The vast majority of forest restorations contain just one tree species—leaving them vulnerable to pests like the emerald ash ...
In 2015, research on global forest cover revealed a concerning fact: 70% of the world’s remaining forest now lies within 1km of the forest’s edge. This process, called fragmentation, is causing the ...
New research from the UBC-based Mother Tree Project is shedding light on how forests respond to harvesting and climate stress ...
A tropical forest can regrow quickly. What is harder to see is how long full ecological recovery takes. A pasture left to ...
Africa’s forests have undergone a shocking reversal, switching from carbon absorbers to carbon emitters after 2010. Researchers found that heavy deforestation in tropical regions has led to massive ...
The world’s forests are simultaneously climate powerhouses and victims, sucking carbon from the air while facing myriad global warming impacts—from wildfires to pest outbreaks. Recent research found ...
Mongabay News on MSN
Listening to forests reveals signs of recovery beyond tree cover
By Abhishyant Kidangoor Can listening to forests help us understand if the life inside them is thriving? Apparently, yes.
Suzanne Simard's "When the Forest Breathes" is steeped in grief over the juggernaut of the modern logging industry.
Long before rising seas swallowed Doggerland beneath the North Sea, this lost landscape may have been a surprisingly lush and ...
Earth’s vast northern forests may be doing far more to slow climate change than scientists once realized. New research from Sweden shows that untouched, old-growth boreal forests store dramatically ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results