An abandoned village in the Huesca Pyrenees has undergone ‘passive rewilding’.
Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock
The abandonment of crops and pastures allows the natural regeneration of bushes and forests and the recolonization of fauna.
The first whale to be taken from Japan’s waters since the country resumed commercial whaling, July 1 2019.
© EIAimage
Japan’s exit from the IWC should spur on more global cooperation on environmental issues, not less.
In Romania, wolves live in the same landscapes as shepherds.
Shutterstock
Academia can play an important role by helping institutions break out of their silos to improve large carnivore conservation.
Climate change is altering the smell of rosemary, affecting its quality and quantity.
Grégoire Lannoy/Flickr
As climatic conditions change, plants’ odours are altered, with direct consequences for pollination, especially by bees.
A healthy coral reef at Swains island, American Samoa.
NOAA/NMFS/PIFSC/CRED, Oceanography Team.
In a study that cultivated coral ‘gardens’ with varying numbers of species, plots with more species were healthier. This finding could inform strategies to help coral reefs survive climate change.
Plastics at a recycling depot in North Vancouver, B.C. in June 2019.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
The global focus on plastic pollution isn’t a distraction from other planetary issues.
Australia’s future prosperity will require bold action on a number of fronts and a deliberate commitment to careful and considered long-term thinking.
Hendra Pontomudis / unsplash
If the right changes are made today, Australia’s living standards could be up to 36% higher in 2060. This translates into a 90% increase in average wages (in adjusted, real terms) from today.
Shutterstock/PopTika
Diving deeper into our relationship with the environment.
Photo Art Lucas/Shutterstock
We don’t notice the plant species we’re losing, but we won’t be able to ignore the effect of their loss on our supply of food and medicine.
Shutterstock
With partnerships between landowners, the government and businesses, South Africa can invest in its wetlands and boost the country’s potable water reserves.
Rosa in the Sumatran Rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis ) Sanctuary, Way Kambas, Sumatra, Indonesia.
Willem v Strien/Wikipedia
The world mourns the loss of Malaysia’s last male Sumatran rhino. Can anything stop the slide of the species towards extinction?
A grassland earless dragon at Jerrabomberra, NSW, November 1991. The search is now on for this species’ Victorian cousin.
CSIRO/Wikimedia Commons
The Victorian grassland earless dragon may well be the first lizard species driven to extinction on Australia’s mainland. But conservationists aren’t ready to declare it dead just yet.
Habitat loss to palm oil plantations in Central Kalimantan, Borneo. The forests of Borneo are home to the few remaining Bornean orangutan Pongo pygmaeus , Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis harrissoni , and the Borneo pygmy elephant Elephas maximus borneensis , among other endangered species.
© Ulet Ifansasti/Greenpeace
New research has found that different types of habitat loss can change the stability of whole plant and animal communities.
A dung beetle wearing silicon boots to protect its feet from the hot soil, as part of an experiment.
Courtesy of Adrian Bailey/baileyphotos.com
Dung beetles are largely invisible. And yet without their vital activities, the world would have a lot more faeces in it.
The Darling River near Louth NSW, April 2019, in the midst of a drought compounded by upstream irrigation policies.
Jaana Dielenberg
In the event, the federal election turned out to be more about the economy than the environment. But there are steps the Coalition government can take to help conservation and boost the economy too.
Rosa Jay/Shutterstock.com
Ecosystem deterioration, along with climate change, is now becoming a controversial political question.
Almost 9 in 10 Australians agree we should invest in restoring wildlife habitats and natural places.
Klaus/Flickr
17 mayo 2019
Sarah Bekessy , RMIT University ; Alex Kusmanoff , RMIT University ; Ascelin Gordon , RMIT University ; Emily Gregg , RMIT University ; Freya Thomas , RMIT University ; Georgia Garrard , RMIT University ; Holly Kirk , RMIT University ; Jeremy Ringma , RMIT University ; Katherine Berthon , RMIT University ; Lindall Kidd , RMIT University ; Marco Gutierrez , RMIT University ; Mathew Hardy , RMIT University ; Matthew Selinske , RMIT University y Roshan Sharma , RMIT University
Here are the promises and policies of the Coalition, Labor, the Greens, One Nation and more.
Villiers Steyn/Shutterstock.com
New research suggests that even ecologically flexible baboons could be at significant risk of habitat loss and endangerment from anthropogenic climate change.
A bumblebee sips nectar from a clover.
Victoria MacPhail
Wild bees pollinate trees and shrubs that feed and shelter wildlife, provide flood control, prevent soil erosion and help regulate the climate.
Sharks and rays are among the most data-deficient groups of species.
HQuality/Shutterstock
A landmark report found more than one million species at risk of extinction – but even the “safe” ones may not be so safe.