Mexican environment minister quits after weed killer row by Staff Writers Mexico City (AFP) Sept 2, 2020 Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was hit Wednesday by his fourth cabinet resignation in less than two years as the environment minister quit after a row over a controversial weed killer. Victor Toledo, a 75-year-old prominent environmentalist, is "a first-class professional, but he is in poor health," Lopez Obrador, who came to power in December 2018, said as he announced the latest departure. Toledo opposes the use of glyphosate, which is classified as "probably carcinogenic" by the World Health Organization. The government has said it will gradually reduce imports of the herbicide. Toledo found himself embroiled in controversy last month after media reported a leaked conversation with other officials in which he purportedly criticized "contradictions" by Lopez Obrador. "We're not going to be able to move to agroecology (a sustainable food system) freely because the president, the agriculture minister and the president's chief of staff are against all this," he reportedly said. Lopez Obrador, however, said that Toledo had already informed him before the controversy erupted that he intended to resign. "Not all of us are made to resist pressure," said the president, who tapped Welfare Minister Maria Luisa Albores to fill the post. Toledo is the second environment minister to step down since Lopez Obrador took office vowing a pro-austerity and anti-corruption drive. The left-wing populist also lost a communications and transport minister, Javier Jimenez Espriu, who opposed his decision to put control of the ports and customs in the hands of the military. Last year, Carlos Urzua openly criticized the government when he quit as finance minister over what he called "disagreements" with Lopez Obrador.
Secret weapon to stop invasive honeysuckle: Satellites Cincinnati OH (SPX) Sep 01, 2020 One common invasive species is so widespread that you can see it from space. The University of Cincinnati found that satellite imagery can identify nonnative and invasive Amur honeysuckle, an ornamental shrub introduced from Asia that has spread in forests across much of the United States. UC graduate Bridget Taylor, UC biology professor Denis Conover and UC geography professor Richard Beck used satellite imagery to find nonnative invasive Amur honeysuckle in several urban parks and cemeteri ... read more
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