Britain’s Puffins, which are among the nation’s best-loved birds, could largely disappear as a...
Author - Inside Ecology
Learning from Wolverines
In his book Lessons from the Wolverine, author Barry Lopez writes of a man searching for answers in...
Sharks and rays are in free fall: More than one-third are...
Sharks, rays and chimeras are now the second-most threatened vertebrate group, after amphibians. In...
Climate crisis: what can trees really do for us?
By the power of sunlight, forests turn huge amounts of carbon in the air into food: sugars for...
Gazing in the Broken Mirror
As the mercury rises with climate change, despair can seem like a fitting response. Drought...
Research links tree health to how birds respond to climate change
New Research from Oxford University has revealed that shifts in the timing of egg laying by great...
Elephants benefit from having older siblings, especially sisters
A study of semi-captive Asian elephants in Myanmar has found that calves benefit from having older...
Migratory birds found to be flying much higher than expected –...
Every autumn, billions of birds leave their breeding areas when the temperature drops and food gets...
Pioneering method of assessing rewilding progress applied for...
Scientists from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Martin Luther...
Large herbivores can reduce fire risks
The use of large herbivores can be an effective means to prevent and mitigate wildfires, especially...