case
Wash Post, 05/14/2013"Farmers must pay Monsanto each time they plant the company’s genetically modified soybeans, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, rejecting an Indiana farmer’s argument that his unorthodox techniques did not violate the company’s patent."
"Climate Change Forecast To Shrink Habitat of Common Plants, Animals"
Reuters, 05/14/2013"The habitats of many common plants and animals will shrink dramatically this century unless governments act quickly to cut rising greenhouse gas emissions, scientists said on Sunday after studying 50,000 species around the world."
"Environmental Review to Delay Two Engineered Crops"
NY Times, 05/14/2013"Genetically engineered crops that could sharply increase the use of two powerful herbicides are now unlikely to reach the market until at least 2015 because the Department of Agriculture has decided to subject the crops to more stringent environmental reviews than it had originally intended."
"US Approves New Pesticides Linked To Mass Bee Deaths As EU Enacts Ban"
RT, 05/13/2013"In the wake of a massive US Department of Agriculture report highlighting the continuing large-scale death of honeybees, environmental groups are left wondering why the Environmental Protection Agency has decided to approve a 'highly toxic' new pesticide."
"Anglers Follow the Bugs to the Trout"
NY Times, 05/13/2013"WARM SPRINGS, Ore. — The sky was not exactly dark in a blotting-out-the-sun sense, but the salmon flies were certainly thick above central Oregon’s Lower Deschutes River. Thousands of female specimens circled 30 feet above the water’s surface, preparing to descend and drop their eggs. Occasionally, a bug would spiral slowly down to the river, flutter awkwardly on the surface, then disappear in a sudden splash."

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