News

Measuring shells and skeletons encased in thousands of limestone samples has revealed that the sheer amount of living stuff ...
"We hope that by sharing our vision, our group can find additional partners to expand the conversation, discuss threats and ...
Our brains can spot real biodiversity using sight and sound alone, according to scientists studying how humans perceive nature.
Properly managing forests requires tools that offer up-to-date information on forest dynamics.
As this chart shows, several of the leading threats to biodiversity areas are human-made. For example, the group Human Intrusions and Disturbance encompasses a range of actions from recreational ...
Some countries are more biodiverse than others because their territories are able to support a variety of animal species ...
Biomass reveals the real impact and energy flow of life in an ecosystem, like knowing not just the cast of a play, but who ...
New research led by scientists at the Smithsonian proposes a plan to safeguard Earth’s imperiled biodiversity by cryogenically preserving biological material on the moon. The moon’s permanently ...
Delegates from around the world are meeting in Colombia in what is expected to be the biggest U.N. biodiversity conference in history. By Catrin Einhorn On the agenda is life on earth, in all its ...
Stanford study shows ocean biomass has risen over 540 million years, linking biodiversity to long-term ecosystem health.
In Vienna, Europe's second-largest cemetery has embraced biodiversity – without disturbing the dead. Some of the greats are ...