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A new study shows that simply changing how trees are arranged can boost forest growth, improve soil health, and lock away more carbon.
A new study published in Nature Communications has found that 17.31% of tropical tree cover—an area spanning 395.9 million ...
Lookout Fire burned most of a forest in Oregon. What's unfolding in the aftermath could inform the future of other forests ...
A Transition Fidalgo team has released a report that for the first time analyzes six years of data collected in the Anacortes ...
Forest fragmentation—the division of large, intact woodlands into smaller patches—has emerged as a critical issue in ...
Initiatives to restore European primary forests and thereby reverse centuries of decline are gaining traction. Such restoration could deliver significant ecological, environmental, climate-related and ...
Haryana to conduct first baseline Aravali survey to map degradation in seven districts to protect and revive the ancient hills. The survey will gather information on geographical contours ...
Digital monitoring tools are helping rangers protect wildlife in South America's Atlantic Forest. Could sound-based maps pin down the poaching threat?
A study finds that logging has inflicted severe damage to the vast boreal forests in Ontario and Quebec, two of the country’s main commercial logging regions.
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