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US postal workers help out with the nation's largest one-day food drive. A union coalition in California advocates for worker rights amidst climate challenges. Livestock waste is polluting 'Pure Michigan' state image. And Virginia farm workers receive updated heat protection guidelines.

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Republicans seek to prevent nearly nonexistent illegal noncitizens voting, Speaker Johnson survives a motion to remove him, and a Georgia appeals court will reconsider if Fulton County DA Willis is to be bumped from a Trump case.

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Some small towns in North Dakota worry they'll go to pot if marijuana is legalized, school vouchers are becoming a litmus test for Republicans, and Bennington, Vermont implements an innovative substance abuse recovery program.

Report: Climate Change Pace Moving Faster Than Birds Can Fly

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Friday, July 5, 2013   

PHOENIX – Birds are often considered highly adaptable, but a new report from the National Wildlife Federation claims that many species are struggling as the climate changes.

In Arizona, the effects are seen in the more than 500 species that migrate – including 150 species of hummingbirds.

NWF senior scientist Doug Inkley says people may assume that migratory birds have an advantage because they can fly to different places.

"The opposite is true,” he says. “They're actually more vulnerable than most of the species that are more residential in nature.

“Migratory birds face the unique challenge of climate change potentially affecting any of the multiple habitats that they require – to breed, to migrate and to overwinter."

Inkley says one problem with changing flight patterns and timing is that the birds show up at the wrong times for their natural food sources.

The Shifting Skies report cites climate change as the biggest threat to birds in this century.

Western forests are seeing pine beetle infestations that the report says are climate-related.

Nic Callero, the NWF’s regional outreach coordinator, says that starts a chain reaction that ends up affecting birds.

"What we're seeing right now is a huge increase in large-scale forest fires from that specific climate impact,” he explains. “And when these fires burn out of control, they burn hotter and they burn larger, we see a huge impact on wildlife and also on many of the migratory bird species."

The report makes some recommendations for curbing climate change, including more aggressive enforcement of the Clean Air Act, doing more to encourage clean energy development and minimizing coal as a power source.







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