tv [untitled] November 22, 2021 6:30am-7:01am AST
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up to the fans and the global team. so we'll come to this region for the 1st time and make this tournaments one for the history books. dorset jabari al jazeera doha, is by that much more on our website. it's out there at dot com. it's updated throughout the day for our top story. that car plan through crowd in the us. ah. you will walk through there with me here robin the headquarters here in doha. let's bring you all told stories. sedans reinstated, prime minister abdulla hum dock has promising a technocratic government preventing the country's military takeover handed spec exclusively to al jazeera. after reaching a deal with the military chief and the elections within 18 months. how can i read him in the cold concept of the upcoming government is that it will be a technocratic government, made up of sudanese, qualified professionals about one and a half years are left out of the transitional period. therefore,
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the upcoming government, according to me, should focus on very specific issues, chiefly the completion of transition into a democracy. and it's related obligations like the convenience of the constitutional conference. i'm holding the elections. a number of people have been killed after a car drove into a crowd jagger parade in the us city of walker show in wisconsin. more than 20 people including children, take the hospital following the incident. fall right populist has a antonio cast as leading and chillies. presidential election with 28 percent support with navy, all of the vote counted. he's facing of an off in december with a former student protest. eda gabriel bar at 225 percent support falls of clothes in venezuela, while millions voted in regional and local elections. the main opposition is taking part for the 1st time in 4 years. $100.00 observers from the european union are
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also monitoring the process to missionaries kidnapped in hazy last month have been released. that's according to christian 8 ministries. they were among 17 from the us and canada who are ducted close to the capital porto prince 5 weeks ago. australia has announced its biggest change to foreign travel restrictions since the start of the pandemic. so fully vaccinated students and work visa holders will be able to fly into the country from next month. australia may also welcome vaccinated citizens from south korea, and japan. and cutoff is marking one. yeah. until the 1st much kicks off. on the 2022 fif, woke up the countdown clock was unveiled at the celebration of the capital dough home. it will be the 1st time the world cup will be played in the middle east. those were the headlines. i'll be back with more news in half my next door now to 0 . it's earth rise to stay with us. ah
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. knowledge is here. with every oh, a with insects make up 80 percent of the species on us for over 200000000 of them for every human they play a critical role. pollinating crops, decomposing waste and supporting food chain with a german study from 2017, has caused worldwide to lum, showing that in some areas flying insect numbers of food and by over 75 percent in
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the last 27 years. and humans are to blame. if development and pesticide to use continue, we could soon face what some experts calling in sick to get in the ecological collapse of the insect population. what is to happen? it would change life on earth as we know it. mm. i'm, yeah. well, i'm in new zealand where an enterprising group of scientists, a bringing a dinosaur era insect back from the brink of extinction. and i'm guillory to robbie in great britain to see how overlooked industrial wastelands being turned into bug reserves in. ah, you zealand is rich in wild and because of its isolation, there are hundreds of plants and animals that evolved here that i found nowhere
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else that human introduce pests have threatened and even wiped out many species. one of those in the native went up hunger. it's one of the world's heaviest insects and has been around for a 190000000 years. even out living the dinosaurs. they used to be found all over new zealand, but now be close to extinction. these amazing ancient creatures play a vital role in me co system and without the other native plants and wild life could also disappear forever. the oakland z has launched a set of programs to save the winter pongo with her. starting with a new interactive exhibition that aims to excite the next generation about like a bug lead. featuring giant 3 d model in sex with educational games and
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puzzles, bud lab shows just how fascinating with so what, what do you like about these? really, to me even really day to be really cool. these children have never seen a wet of hunger yet, had they lived several generations ago. they would have spotted them in the garden hose learning center guide coast mcfarland, explains why we should all care more about our native insect. fascinating and people dismiss them and not only that, they're really, really important for the environment may as how everything works together with that and think we will be here. how important is it to teach young people about in things? well, they have a 5th, all right, for the other one forgot to have to be helping to keep and think fight for this coming invented by can really can wasn't good for that. yeah. it's not with them. i've been that kinda be right,
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so this is can be great raising awareness of causes, but it's just on the other side of the that some really significant work is being done to protect and revive the threatened wit upon god. i'm meeting ben. goodwood and then tamala, just at oakland, is weight upon good breeding program. have n t a y. good thanks. how you doing? this is where i went to market this is one of the world's only industrialized insect conservation programs providing be optimum light and temperature conditions for winter hunger. so these are the ones that you read. yep . some adult would appear in here. incredible, massive. they one of the heaviest and 6 in the world. this is an adult a now, so they don't get too much bigger than us. went upon the 2 way up to 70 grams. that's the equivalent of 3 small mice to think i can call her shot. wow,
