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Billion people face global flooding risk

A British aid charity is warning that by 2060 more than a billion people worldwide will live in cities at risk of catastrophic flooding as a result of climate change.

A study by Christian Aid says the US, China and India are among the countries most threatened.

It says the Indian cities of Kolkata and Mumbai will be most at risk.

The eight most vulnerable cities on the list are all in Asia, followed by Miami in the US.

The report urges governments to take action to reduce global warming and invest in disaster reduction programmes.

Dr Alison Doig, the report's author, told the BBC World Service that people living in large coastal cities were particularly at risk.

"I think it's cities like Kolkata, Dakar, the big mega-cities of the south and the emerging economies where the people are most vulnerable to exposure to sea-level rises and to higher rain events," she said.

"Flooding in these cities can cause massive damage, but can also threaten life."

Dr Doig warned that Florida was likely to suffer extensive flooding.

"The whole of Florida is totally vulnerable," she said.

"It is so low-lying, it is virtually swampland reclaimed. So significant climate change... raising water half to a full metre this century, will take out an awful lot of Florida and a significant amount of Miami."

Gorillas chimps threatened by human disease

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Gorillas and chimps are threatened by human disease

 

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In a bid to save wild apes from extinction, people may

be unwittingly infecting them with potentially deadly diseases, new research

shows.

Humans and great apes are closely related, creating the potential for

diseases to jump between them.

Isolated incidents have been documented of apes and monkeys contracting

measles, pneumonia, and influenza from people, as well as a range of other

bacteria, viruses and parasites.

But the problem may be greater than even that, as highlighted by five

recently published academic studies.

 

Your close cousins

English translation unavailable for Biodiversity and language diversity and loss linked..

Humans killed off Australia's giant beasts

An extinct marsupial mega-herbivore
Scientists have linked a dramatic decrease in spores found
 
in herbivore dung to the arrival of humans in  

Australia 41,000 years ago.

 

 

Humans hunted Australia's giant

vertebrates to extinction about 40,000 years ago, the latest research published

in Science has concluded.

The cause of the widespread extinction has provoked much debate, with climate

change being one theory.

However, scientists studied dung samples from 130,000 and 41,000 years ago,

when humans arrived, and concluded hunting and fire were the cause.

The extinction in turn caused major ecological changes to the landscape.

The scientists looked at pollen and charcoal from Lynch's Crater, a

sediment-filled volcanic crater in Queensland that was surrounded by tropical

rainforest until European settlement.

They found Sporormiella spores, which grow in herbivore dung, virtually

disappeared around 41,000 years ago, a time when no known climate transformation

was taking place.