Male Superb Lyrebird in display.
Alex Maisey
The Superb Lyrebird is famous for its song and dance, but what is less known is their extraordinary role as world-class ecosystem engineers.
The health impact of wildfire exposure depends in part on the fire itself and how much smoke a person breathes in, how often and for how long.
AP Photos/Noah Berger
Wildfires blanketing several Western cities are creating hazardous health conditions. Don’t count on cloth masks to protect your lungs.
Shutterstock
They’re a familiar sight on forest walks and long drives, but tree ferns are more fascinating than you may have realised.
REDD+ goals suffer at the hands of other development aims.
Wikimedia Commons
Conservation and development scheme REDD+ has manifested as a series of models, which increases its perceived success and enables it to continue despite not delivering on its wide-reaching promises.
Jeremy Kieran/Unsplash
The age of a forest can influence how effectively it offsets our emissions.
Ivanov Gleb/Shutterstock
In general, the larger the tree, the more carbon it stores.
Pangolins have been found with covonaviruses that are genetically similar to the one afflicting humans today.
Jekesai Njikizana/AFP/Getty Images
Yellow fever, malaria and Ebola all spilled over from animals to humans at the edges of tropical forests. The new coronavirus is the latest zoonosis.
Forests around the world are changing, affecting unique biodiversity.
Malkolm Boothroyd
New findings show how changes in land use have complex effects on animal and plant species.
A forest cat.
Captured by the project's camera trap.
The conventional view is that Madagascar has no native cats. Yet, cats are plentiful.
An Amazonian man surveys the swollen river.
Daniel Tregidgo
Local people are caught in an impossible situation – stay home and starve or venture out to buy food, potentially bringing the virus home too.
Ghana’s forests require better care if cocoa farming is to be sustainable.
Wikimedia Commons
The rising demand on the world market for cocoa has put pressure on Ghana’s forests.
Omo Forest, a home for elephants, in Ijebu East and North Local Government Areas, Ogun State, Nigeria
Peter Martell/AFP via Getty Images
Protected areas in Nigeria are generally hampered by limited funds and resources.
Forest in Gunung Leuser National Park.
Junaidi Hanafiah / CC BY-SA
Declaring conservation areas is meant to preserve nature. Why is this approach still failing?
Sean Davey/AAP
The forestry industry wants to remove damaged logs from native forests after the bushfires. But our wildlife needs them now more than ever.
The Rim Fire burned 256,000 acres of the Stanislaus National Forest and Yosemite National Park in 2013.
(USDA Forest Service, Chris Stewart)
Wildfires reduce the reliability of city water supplies in North America. But active forest management provides a key to the solution.
EPA-EFE/Martin Alipaz
A new study revealed that indigenous territories store more than half the carbon in the Amazon forest.
Breathe in the fresh forest air.
Luis Del Rio Camacho/Unsplash
Without care, reforestation projects can damage ecosystems and be useless as carbon stores. Here’s how to go about it the right way.
Indigenous Marind in West Papua consider the forest and its plants and animals as kin. These culturally valued multispecies relations, however, are being disrupted by oil palm development projects.
Sophie Chao
Indigenous Marind in West Papua consider the forest and its plants and animals as kin. These culturally valued multispecies relations, however, are being disrupted by oil palm development projects.
A toucan eating a fruit in the tropical wetlands of the Pantanal, Brazil.
Uwe Bergwitz/Shutterstock
In the absence of animals to help larger trees reproduce, forests are suffering.
Eduard Militaru/Unsplash
Restoring Britain’s woodlands and peatlands isn’t just a utopian dream.