The United Nations biodiversity summit, known as COP16, comes amid growing concerns over plummeting populations of plants and animals, and damage to the habitats that sustain life on earth ...
The United Nations effort to achieve “harmony” with the natural world kicks off in Colombia this week. Recent reports show ...
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day. Reuters provides business, financial ...
We see a bright future for this “biodiversity jukebox”, with tracks for every ecosystem. In healthy ecosystems, everything from animal calls to water trickling underground creates a sonic ...
After you take action, share your favorite alerts (or the whole page) to help spread the word about saving the world’s biodiversity. You can also read our plan to confront this emergency. It’s full of ...
An international team of scientists has made a discovery that could reshape our understanding of how global biodiversity evolved. By reconstructing the evolution of species over the past 45 ...
Please note that the Biodiversity Trends Explorer is no longer live. The BTE data was generated in 2021. Because we want to provide the latest and most accurate models available, we will be removing ...
“Many of the same threats that impact biodiversity in the tropical Andes ... it’s like looking at art — nature’s living art.” On all four flights of the trip, Justin was coincidentally ...
In biodiversity-rich regions such as Latin America and the Caribbean, the figure for animal population loss is as high as 95 ...
BioDT develops prototype Digital Twins for biodiversity conservation In order to test its modeling system, BioDT is developing 10 prototype digital twins (pDTs) focused on species and ecosystems ...
A recent published in Frontiers in Microbiomes investigated toothbrush and showerhead microbiomes to understand microbial composition in biofilm-based and frequently moist built environments ...
A new commentary piece in Nature argues that the much-cited claim that Indigenous peoples protect 80% of the world’s remaining biodiversity is not only baseless, but wrong. Although scientists ...