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North Texas man's body and his dog recovered after drowning in Argyle pond • 'Power Soccer' program gives athletes with disabilities a chance to compete in DFW • Fifth Third Bank to lay off more than 100 employees at Frisco office after $10.9B merger • 'Your job is at risk': A North Texas county's data center fight is playing out in two places at once • Is your city one of America's fittest? Here's how North Texas ranked in 2026. • Lawsuit alleges North Texas university housed students in mold-contaminated dorms • Taiwan tech giant Foxlink chooses Fort Worth for first U.S. AI factory • Trinity Metro services return to normal operations as FIFA wraps up World Cup in North Texas • Collin County Dems want state to investigate whether Ken Paxton violated Texas election law • Frisco businessmen ordered to pay $400 million in damages for fraud scheme • The City of Celina and the Celina EDC Announce Major New Development in Downtown Celina • Frisco man sentenced to 50 years for violent machete attack against a security guard • Dallas Man Sentenced to 15 Years for Attempted Armed Robbery of Lyft Driver. • What comes after North Texas' final World Cup match? • Frisco man sentenced to 20 years for abusing child at furry convention • North Texas man's body and his dog recovered after drowning in Argyle pond • 'Power Soccer' program gives athletes with disabilities a chance to compete in DFW • Fifth Third Bank to lay off more than 100 employees at Frisco office after $10.9B merger • 'Your job is at risk': A North Texas county's data center fight is playing out in two places at once • Is your city one of America's fittest? Here's how North Texas ranked in 2026. • Lawsuit alleges North Texas university housed students in mold-contaminated dorms • Taiwan tech giant Foxlink chooses Fort Worth for first U.S. AI factory • Trinity Metro services return to normal operations as FIFA wraps up World Cup in North Texas • Collin County Dems want state to investigate whether Ken Paxton violated Texas election law • Frisco businessmen ordered to pay $400 million in damages for fraud scheme • The City of Celina and the Celina EDC Announce Major New Development in Downtown Celina • Frisco man sentenced to 50 years for violent machete attack against a security guard • Dallas Man Sentenced to 15 Years for Attempted Armed Robbery of Lyft Driver. • What comes after North Texas' final World Cup match? • Frisco man sentenced to 20 years for abusing child at furry convention •
WEATHER

Species’ ingenious survival strategies no match for human destruction, red list reveals

Damian Carrington Environment editorJul 91 min readtheguardian.com
Species’ ingenious survival strategies no match for human destruction, red list reveals
Newly endangered animals include desert frogs and snails in extreme ocean depths, both threatened by mining Life has colonised every corner of the planet by evolving ingenious survival strategies but these are increasingly being overwhelmed by destructive human activities, this year’s red list of endangered species has revealed. Many snails, limpets and clams have adapted to life at crushing depths in the oceans on hydrothermal vents where water temperatures can reach 450C (842F). But an assessm

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