The Rivers Trust is this week launching the Big River Watch, asking people to record observations of their local rivers on a free app.
The results will be made available through an interactive dashboard, and will help the organisation, as well as individuals and communities who can all access the data, to take action to improve rivers.
Volunteers will be asked to identify sewage pollution, sewage fungus, minewater and silt, along with other indicators of river health, so pollution hotspots can be identified and tackled. The Rivers Trust is hoping for it to be the UK and Ireland's biggest ever mass participation survey of river health.
Denne historien er fra May 03, 2024-utgaven av The Guardian.
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Denne historien er fra May 03, 2024-utgaven av The Guardian.
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Noise, crime, crowds Rise in tourism stokes tensions in bustling Lake District town
Even on a weekday afternoon at the very tail end of summer, Bowness-onWindermere is bustling with life. Outside the town's pubs and bars, drinkers sip lager and sparkling wine in the warm September sun.
EU's new proposals on youth mobility will put Starmer 'reset' to test
Fresh proposals to allow young people to move between Britain and the EU will be presented to the British government within weeks, in what is seen as a significant early test of Labour's \"reset\" in relations with Brussels.
Reform can win election, Farage tells conference full of hard-right rhetoric
Nigel Farage has predicted he can win the next general election at a packed Reform UK conference that announced a new structure for the party but also leaned heavily into hard-right tropes and occasional conspiracy theories.
Labour Party must focus on cost of living and NHS to keep voters-study
Keir Starmer won the election owing to a ruthless focus on winning over people who voted Conservative in 2019, but the party has been left with a \"fragile coalition\" of supporters who will abandon it if it fails to deal with the cost of living crisis and the NHS, a thinktank has found.
Angela Rayner 'Within five years, people will have a better life'
A longside Michael Foot's \"donkey jacket\", an empty can of BrewDog's Barnard Castle Eye Test beer and a pike from Peterloo, sits a new exhibit at the People's History Museum in Manchester: the jacket Angela Rayner wore when she first stood in at prime minister's questions against Boris Johnson.
The Perfect Couple Were cast right to try to veto opening dance?
Anyone who has been watching The Perfect Couple - Nicole Kidman's glossy whodunnit, which is Netflix's most popular show this month - will have many questions.
Jewish Chronicle How fabrications of writer who came 'out of nowhere' shook the paper
Elon Perry gave the impression he was a mover and a shaker.
Mossad mystery Chequered history of spy agency that is yet to admit sabotage
Israel's foreign intelligence service, usually known as the Mossad, has scored many spectacular wins in almost 80 years of undercover operations, earning a unique reputation for audacious espionage and ruthless violence.
A monster': Abusive Fayed likened to Savile by lawyers acting for alleged survivors
The former Harrods owner Mohamed AI Fayed was a \"monster\" whose sexual abuse of women could be compared to the cases of Jimmy Savile, Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein, lawyers representing dozens of alleged survivors have said.
Not sci-fi: a full-body scanning chamber that can assess your health risks in minutes - for £299
In the 2016 movie Passengers, the crew of a spacecraft bound for a distant planet had access to a scanning chamber known as Autodoc that could instantly diagnose their medical problems and even predict the time of their death.