Our relationships with the natural world have changed, and addressing how we understand our place in the world will help us find solutions to current environmental crises.
An Amazon poison frog (Ranitomeya amazonica).
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New research looks at how different species have managed to cross geographic barriers throughout history and whether their individual traits played a crucial role in these journeys.
The Winchester City Mill youth hostel, in 1945.
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Monitoring and protecting the Kasanka bat colony helps protect bats from the entire sub-continent, and thus supports ecosystem services in a wide area.
The yellow crazy ant (Anoplolepis gracilipes) is a notorious invasive ant species.
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Stories in Greek mythology on the cycle of nature showing youth, death and rejuvenation can have lessons for us today on how grief changes over time and transforms who we are as people.
A flock of puffins on a cliff in Northumberland, England.
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Recent survey evidence suggests that most Canadians have positive opinions of wolves and rural Canadians in particular have strongly positive feelings on wolves and their protection.
There are plenty of ways to benefit from nature in and around your home.
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Practitioners of Pagan religions no longer need to go into a forest to find an object for their altars. Commercialization means that sacred objects are available online.
Only by understanding our past and current relationship with soil can we reflect and change our partnership with soil from extraction and exploitation to respect, relationality and reciprocity.
A springer spaniel called Freya could detect great crested newts at distances of up to 2 metres above the ground.
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