“The best science long reads of 2017 (part two)”, BBC News

Science & Environment, London, 31 December 2017

From investigating the songbird trade in South-East Asia to hanging out with a man who keeps some very poisonous company, here’s a second festive selection of the best science and environment long reads this year. You can read part one here.

Sold for a song. By Victoria Gill

Lush green blankets of vegetation drape over Java’s steep mountains. But these dense rain forests – on Indonesia’s most crowded island – are rapidly falling silent. Songbirds that used to give the mountains a unique melody are being caught and sold.

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Weather forecasting’s post-1987 revolution. By David Shukman

On 15 October 1987, a BBC weather forecast, drawing on Met Office guidance, dismissed any suggestion that Britain might be hit by a hurricane. That night, the country was battered by high winds, leaving 18 people dead. For the 30th anniversary of the event, David Shukman looked at how technology has transformed weather forecasting in the time since the Great Storm.

Read the feature.


The man who keeps monsters. By Jonathan Amos

Nothing in your imagination can match some of the terrifying creatures that already exist in nature. Venom evolution expert Dr Ronald Jenner studies them up close.

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Botanical exploits: How British plant hunters served science. By Helen Briggs

In the early part of the 20th Century, British plant-hunters risked life and limb to explore the botanically rich interior of China in the name of science. The legacy of these expeditions can be seen in gardens across Britain today.

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Europa: Our best shot at finding alien life? By Paul Rincon

After two decades of development and “heartbreak”, scientists are on the verge of sending missions to explore the ocean world of Europa. Could this be our best chance of finding life elsewhere in the Solar System?

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Are your clothes polluting the ocean? By Victoria Gill

Polyester and acrylic clothing shed thousands of plastic fibres during a wash – sending plastic pollution down the drain and, eventually, into the ocean. From here, these fibres can get into the marine food chain. How can we tackle this threat to the environment?

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The other Dodo: Extinct bird that used its wings for clubs. By Rory Galloway

The extinct Dodo had a little-known relative on another island. This fascinating bird ultimately suffered the same fate as its iconic cousin, but we can reconstruct some of its biology thanks to the writings of a French explorer who studied it during his travels of the Indian Ocean.

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Why is it so hard to swat a fly? By Rory Galloway

Try to swat a fly and it will soon become clear that they’re faster than you. Much faster. But how on Earth do these tiny creatures – with their minuscule brains – outwit us so easily?

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What’s really the point of wasps? By Prof Adam Hart

The only thing more certain to spoil an August Bank Holiday weekend BBQ than a sudden cloudburst? The arrival of wasps. Though much maligned, these fascinating creatures perform a vital ecological role, say scientists.

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