Madagascar’s cliffs, rolling plateaus, and winding rivers weren’t shaped by a single violent event. Instead, the island’s ...
Madagascar’s land reshaped twice. Two giant rifts flipped slopes, reversed rivers, and formed isolated landscapes that ...
Easton R. White is an assistant professor of biology at the University of New Hampshire who studies biodiversity and ...
Relying on a handful of crops makes the entire system more vulnerable to pests, disease, and climate shocks. By cultivating a ...
With healthy populations of animals that disperse seeds, tropical forests can absorb up to four times more carbon.
Safeguarding biodiversity is not simply an environmental concern but a foundational element of preventive and clinical care.
The world’s largest network of environmental groups approved the exploration of genetic engineering tools to aid in the ...
The Biodiversity Collections Network (BCoN), in collaboration with the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS), has developed a comprehensive roadmap toward an integrated biological and ...
Over a few million years, the spider Dysdera tilosensis—a species endemic to the Canary Islands—has reduced the size of its ...
In a landmark moment for global conservation, Union Minister of State for Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Shri Kirti Vardhan Singh, inaugurated the launch of India’s National Red List Roadmap ...
Sparks between microscopic bubbles could explain the ghostly, glowing will-o’-the-wisps, study finds
Hovering blue flames that flicker over bogs and marshes have inspired ghostly folktales for centuries. Known as “will-o’-the-wisp,” “jack-o’-lantern,” “corpse candle” and “ignis fatuus” (“foolish fire ...
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