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incredible. today john, do they? why not so they totally flightless, they're really good camouflage. they know they very, very well adapted for predators. but mammals can just smell them out. is that why i thought it to die out? really common in the middle part of the 18, hundreds and in humans, accidentally devilish rent, museums and funds in the industry. and i would like to place things everywhere, aside from one on the side, effects of incredible. why would you save the lab from that? they have a function supply and the ecology it's foliage because net to the ground spaces, which i read about up to the can see with the breeding program started in 2012 with only 12 sweat her. since then, is a 3 and a half 1000 insects have been released onto
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a few key islands which still provide the ideal conditions for them to flourish. to day bends, readying a batch for transport. laser be the easiest ones to learn because it, alas said us hope and comes out by light hide these little choose to me and it is the size that you want to be taken to the island. yeah. once they've got a bit of size along the a little bit more robust about fuel printers in the site around the world. oh yeah, sure with that's wrong. all right, so that's the 1st thing i also, adjuster tele here, wants to success rates as your rating program to 90 percent of all right, which is really, really good. did interesting. they're upset that we're working them out. i'm sure there is one. there was on to greg since everything was really, really seems not as bad here. we found 385 ways have packed and ready
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to move. it's time to head to the docs. ah, we're off to a private island in the house. okay, golf, when a fall, still hospitable to winter, it's a one hour boat journey from the mainland. broad and su neu to the islands owners. avid conservationists who have given their land over to the protection of native species. you must be rod. yeah, r n a. have you always been involved in the releases as much as possible in 2003? broaden su, finally, breed the island of invasive mammals, like rat stokes and feral cats making it a safe home for wet of hunger. ah,
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we never really looked at ourselves as owners, but more as i am guardians of the wonderful place that we've had the privilege of growing up and how does releasing the when a pongo onto the island actually fit into all of your plans. so they're critical to the health of the island. nothing exists and i for license. so the, when a pongo are a bit of a, one of the missing links ahead for the 1st part of the jigsaw. even though with her or a crucial piece of the landscape here, the young insect still need to be handled carefully. which means selecting the perfect spot for then you home, walk away. last paradigm. how do you choose the fights where you release, where says, yes. so this is one of our lay sites here. and so we want to look for places, got lots of hardings bought. and somebody that's got lots and lots of good through plants as well. my goodness, this is incredible. how, how old is history?
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does estimated to be about 800 years old because he was a fickle palate from now. one of the, with a plan is massive. good way to him sometimes to take it presents if he can actually find them. and i thought he really important for the ecosystem. yeah. yes. so that's impactful. you transfer that is recycling with eating that could fill up the pants on the soil health. finding these droppings isn't tony a sign of a healthy environment, but also evidence of an already thriving population. that will surely vocab newcomers. this is kind of the ideal spot where the best place now on for them to be released into his go heaps and heaps, and heaps of body whole school. when upon his one of their preferred plants, they can go from the spring in boston is right across the whole forest here, cuz it's got a huge crown on the west. i will be released at night when they are most active. this pink tape will help us find this spot in the dark later on.
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i can't believe they've trusted me with things. well. all right, the start of the early start here. yeah. a hey conceal actual act of loans when she went in and we're going to release more on this and i will move along in your how important is it for you to reestablish would upon go here? awesome. because the just giving back something that probably would have been here years and years ago. hopefully the droppings will enter the forest, m on another one. it is
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a real soft touch on the back. for how much longer do you think you'll be doing these sorts of releases for but a few more releases to do. and then after that it's mainly just monitoring the populations. allen's big one with a panda now exists on full islands. as in basic predators slowly removed from other locations. that number is expected to rise. the hope is that one day wait upon the could return to the mainland where they want thrived me. there is certainly the bills change here and more people and institutions are taking action in support of native species. the government has even committed to rid the country of human introduced pest by 2015. there is still a long way to go, but at least the future is now looking optimistic full upon ah
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ah, a plants reproductive cells, a found in its pullin. when an insect visits a flower to feed off, its nectar. pullin rubs off from the mail stamen on the insect, and sticks to the hairs on its body. as the insect moves on to another flower grains of pollen, a transfer to the female stigma that's when pollination happens. so that seats and fruit are produced around 75 percent of all crop species require pollination by an animal. often insects including beads, but also other animals such as birds and bats. but 2 out of 5 insect pollinators disappearing and with them, our food supply. in southwest china, wild bees have been eradicated by intensive farming. so people are doing the work.
