Good news! Ministers have finally given green light to new #NaturalHistory GCSE. We’ve campaigned so long for this! Big hats off to tireless advocate Mary Colwell 🙌 Now our young people will have a chance to get to know & love the natural world, to feel awe & wonder, & gain skills to protect it 🌷🌳🦡
Long-awaited course to examine human effects on natural world and explore everyday ways to aid biodiversity
More species discovery in the Peruvian Andes!
🌿 Congratulations to Rodolfo Vasquez and Rocío Rojas-Gonzales on Saurauia vanderffii - a new Actinidaceae from the Central Rainforest Cloud Forests Biosphere Reserve.
🇵🇪🔬✨
www.lillo.org.ar/journals/ind...
Check out the early view of my second PhD article! Focusing on woody productivity dynamics of Cerrado savanna trees, we analyse how NPP changes across different fire regimes, and explore how these responses are mediated by functional traits 🔥🌿 @ioliverasmenor.bsky.social
@manumachadoeco.bsky.social
Fantastic map of forest cover world-wide
bit.ly/PD_Senna
Scientifically, 'Old World' and 'New World' are clearly anthropocentric terms but need not be Eurocentric.
The deep past has much to teach us all.
This is humanity's 42,000-kilometer Stone Age odyssey during the, in one image.
outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org
🔥ADVANCE ACCESS🔥: Contrasting responses of pollen and fruit to whole-tree heating in two tropical savannah species
doi.org/10.1093/aob/...
#PlantScience
‘Contrasting responses of pollen and fruit to whole-tree heating in two tropical savannah species’ by Georgina Werkmeister & colleagues
👉 doi.org/q88n
Unexpectedly pollen viability under hotter conditions🌡️suggesting pollen development in tropical woody plants may be more heat-resilient than thought
Francisco Navarro-Rosales
ForestPlots
🔥ADVANCE ACCESS🔥: Bark protection and light-adapted photosynthesis influence woody productivity of Cerrado trees in changing fire regimes
doi.org/10.1093/aob/...
#PlantScience
AbstractBackground and Aims. The Brazilian Cerrado – the world’s most biodiverse savannah – is rapidly warming, potentially threatening thousands of specie
The deep past has much to teach us all.
This is humanity's 42,000-kilometer Stone Age odyssey during the, in one image.
outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org
AbstractBackground and Aims. The Brazilian Cerrado – the world’s most biodiverse savannah – is rapidly warming, potentially threatening thousands of specie
I created a global forest map showing how forests vary by climate zone - Added twist, 90% of the code + the following post was generated by Claude. 1/4
#Python #GIS #DataViz #Cartography #Forests
ForestPlots
How will climate warming affect reproduction in wild tropical plants? 🌡️🌿This new study experimentally heated mature woody species in the Brazilian Cerrado, the world’s most biodiverse savannah, to test how rising temperatures impact plant reproduction. (2/10)