The Shire of Esperance has received more than $65,000 towards restoring, revegetating and protecting the region’s most ecologically significant...
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Maroc - WN.COM - Africa - 06/12/2025 09:44
Sub-Saharan Africa has already lost nearly a quarter of its biodiversity since pre-industrial times, according to a major new African-led study. The research, published on Wednesday in Nature, found that on average, populations of plants and animals across the region have declined by 24%, with some species — especially large mammals — suffering far more severe losses. Yet the analysis also delivers a crucial insight: more than 80% of the region’s remaining wild plants and animals persist outside formally protected areas, surviving instead in largely untransformed natural forests and rangelands, where people coexist with and depend on biodiversity. “Conserving and restoring biodiversity,...
The Shire of Esperance has received more than $65,000 towards restoring, revegetating and protecting the region’s most ecologically significant...
The Shire of Esperance has received more than $65,000 towards restoring, revegetating and protecting the region’s most ecologically significant...
Trees across Australia’s forests are dying at increasing rates, with new research pointing to a long-term shift in forest health linked closely to a...
Trees across Australia’s forests are dying at increasing rates, with new research pointing to a long-term shift in forest health linked closely to a...
Erik Irmer has been documenting the spread of invasive plant and animal species that disrupt native ecology across Europe. He focuses on humans’...
By Christine Heinrichs The sea otter pup was tiny, probably less than 2 weeks old, alone in Morro Bay on an October morning earlier this year. A...
The TT Field Naturalists’ Club presents the following summary based upon events that have been reported in the media during 2025. There are likely...
The TT Field Naturalists’ Club presents the following summary based upon events that have been reported in the media during 2025. There are likely...
Australian forests are thinning in a worrying finding for a world relying on plants to help soak up excess atmospheric carbon.
Australian forests are thinning in a worrying finding for a world relying on plants to help soak up excess atmospheric carbon.