Environment
CO2 levels 'are highest since 1997'
Published: 23 October 2006
Carbon dioxide emissions have risen to their highest level since Labour came to power, a Friends of the Earth analysis of the Government's latest energy figures has found.
Britons 'waste more energy than anyone else in Europe'
Published: 23 October 2006
Research says that the British waste more energy than the inhabitants of other major European nations.
Cracking up: Ice turning to water, glaciers on the move - and a planet in peril
Published: 22 October 2006
Do fish feel pain?
Published: 22 October 2006
It's a mad, mad, mad autumn
Published: 22 October 2006
Indian summer may mean holly without berries this Christmas
Published: 21 October 2006
Think roast turkey without stuffing. Or the pudding without brandy butter. Tragic, but it may be about to happen this Christmas: holly without berries.
Call to protect orchards, the apple of England's eye
Published: 21 October 2006
Nature conservationists have called on the Government to protect Britain's traditional orchards from further destruction, on the grounds that cultivated fruit trees provide a rich habitat for wildlife.
Protesters stage 'die-in' to challenge climate change sceptics
Published: 21 October 2006
Environmental campaigners will hold a "die-in" today outside the offices of a research organisation which claims science has failed to prove human activity is the cause of climate change.
Climate change 'will cause refugee crisis'

Published: 20 October 2006
Mass movements of people across the world are likely to be one of the most dramatic effects of climate change in the coming century, a study suggests.
Revealed: how conservation efforts may be exacerbating the crisis in the seas

Published: 19 October 2006
Overfishing and the environmental degradation of the oceans are hitting fish populations with a "double whammy" from which many may not recover, a study has found.
Snow comes to Cornwall - but not the Cairngorms

Published: 19 October 2006
The image of Scotland's ice-capped mountains is in danger of becoming a thing of the past as rising temperatures threaten to wipe away the snow from the top of the country's highest and most rugged peaks.
Giant pandas: Born to be wild

Published: 19 October 2006
Memo to self: recycle

Published: 19 October 2006
Winners with animal magic

Published: 19 October 2006
The penetrating stare of a Dalmatian pelican was captured by Nils Grundmann when he was only 10 years old. Yesterday the image won him the youngest age group award for the Shell Wildlife Photographer of the Year.
Iceland defies world ban with return to whaling

Published: 18 October 2006
Iceland has decided to resume commercial whaling, in defiance of the 20-year-old international whaling moratorium. The country joins Norway in openly hunting the great whales for profit. In recent years it has been killing a small number of animals annually but saying it was hunting them for "scientific" reasons, as does Japan.
Invasion of the giant butterflies blown way off course

Published: 17 October 2006
A mini-invasion of giant butterflies from America has crowned a remarkable season of migrant butterflies and moths flocking to Britain.
How Government flights pumped out 1,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide

Published: 16 October 2006
Figures show the total distance flown by Government ministers and senior officials last year is equivalent to 14 return trips to the Moon.
How we have lost 200,000 miles of hedge in 60 years

Published: 15 October 2006
Invading 'killer' moth is no danger to humans, says Kew

Published: 15 October 2006
One of Britain's top attractions yesterday moved to reassure visitors after a potentially deadly exotic moth was found in the gardens.
Government considers Bill to cut emissions

Published: 13 October 2006
The Government may bow to mounting pressure from green groups and opposition parties by bringing in a Climate Change Bill.
Balmy autumn temperatures look set to be the hottest on record

Published: 13 October 2006
With bright sunny mornings and balmy afternoons, this year's autumnal weather has been more typical of Greece or Spain.
Rabies vaccine may save rarest wolf from extinction

Published: 12 October 2006
One of the rarest animals in the world might be saved from imminent extinction with the help of a rabies vaccine targeted at the most vulnerable members of the species.
Tissue firms accused of falling short on recycling

Published: 12 October 2006
It may sound like an impertinent question: does your loo paper really need to be quite so bright and fluffy? But it's serious, according to the green pressure group WWF, which says that too much virgin fibre from the world's forests is being used in lavatory tissue, when recycled fibre would be just as good.
Animal behaviour: Rogue elephants

Published: 12 October 2006
Dolphin-friendly tuna? Don't believe it

Published: 12 October 2006