News
Tropical trees are dying faster than ever, and it's not just heat or drought to blame. Scientists have uncovered a surprising ...
Climate change and degradation are making fires a leading cause in global forest loss, both in the tropics as well as in ...
New research reveals that thunderstorms - not just drought or heat - are a major cause of rising tree deaths in tropical ...
Trees in tropical forests are dying at an increased rate, with consequences for biodiversity, carbon storage, and the global ...
As Brazil prepares to host COP30, construction of a controversial highway through the Amazon rainforest has sparked criticism ...
In 1978, renowned ecologist Dan Janzen jumped into a ravine in Costa Rica, broke three ribs, and spent the first month of the rainy season watching the tropical dry forest from inside a shack. At ...
Six Latin American countries were in the top 10 nations for primary tropical forest loss. In the Amazon, forest loss more than doubled from 2023 to 2024, with more than half the result of wildfires.
Historic forest fires in Brazil last year scorched through an area larger than the size of Italy, recording a burned area ...
Greenpeace Brazil returned to the ancestral waters of the Juruá River - the most curvy river in the world - to spotlight ...
Trees in tropical forests are dying at an increased rate, with consequences for biodiversity, carbon storage, and the global climate. While ...
In the Amazon, forest loss jumped by 110% compared to 2023, the biggest increase since 2016. Although tropical forest loss rose globally, some countries, like Indonesia and Malaysia, saw improvements.
Today, at the Living Planet Symposium, ESA revealed the first stunning images from its Biomass satellite mission—marking a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results