«[Golden Malrin] is an important tool in
reducing fly populations which have the potential to spread disease to livestock and humans,» wrote Mark Newberg, a representative for Wellmark International in Schaumburg, Illinois, which produces Golden Malrin, in an email.
Not exact matches
The
flying foxes on Pemba Island in the Indian Ocean were
reduced to just a few individuals in the 1980s, but the
population recovered to more than 20,000 over the course of 20 years of conservation efforts.
He also makes the valid point that just 15 percent of the
population take 70 percent of the flights, and that they tend to be significantly richer than average, so that if governments are committed to
reducing their carbon footprints, not cutting the amount of
flying around that's done is fundamentally unjust to everyone else who has to cut back more.