Joshua Resnick/Shutterstock
Nurturing enthusiasm for growing food closer to home could benefit people, wildlife and the global food system.
Ohrim/Shutterstock
Marine wildlife rarely remain in one habitat. Most species rely on a healthy network of ecosystems to raise their young and catch their food.
Llwynypia, South Wales, a colliery village built up around a coal mine.
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The miners might be fondly remembered, but
literature helps us bear in mind the environmental damage the industry caused.
Ben Birchall/PA Wire/PA Images
New bike lanes are a good idea for health and air quality, but the convenience of car travel for most journeys will remain.
A large cargo ship waiting to be scrapped in Alang, India.
Salvacampillo / shutterstock
Shipbreaking is one of the world’s most dangerous jobs – but it doesn’t have to be.
DmytroPerov / shutterstock
Using sustainable cement would shift Earth Overshoot Day back by 10 days.
Jaromir Chalabala/Shutterstock
The €24 billion spent supporting farm incomes in richer regions could more than cover the EU’s Biodiversity Strategy.
Engraving from John Chardin’s Travels into Persia and the East Indies, 1686, showing Mount Ararat, Turkey.
Before reaching summits became part of the new ‘sublime’ in the late 18th century, people didn’t climb mountains.
EPA-EFE/Neil Hall
Extreme heat could kill 5,000 people each year in the UK by the 2050s.
Donatas Dabravolskas / shutterstock
Scientists find inequality between humans also harms the birds, the bees, the microbes and the trees.
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Within the growing mountains of electronic waste, precious metals lie waiting to be recovered.
Coral Brunner/Shutterstock
Sexual reproduction helps keep coral colonies diverse and resilient. Now, scientists are doing it in a lab to restock flagging reefs.
EPA-EFE/ROGERIO FLORENTINO
Fires that burn the forest burn crops and pastures alike. But farmers in the eastern Amazon are left with few good options.
Chris Redan/Shutterstock
As face marks and coverings become compulsory worldwide, littering and their potential impact on the environment increases.
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Volatile, unstable air means that it is very tricky to work out exactly where each thunderstorm will be.
F-Focus by Mati Kose / shutterstock
Peatlands will become a major source of greenhouse gases as the permafrost thaws.
Xavi Cabrera/Unsplash
Plastics are strong, durable, waterproof, lightweight, easy to mould, and recyclable – all key properties for construction materials.
MV Wakashio, a Japanese owned Panama-flagged bulk carrier ship leaks oil after drifting ashore over coral reefs.
Etat-major des Armees/EPAhandout
Mauritians have been volunteering to help clear an oil spill from the MV Wakashio but have been told not to. It’s difficult when the threat of oil and inaction is what many have seen.
Ekaterina McClaud/Shutterstock
Towns and cities create an orange glow on the horizon at night. It’s so widespread that it even disturbs sea creatures.
A swarm of giant Asian honey bees.
Rickythai/Shutterstock
Honey bees in the most polluted parts of an Indian city were more likely to die sooner and showed clear signs of poor health.
Monika Wisniewska/Shutterstock
Heatwaves are here to stay, and they aren’t all sun and games.
Bondi Beach in Sydney is locked down, April 2020.
Bianca De Marchi / EPA
My research shows we’ll need transformative change not just temporary lockdowns for COVID-19 to make much difference to the climate.
Karen Vardazaryan/Unsplash
It seems likely we are going to need radical reductions in future ownership of private vehicles as we transition to cleaner transport.
Valley Journal/Shutterstock
Fish need to cross roads too. But the tunnels built to channel rivers under roads and railways can block their migrations.
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The UK alone may use 10 million disposable items each day, though more sustainable alternatives are available.