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Dozens of CA events this weekend honor Latino Conservation Week; Kamala Harris joins Oprah Winfrey in emotional campaign event; Report finds poor working conditions in Texas clean energy industry; AI puts on a lab coat, heads to technical schools.

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Rising threats of political violence, a Federal Reserve rate cut, crypto industry campaign contributions and reproductive rights are shaping today's political landscape.

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A USDA report shows a widening gap in rural versus urban health, a North Carolina county remains divided over a LGBTQ library display, and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz' policies are spotlighted after his elevation to the Democratic presidential ticket.

What Spring Has Sprung in Connecticut

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Thursday, April 15, 2010   

NEW HAVEN, Conn. - More potent poison ivy and an exploding deer tick population are just two of a list of changes happening in the environment, according to a new report from the National Wildlife Federation (NWF). The study tracks how climate change is helping some less-desirable species of wildlife thrive.

NWF senior scientist Doug Inkley says it means more people around the world will be introduced to the deer tick - the so-called vector, or host, that carries and causes Lyme disease, which takes its name from Lyme, Connecticut, where the disease first gained notoriety.

"The deer tick, which only goes as far north at the U.S.-Canadian border, will probably, by the end of the century, be able to reach all the way up to just south of Hudson Bay, about a 60 percent range expansion."

The report also shows that poison ivy appears to be growing more toxic because of increased levels of carbon dioxide.

Inkley says evidence uncovered and made public in the new report makes an even stronger scientific argument that climate change is more than theoretical.

"The plants and the animals are already responding to the changes in the climate. That is additional evidence on top of the data that the scientists have collected on the climate itself."

The complete report is at www.nwf.org




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