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They are working to clean up oil without protection and the children are falling sick. They are doing it bare-handed without any protective gear.’ The forest also acts as a buffer to protect the coastline against cyclones and rising sea tides. Without any protective gear, this man collects heated oil.
The piece describes why this corner of the world often has an attitude toward indiscriminate hunting that ranges from laissez-faire to Wild West, and also the toll that the ensuing slaughter takes on populations of birds that are protected in their northern European summer homes.
It’s also endangered, with populations in India and Cambodia numbering barely around the 1,000 mark. National Geographic highlights the amazing story of how a group of villagers banded together to educate their neighbors and protect the Stork, a scavenger also called Hargilla (Sanskrit for “bone swallower”).
However, this offers no protection against superstition. . “You live your whole life just to travel to the place you?re re gonna die” (Craig Finn, “Blankets”). The Greater Coucal spends most of its life feeling superior to the Lesser Coucal. Traditional wisdom sometimes is massively overrated.
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