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* Workplace Parking Levy would be an excellent way for Nottingham to fund serious carbon cuts, FoE, September 24 topic
* Workplace parking levy will help Nottingham, July 31 topic Your comment - Contribute via our Forums or a type article, or on any article via its talk page - click on 'talk' link at top of page
* Nottingham City Council unanimously passes Peak oil motion, December 9 topic, place First record of non-native species in East Midlands worries wetland wildlife experts Last week, (17/10/05), wetland wildlife experts from across the region came face to face with a creature that poses a potentially lethal threat to the future of our native white clawed crayfish. Representatives from The Wildlife Trusts, Severn Trent Water and the Environment Agency gathered at the Attenborough Nature Reserve for a special ‘Water for Wildlife’ meeting and as part of the programme they saw live spiny cheek crayfish – a species which has recently been found to be breeding at the reserve. This is the first time the creature has been recorded in the East Midlands and wildlife experts are worried that this alien species could spell disaster for the native white clawed crayfish if it were to spread to other water bodies. It was thought that signal crayfish had become established at Attenborough as it has across much of the country but Wildlife Trust staff and volunteers were shocked to find that we had the spiny cheek variety. The species can cause ecological damage due its burrowing activities, and it can also damage populations of aquatic plants and invertebrates, which it eats in profusion. It is known to carry the organism that causes crayfish plague – spread by a parasitic fungus, Aphanomyces astaci. The plague is lethal to European crayfish, including our own white-clawed crayfish, Austropotamobius pallipes. The Wildlife Trust is urging fishermen to take extra precautions to ensure that they don’t contribute to the spread of the disease by disinfecting their equipment (including waders) or leaving it to dry out in the sun. In July '05 the Health In Your Environment voluntary sector forum held a seminar about climate change and health with Rob Crowder from Nottinghamshire County Council and Jonathan Harris, Assistant Director of Public Health for the East Midlands. A short report of the event is now available on the publications page at the HIYE website. (20/9/05)
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