Save Our Pollinators, Save Our World
Sunflower Bee, Evolve to Ecology.org copyright 2017-2021 Listen to this article being read here Pollinators serve a great purpose in the agriculture world. Without them,...
A Cephalopod Has Passed a Cognitive Test Designed For Human Children
Listen to article being read here A new test of cephalopod smarts has reinforced how important it is for us humans to not underestimate animal...
The Evolution of Plant Music
Peruvian Art Listen to article being read here Suzanne Simard, forest ecologist at the University of British Columbia has been studying old trees in forest...
Ancient Indigenous forest gardens still yield bounty 150 years later
Originally planted with a rich array of edible and medicinal flora for people to use, forest gardens are now a source of food for animals and pollinators. While human activities, such as industrial land management, are often seen as being harmful to biodiversity, their study shows how Indigenous practices have benefited the health and resilience of forest ecosystems in the long-term, the researchers say.
Chile: 35 years of successful recovery of the Burrowing Parrots
The Burrowing Parrot, in spanish, ”Loro Tricahue”, (Cyanoliseus patagonus), also known as the burrowing parakeet or the Patagonian conure, is a species of parrot native to Argentina and Chile. The Burrowing Parrot was on the brink of extinction, with small populations fragmented throughout Chile.
”The Burrowing parrots/ Loros Tricahue, that inhabit Chile are an endemic subspecies, that is, they cannot be found anywhere else in the world. It is one of the four native parrots and also the largest. It was on the brink of extinction,” says Marcia Ricci, head of Conservation of Biological Diversity at CONAF in the O’Higgins region.
The Rainbow Serpent
The rainbow serpent, the white-lipped python is an iridescent snake. AS FAR AS heads go, this is an impressive one. Belonging to the brightly iridescent...
Deadly Prion Brain Diseases and Experimental mRNA Covid-19 Vaccines: Study Finds Plausible Link
An important and highly concerning study published early this year in the journal Microbiology & Infectious Diseases titled, “Covid-19 RNA Based Vaccines and the Risk of Prion Diseases,” addresses one of the many potential, unintended, adverse health effects of the experimental mRNA Covid-19 vaccines presently being deployed worldwide, namely, their possible induction of prion diseases, a category of highly fatal brain disorders.
Mother Trees’ Are Intelligent: They Learn and Remember, Ecologist Suzanne Simard says they need our help to survive
Author Suzanne Simard. Credit: Brendan Ko Listen to the article being read here 'Mother Trees' Are Intelligent: They Learn and RememberFew researchers have had the...
PCP Papers-Pandemic Fraud Against Hancock, Whitty, Vallance and Ferguson
Visit the People's Union of Britain for the latest updates on movement of this case to trial PCP Papers Laid Alleging Pandemic Fraud Against Hancock,...
Only 19% of Earth’s land is still ‘wild’
The paper “debunks an important myth” in conservation circles, says Massachusetts Institute of Technology aerospace engineer Danielle Wood, who studies technology and international development but was not involved with the new work. By offering a long-term look at humans’ impact on the planet, the study reveals that it’s not people per se that send biodiversity on a downward spiral, but it’s instead the overexploitation of resources, she explains. If their practices are sustainable, “humans don’t have to be removed,” to save the world’s species.