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the bes once did. every year in hon. one county, thousands of villages painstaking me pollinate every single apple and pear blossom by hand. using a long stick attached to brushes or chicken feathers. the method works with some high value produce, but simply aren't enough people to pollinate all the world's crops. much more effective would be to nurture pollen 80 and set populations in orchards by banning pesticides and planting natural habitats. bees and other insects have been safeguarding our food supply for millennia. the least we can do in return is to provide them with what they need to survive. ah, with a long history of habitat last and industrialized farming here for seen. so in the worst cases of insect the klein annexation in the world,
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i've come to the u. k. to see how all industrial sites are being into bug reserves in an attempt to reverse this warring trans in professor dave colson has been studying in sex for over 20 years. and understands just how damaging their rapid decline could be. but it goes away or insects disappearing that there's a whole host of challenges, but they face all to do with us. modern farming methods become very reliant on using lots and lots of pesticides. which mean the pharma can grow our perfect monoculture. we are not an insect inside the entire botanical diversity surrounding us is just a handful of species instead of the hundreds, a spacious that used to live here. and a lot of people think of this is what the, the british countryside should look like. but it's only been like this for a few decades. it's eisley makes the landscape uninhabitable for most insects. is
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there anything we can do to turn this around or have we sort of passed the tipping point for some seizures, it's too late. some have gone extinct, but for the majority, they're still here. and we need to make sure we look after that. we should be absolutely terrified to bypass this should should be something that everyone is talking about and everyone is keen to fix. because if, if we don't, we face of really bleak future with that. ah, that's a call to arms if there ever was one. and here in the u. k. some groups are taking the warnings of entomologist seriously. i'm on my way to canvie where to see the you case 1st reserve for in sacks. i'm due to me, dr. sarah henshaw, an entomologist, a bug life, an organization dedicated to the protection of insects. but this desolate ex industrial or brownfield site is not exactly what i was expecting. hello, you must be sarah. hi, barry here soon. i'm very hi. welcome to come. you just see those guys that is one
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of the machine by diverse wildlife rich sites in britain. so you want to take a look, i really with one of those places to be if i used to pay an oil refinery, you can see remnants of industry all around us has been abandoned for more than 40 years. and why is an old oil refinery, an ideal spot for protecting bugs? it hasn't been managed, has been made pesticides. so providing natural habitats that have been lost in the wider landscape. wildlife is using, this is a refuge and rarely for ah, sarah, what's as it looks like a helicopter should be landing any minute now. has it a large tarmac base? there's about 30 of them across the site. they would have. how was the large oil storage tank is, but as you can see, nature is coring back. and how many species of insects are there on the same with
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over $2500.00 different species on this site alone include him so much found nowhere else. this is why the site is a you case, 1st book reserve. can we try to find so we can little hunting for things about brownfields i, which makes it who made it is all these different habitat and really small play. so therapy grounds, bath burrow and nest flowers to feed on, scrub and trees to over winter and provide a bit shelter is an amazing mosaic edison. they need all in one place. so why are these insects so important to the natural landscape? so we need healthy intro, systems invertebrates indicate for us, if their books are happy and the megaphone is happy. so the mammals and the birds also happy. so when he's looking for the books and everything else will fall, it's line can't be week, has been described as a little brownfield rain for us. and i can definitely see why there are bugs everywhere. so many that a team of volunteers carry out surveying work throughout the whole year,
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rory and imagery and already have their morning's work set out on their, which doubles as a lab. i need to reach here what's going on and here this guy's really active. so that all ground beetles, those of predatory species, that a living this bad open ground a conduit, we've got a few species that are actually only found here. oh, did you catch these all today or over the past week j, even though it's quite a cold spring day to day, still see those of which diversity of life he on can be what? and what will this help you establish moving forward? so give us a good, a sign of what's here, and then that way we can see how it's improved. and what we're seeing more of what we're seeing less of doing regular studies like this in such a bite of as hot spot like can be weight is really important to see how the rest of the country is doing. do you release the insects or do you take them back to a laboratory? what happens to them? most of them we can isaiah on site. so ethan released and then made that day. however, some of them we might need to take back to the have
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a better look at kind of counselors this. this is a lucky, more caterpillar, where they are live and saw this protective web on the high choice. you used to find an app, you went out in the u. k. but you, you too modern landscapes each holiday for these classes willis and can't you wake? we've seen them all over the place. i think this is the perfect example. it shows what the he's at banding sites that are acting as real racking 2 species, a declining elsewhere. well, the surviving on site like this blue since bug life started surveying nearly 10 years ago. 3 insect species believed to be extinct, have been discovered here. it can be wick, it's exciting and i can't resist trying to find a few myself. okay, one thing with soccer. so all right, i had something excellent. this is a true back here. i have a floor, i have a fi, but i really quickly pulls until ecosystem and a lot of our insect life are quite fabulous. we'll floyers with them as well as
