New research shows how human activities, like fertilizer use and polluting, are impacting nitrogen-fixing plants which are crucial for maintaining healthy ecosystems by adding nitrogen to the soil.
STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississippi State University is part of a European-American collaboration studying how human activities, ...
Because forests are home to the most plant and animal species in any ecosystem, including 68% of mammal species, scientists ...
Northern New Mexico Indigenous communities and environmental groups are calling for the reconsideration of federal plans to ...
Citizen science projects in Visakhapatnam engage community members to document biodiversity, contributing valuable data for ...
The largest seaweed festival in North America is taking over Humboldt Bay beginning Friday, Oct. 18 through Sunday, Oct. 21, ...
It is time to recognize that the Western conservation model has serious historical flaws and cannot achieve global targets ...
Nearly 200 nations face a deadline to report their nature conservation plans to the United Nations ahead of a two-week U.N.
However, more than a quarter of the world’s known species, or about 45,300 species, are now threatened with extinction, ...
In 1992, 150 nations signed the Convention on Biological Diversity, a global agreement to support sustainable development by ...
Naval Chief Admiral Naveed Ashraf has emphasized the need to preserve underwater ecosystems and sustainable use of marine ...