- EU vows firm response if Trump unleashes tariffs
- Trump says tariff 'pain' will be 'worth the price'
- Global warming makes French reservoir a winter resort for migrating cranes
- China shrugs off new Trump tariffs but bruising trade war looms
- Is it Beyonce's time? Music's A-listers ready for the Grammys
- Chappell Roan: the splashy pop supernova
- Trump unveils sweeping US tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China
- US unveils sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico, China
- Ex-Charlie Hebdo artist wins top prize at comics festival
- Trump tariff deadline looms, Canada told levies coming Tuesday
- Trump tariff deadline looms over Canada, Mexico, China trade
- Horst Koehler, German ex-president and IMF chief, dead at 81
- Pre-Grammys gala honoring the Grateful Dead focuses on fire relief
- Tradition and technology sync at China 'AI temple fair'
- Taliban govt-run corporation takes over luxury Kabul Serena hotel
- Benin seeks home-grown cotton 'revolution'
- A 'city-killer' asteroid might hit Earth -- how worried should we be?
- Philadelphia plane crash marks a second US aviation disaster
- OpenAI chief says it needs new open-source strategy
- Neymar signs for Santos
- US charges former Fed official with spying for China
- Meta mulling incorporation shift to Texas: report
- Scientists cast doubt on famous US groundhog's weather forecasts
- World's longest cargo sail ship launched in Turkey
- TikTok king Khaby Lame joins UNICEF as goodwill ambassador
- Stock markets mostly gain at end of turbulent week
- Stock markets gain at end of turbulent week
- Calls for UK govt to allow bird flu vaccines for poultry
- Offshore wind power giant Orsted changes CEO
- South Korea, Ireland watchdogs to question DeepSeek on user data
- Trio of rare tiger cubs spotted in Thai national park
- Stock markets close out turbulent week with gains
- South Korea watchdog to question DeepSeek over user data
- Kenya's Ice Lions skate to win on East Africa's only rink
- World awaits Trump tariff deadline on Canada, Mexico and China
- Samsung operating profit hit by R&D spending, fight to meet chip demand
- Japan records biggest jump in foreign workers
- Asian markets mostly rise but worries over tariffs, AI linger,
- Investigators recover plane black boxes from Washington air collision
- 'No happiness': Misery for Myanmar exiles four years on from coup
- Ghosts of past spies haunt London underground tunnels
- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Marianne Faithfull: from muse to master
- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
CMSD | -1.59% | 23.84 | $ | |
BCC | -1.98% | 126.16 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.89% | 23.47 | $ | |
SCS | -1.39% | 11.48 | $ | |
BCE | -0.46% | 23.79 | $ | |
GSK | -0.26% | 35.27 | $ | |
AZN | -0.68% | 70.76 | $ | |
RIO | -0.83% | 60.41 | $ | |
BTI | -0.1% | 39.64 | $ | |
NGG | -0.55% | 61.4 | $ | |
RELX | -0.92% | 49.89 | $ | |
RBGPF | 100% | 67.27 | $ | |
BP | -1.77% | 31.06 | $ | |
VOD | -0.82% | 8.54 | $ | |
JRI | -0.32% | 12.53 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.81% | 7.43 | $ |
Global warming makes French reservoir a winter resort for migrating cranes
The Lac du Der was once just a passing glimpse for hundreds of thousands of cranes flying from Scandinavia in search of sunshine, but with global warming the French reservoir has become an attractive winter retreat.
Tens of thousands of the majestic birds now spend Europe's coldest months around the 48 square kilometre (19 square mile) expanse of water south of France's champagne capital of Reims.
Each year, the number increases and, every dawn, clouds of thousands of birds rise up to fly off in search of food in nearby fields.
Lac du Der was created in the 1970s to stop flood waters heading down the River Seine towards the Paris region.
For much of the time since, small islands in the lake were frozen over in the winter and so of no interest to the common cranes and sandhill cranes that passed over each year heading from Scandinavian countries to Spain and North Africa.
But the rising temperatures of recent decades, much of it blamed on human activity, mean the islets have become a haven for the birds. Nearby fields are also soft enough to find food.
The reservoir unwittingly established a "humid zone" for the cranes on their migration route, according to Benoit Fontaine, an ecologist for the French biodiversity office and the natural history museum.
"Now the birds do not have to go so far," he added.
Most cranes still head for the Mediterranean sunshine but the League for the Protection of Birds (LPO) estimates that up to 30,000 now spend winter around Lac du Der. It says the number has increased tenfold in the past decade.
The cranes have become an attraction for tourists armed with cameras. But local farmers complain of the damage to their land.
"They eat the seed or they tear up the wheat with their feet," complained Jean-Claude Laffrique, whose farm in the village of Scrupt is 20 kilometres (13 miles) from the lake.
Local residents are also woken up when the squadrons of cranes land nearby. Some experts say migrating birds play a key role in the spread of bird flu.
Laffrique has tried to scare off the cranes by putting old cars in his fields or using a scare cannon -- a tube connected to a gas bottle which makes noises. This year he has put up three windsurf boards with their sails.
"After a while, they get used to it," said the exasperated farmer, who like other landowners gets compensation from the regional government.
D.Avraham--CPN