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Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Battle of the bugs: on wings of climate change

Priti David/PARI India is seeing huge declines in native insect species – several of them tied closely to our food security. But it’s hard to get humans viewing insects with the warmth they reserve for, say, furry mammals It’s like a sequel to the 1998 hit film, A Bug’s Life. In the ori

‘CSI Amazon’: Epic study looks at what’s killing the rain-forest’s trees

Liz Kimbrough A newly published study in the journal Nature Communications provides insight into the patterns driving tree death in the Amazon and may help scientists explain why and how the forest is changing. A newly published study provides insight into why trees die in the Amazon, and why the

Create open data culture to feed hungry world – experts

Fiona Broom The world’s ability to feed its growing — and increasingly hungry — population will depend on a culture of openness in research and data sharing, a debate on the future of agricultural research heard. Making agricultural data accessible is key to accelerating new discoveries

Community restores private forests for sustainable future in India

Deepanwita Gita Niyogi Private forest owners have been restoring degraded lands, improving green cover and livelihood opportunities. The initiative helps in biodiversity conservation and maintenance of wildlife corridor as well Balkrishna Nathuram Bhomkar,a resident of Bopoli village in Satara distr

Argentine provinces clash over a new large-scale dam

Damian Profeta  Downstream provinces challenge the Portezuelo del Viento dam over the reduction of water availability After fits and starts that date back to the 1950s, Argentina’s Mendoza province is preparing to make the Portezuelo del Viento mega-project a reality. The dam in the west of the c

Brazilian government taken to Court over deforestation and human rights abuses

A coalition of non-governmental organisations brought the Brazilian government to the Federal Supreme Court for its active negligence to protect the Amazon and the people of Brazil. The rates of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon have recently reached historical numbers, resulting in a 34% increa

US Coral Reefs vulnerable and in a state of decline

Coral reefs in both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans received a “fair” score in the first-ever condition status report for U.S. coral reefs released by NOAA and the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES). While the overall scores were “fair,” the report highlights cor

Too much climate finance given as loans force poorer nations into debt

A paltry 14 percent of climate finance is going to the least developed nations and just 2 percent to small island developing states, which have done least to cause the climate crisis but are being hit hardest. Climate finance provided and mobilised by developed countries for developing countries tot

We found a way to turn urine into solid fertiliser–it could make farming more sustainable

Prithvi Simha, Björn Vinnerås, and Jenna Senecal The idea behind it is rather simple. Fresh urine is collected from urinals or specially designed toilets and channelled into a dryer, where an alkalising agent, such as calcium or magnesium hydroxide, raises its pH. Any water in the now alkaline uri

Lions and Tigers and Anteaters? US Scientists Scan the Menagerie for COVID

JoNel Aleccia Across the country, veterinarians and other researchers are scouring the animal kingdom for signs of the virus that causes COVID-19. At least 2,000 animals in the U.S. have been tested for the coronavirus since the pandemic began, according to federal records. As COVID-19 cases surge i

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