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Huge Arthropod Declines Documented in Puerto Rican Rainforest
The study authors attribute the decreases to climate change.
Huge Arthropod Declines Documented in Puerto Rican Rainforest
Huge Arthropod Declines Documented in Puerto Rican Rainforest
The study authors attribute the decreases to climate change.
The study authors attribute the decreases to climate change.
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Huge Arthropod Declines Documented in Puerto Rican Rainforest
Ashley P. Taylor
| Oct 16, 2018
| 2 min read
The study authors attribute the decreases to climate change.
Save the Wolves, Control the Moose
The Scientist
Staff
| Sep 25, 2018
| 2 min read
Researchers plan to relocate mainland wolves to an island in Lake Superior in an effort to boost the near-extinct predator population and limit the growth of local moose herds.
Present-Day Arboreal Birds Have Ground-Dwelling Past
Sukanya Charuchandra
| May 24, 2018
| 1 min read
A mass extinction event from an asteroid hitting Earth wiped out forests and, concurrently, tree-dwelling birds.
The Weird Growth Strategy of Earth’s First Trees
Shawna Williams
| Oct 24, 2017
| 3 min read
Ancient fossils reveal how woodless trees got so big: by continuously ripping apart their xylem and knitting it back together.
Global Forest Estimate Rises 9 Percent
Aggie Mika
| May 15, 2017
| 1 min read
Dryland biomes are covered in at least 40 percent more forest than previously estimated.
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