News

Family-owned MVP Roofing expands from western Kansas into Salina. Co-owner Aaron Carswell, a 23-year Salina police officer, will lead the central Kansas operations. MVP offers giveback programs ...
Osaka (Japan) (AFP) – World Expo opens on Sunday with host Japan aiming to bring humanity together, despite global turmoil and tepid public enthusiasm for the six-month event showcasing ...
The presence of blue-green algae in Martray Lough near Ballygawley is "disheartening", the Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (Daera) has said. With the recent good weather ...
Concerned member of environmental group ‘Save Our Shores, Protect Lough Neagh and our inland Waterways’, Thomas McElhone, says that ‘This green pestilence ( algae ) is back’. Did you know ...
CEO John Warner said part of the problem is animals are eating fish that have consumed algae containing a toxin called domoic acid. "It's a neurological toxin. It affects their brains. They're ...
Florida dolphins are starving to death because of harmful marine algae blooms, researchers have said. In 2013, 8 percent of the bottlenose dolphins living in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon perished.
With a recent bloom of toxic algae, beachgoers in coastal North County have been seeing dead or sick sea lions, dolphins and other marine life washed ashore over the last few weeks. The city of ...
Kubota of Salina has announced the grand opening of its transformed dealership experience, serving the heart of Kansas’s agricultural, construction, and rural lifestyle communities. According to a ...
Salina and surrounding communities will see a significant increase in military presence over the coming weeks as more than 600 service members arrive to take part in Jaded Thunder, a comprehensive ...
Although toxic algae no longer scums the surface of the shallow body of water, is the water safe? A longtime resident who has advocated for better management of the lake remains skeptical ...
A research team led by the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW) was able to revive dormant stages of algae that sank to the bottom of the Baltic Sea almost 7,000 years ago.
The peculiar color results from algae and bacteria, and although safe for humans ... thanks to its high salt content and the Dunaliella salina bacteria. Salt production and tourism thrive alongside ...