Noah's Ark 2.0
Articles relevant to the conservation of nature, ecological economics and sustainable living.
Meet The Bizarre Sea Snail That Builds Its Own Iron Suit Of Armor It's able to make a home in "impossible living conditions" that would be fatal to most other animals on Earth.
You can find the "Post-growth perspectives on biodiversity conservation" symposium through the following link: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbxUL0LI0R89s4j4w7S5Cpw1RANWuvoVR
Why some female hummingbirds masquerade as males Scientists are increasingly finding examples of female birds with showy, male-like plumage.
Prevent more trees from becoming evolutionary anachronisms (e.g. Crescentia alata https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crescentia_alata).
Sounds good at first, but potentially confusing; critically endangered species with a green status. What do you think?
New IUCN green status launched to help species ‘thrive, not just survive’ Conservation tool will focus on recovery efforts to give a fuller picture of threats to plant and animal populations
A short presentation of ongoing research for the EAAE 2021
Poster presentation for EAAE2021 (16th European Association of Agricultural Economists int. conf.) Poster presentation prepared for EAAE2021 (16th European Association of Agricultural Economists int. conf.) by Joeri Sol on his recent working paper 'Develop...
Social plants: in the wild, staghorn ferns grow in colonies to improve water storage for all members A colony-building fern that grows in treetops on Lord Howe Island has adopted a lifestyle similar to social insects, turning our understanding of the evolution of biological complexity on its head.
Google's New Timelapse Shows 37 Years of Climate Change Anywhere on Earth, Including Your Neighborhood Google Earth's latest feature allows you to watch the climate change in four dimensions. Timelapse, is the biggest update to Google Earth since 2017. It may be the largest video taken of Earth on Earth. It compiles 24 million satellite photos taken between 1984 and 2020 to show how human activity ha...
Conservation group to buy world’s largest privately owned giant sequoia forest for $15 million Alder Creek, the largest remaining privately owned giant sequoia property in the world, was just “bought” by century-old conservation group Save the Redwoods League, to safeguard the trees as a national treasure — but now the funds need to be raised.
Community in Scotland achieves the impossible to create a new nature reserve Scotland is to get a brand new nature reserve thanks to a small community who just completed one of the nation’s biggest ever grassroots land...
Are We Managing Invasive Species Wrong? • The Revelator New research suggests that sometimes trying to completely eliminate a problematic non-native species may cause more harm than good.
‘A forest on caffeine’? How coffee can help forests grow faster Waste left over from the coffee-making process can jolt destroyed forests back to life.