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the bus buys and bumblebees. yeah, i it all seems like good fun. but this surveying is crucial, not only for monitoring insect numbers, but also managing the land so that it provides the best possible habitat for these creatures. the thrive image and has offered to show me a declining species that need some special treatment. or we haven't heard of it and say that a brown bonded car debate and it's one of the 200 different species of beasts and was that you can find on this site. i'm a little what can you do here is to remove some vegetation. they have some background that they can borrow into and make what we call our b cliffs. removing vegetation sounds counter intuitive to a nature lover like myself, but i mentioned as the expert, so i'll wait to see what she has to show me. she's taking me to find an elevated spot to create our b class. so here we are 3 of them. so what we're gonna be doing is we're going to be going back
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a lot of the grass on the lot of the scrub. a lot of people when they want to save invertebrates, they think that they have to part these while far meadows, which is incredibly important. but also they do really need these nice bare areas that they can live in and how do they occupy the space? so they sort of burrow into the fans. yes, there. what i'll do is i'll probably find a new whole like this one here. and on think a little math into there and the know lay the eggs. knew they were really good. again. tell this clearly. yeah, definitely learning is so amazing to be so close to it, especially when it's such a rice rash. when we often think of conservation and saving species, we just think of the meadows and he's perfectly manicured, landscape, or we're in the middle of a waste land. it's not a wasteland to them. it's their home and it's in fact, the last place they can be in this area. so it's really important that we take that into consideration when we make decisions about line in to date can be week,
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has been a resounding success. ah, but to save britons in sax, more land must be given over to their protection. sarah wants me to see another site that bug life is looking to reclaim 20 kilometers down the road at west 30 marshes. if successful, it could add an additional 7 heck, tears of protected habitat to the cause. it's been acquired very little with young fight. i've been here few times. i'm really fight show you ah oh, before the site we've abandoned it was a comb fired power station. black. the strike is the fly ash, which is the byproduct later on in these low nutrient pool. call it you really favor lots of wildflowers that boom will be lost. hover flies, bush flies will really love and take advantage of the try. and i,
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it looks like wasteland. so we had to do a huge amount of work. campaigning, raising awareness, and we hope he's going to be one of our next book reserves. and do you have a lot of resistance when you approach developers and local governments? when you want to talk about conservation on sites that could earn a lot of money for them. of course, because this is prime development land. fortunately in japan, yet half of the brown federal person just to land in the 10th gateway, already been developed to demonstrate the need for sites just can be wet and hopefully this in the future that preserve and save because we're losing this resource quicker than we even finding out how important is the site provides an amazing opportunity to challenge perception on the key driver for fighting good books. they are important and i think we should have more of, you know, i mean the u. k. elsewhere well, in after hanging out with sarah and her
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amazing team a bug life, i don't think i can ever go by any piece of land, no matter how derelict and forgotten and not see its full potential. and we really need to have the shift in perspective because as our own, the rapidly grows an industrialized land. every square inch, county, and bike, protecting our insect neighbors were ultimately safeguarding our own future. i ah, insects numbers are in steep decline. but across the globe, people are endeavoring to reverse this alarming trends. ah, in the us conservationists at oregon zoo, a saving to local butterflies species by breeding and releasing as many as 2000 along the coast each year and an engineering student to climate frayza
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university in canada. as designed to real time be hiv monitoring system to track b health through microphones and heat senses. by helping to pinpoint the causes of colony collapse, disorder or invention has the potential to save millions of bees. ah, the race is on to prevent the collapse of the planets in set populations. if life on earth is to continue as we know it, then we need to move fast ah. in columbia, transforming open ways to building drug use is to for a same there waste left of the war. we can finish their house in charge of fishing in america. just can use any single pole critical forms and living buildings. anything you do on land, on the ground doesn't make sense to do that apply on a building. now can, we might have not just decorative,
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but can we make it biologically productive earth right? describe as cutting edge solution for sustainable city. on al jazeera, compelling journalism, we keeping our distance because it's actually quite dangerous. ambulances continue to arrive at the scene of the explosion. inspire program making. i still don't feel like i actually know enough about living under fascism was light. how much money did you make for your bro in delay? rent and late february al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 5th year running. oh, there's a lot more in al jazeera than t v. with our website mobile app, social media and podcast, al jazeera digital is the world award winning online content. and each week on portal will bring you the very best of it. they're trying to brighten the people to be the to go somewhere else. but the truth is that it got nowhere else to go. so if
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you missed it online, catch up here with me, sandra goldman on al jazeera ah, promising a technocratic government focused on democratic transition to dallas, reinstated prime minister of dela. hm dot speaks exclusively to al jazeera after deal with the military. ah, hello robin. you're watching old. is there a lot of my headquarters here in doha, coming up in the program? today, our community faced hor tragedy in what should have been a community celebration. a number of people have been killed and more than 20 injured as an s u. v is driven into.
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