News

Our brains can spot real biodiversity using sight and sound alone, according to scientists studying how humans perceive nature.
A new study argues that religion, politics and war affect how animals and plants in cities evolve, and the confluence of ...
A study published in People and Nature finds that both sight and sound influence perception of biodiversity, and participants ...
Villages, often separated from larger towns and cities, consist of clusters of households and a few public buildings. Despite ...
A major study of U.K. dietary habits has found that the food we eat contains an average of at least 49 different species each ...
In the mist-covered heights of the Peruvian Andes, scientists uncovered strange and elusive lifeforms that have never been seen before.
For example, the Tianliaoyang Wetland (田寮洋濕地) in New Taipei City and its surrounding forests have documented visits of more than 100 bird species within a single day every year, it said. For forest ...
For example, in the vast majority of tortoise leaf beetle species, the group Salem studies, it’s not a genetically encoded enzyme that breaks down pectin, but a bacterial symbiont.
Coal mine’s 60-year-old fire an example of how long-term disturbances affect soil richness Staff Writer | March 13, 2024 | 5:39 am Education Energy Suppliers & Equipment USA Coal ...
To many humans, soil is just the dirt under our feet. But new research shows that for more than half of all species on Earth, soil is crucial habitat—and an imperiled one at that.
Learn what an umbrella species is and why these animals are instrumental in the conservation of their ecosystems.