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April 18, 2008

The League of Conservation Voters’ (LCV) Web site is a great place to start. You can find scorecards for each of the 2008 presidential candidates — based on their environmental voting records — here.

The LCV doesn’t only cover presidential races. You can find out how your state ranks overall on environmental issues, and look up the environmental rankings (based on voting records) for every senator and house representative in your state, as well. Click here to get started.

For more information and additional resources, read Where do the Presidential Candidates Stand on Environmental Issues?, from Mother Earth News.

— Aubrey Vaughn, assistant editor, Mother Earth News 
April 4, 2008

First, thank those industrious bees for gracing your garden! Bees are terrific pollinators, and they’re presence in your garden is great news for the flowers you enjoy so much. With so much concern over Colony Collapse Disorder, there are many people who would love to have such a worry.

And, actually, honeybees aren’t likely to bother you unless you disturb them or their hive. You go about your business, they’ll go about theirs (making sure the flowers keep coming back!). Pay attention, and use common sense. Also, avoid wearing bright clothing, and skip perfume or heavily scented lotions when you know you’re headed outside. That said, you can’t be expected to keep track of every critter in your garden at every moment. If you are ever stung, you can find a few natural bee sting remedies here.

— Aubrey Vaughn, assistant editor, Mother Earth News 

How can I make homemade laundry soap?

— Diane Mendel
Atlanta, Georgia
March 21, 2008

Making Earth- and people-friendly laundry soap is simple and inexpensive. For starters, try this easy whitening formula from Natural Home magazine:

Bleach/Brightener Substitute
1 cup hydrogen peroxide
1/4 cup lemon or grapefruit juice
12 cups water

Store in a labeled plastic jug. Add 2 cups per load.

You also can find great recipes for Washing Powder and Pre-wash Stain Spray here.

— Aubrey Vaughn, assistant editor, Mother Earth News 
March 7, 2008

A lot of people scratch their heads about this. A good starting place is to consider the great fortune each United States citizen has: We inherit 623 million acres, thanks to the foresight of earlier generations. Those lands come in four varieties: national parks, national forests, national wildlife refuges and western areas overseen by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM, the largest of the four).

— Ben Beach, senior editor, The Wilderness Society

 

What's the most endangered mammal in the United States?

— Bailey Wabash
Evansville, Indiana

The United States is home to 416 mammal species and about 9 percent of the world’s total, placing us sixth among nations in mammal diversity. Currently 83 mammals are listed under the Endangered Species Act as either threatened or endangered. One-fifth of the U.S. mammals on the list of endangered species are bats, which may surprise many, but not when you consider the fact that bats (order Chiroptera) also represent approximately one-fifth of mammal species worldwide. 

Some of the mammals on the list of endangered species are considered genetically distinct sub-species of more common animals such as the Key deer and Florida Panther. Others receive the legal protection under the Endangered Species Act only in portions of their historic range where they may have become threatened. Good examples would be the grizzly bear and grey wolf in the lower 48 states, whose populations in Alaska are considered relatively secure. 

— Alan Pollom, director of the Kansas chapter of The Nature Conservancy