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Thursday, July 16, 2026
How Laos lost its tigers

Jeremy Hance  A new paper in Global Conservation and Ecology finds that the last tigers of Laos along with the Indochinese leopards vanished shortly after 2013 from Nam Et-Phou Louey National Protected Area. A new camera trap study finds that tigers vanished from Nam Et-Phou Louey National Protec

Farmworkers Face Daunting Health Risks In California’s Wildfires

As wildfires grow more frequent, so do concerns for wine country field workers, who can face conditions that jeopardize their health, wages and housing. Farm laborers in yellow safety vests walked through neatly arranged rows of grapes Friday, harvesting the last of the deep purple bundles that hung

EU provides €40 million for sustainable fisheries and aquaculture in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific

The initiative will work with 10 value chains in 10 different countries, aiming to maximise economic returns and social benefits, while minimising the detrimental effects on natural habitats and marine wildlife The EU, the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) and the Food and Agri

Colombo Declaration calls for tackling global nitrogen challenge

At a time when the world grapples with the menace of air pollution killing 7 million people prematurely every year, Sri Lanka, with support from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), convened a two-day event at which member states came together to adopt what is being called the “Colombo Declaration

In Mexico, Indigenous recipes are improving backyard farming

Larissa Hotra A new cookbook reignites pride in tradition, native seeds and sense of place This article was contributed by Rare in celebration of World Food Day 2019. In southern Mexico, foods like chipilín (leafy greens), chayote (mirliton squash), yerba santa (sacred herbs) and mai

Fishing villages dry up on the Indus

Akhtar Hafeez Dam construction and other upstream activities have left the fishing communities in Pakistan along the Indus with little to fish, and livelihoods that have dried up with the river The province of Sindh is grappling with an acute water shortage, a crisis which the government hopes to ad

Is climate change responsible for the conflicts we’re seeing around the world today?

John Vidal The relationship between a heating planet and violent clashes is complex — and critical “This is where I keep my weapon,” said Lolem, a young Karamojong cattle herder. Digging below the surface of the bone-dry ground in northern Uganda, he drew out an old AK-47 and some bullets, wra

Brazilian experts warn of uncontacted tribes “genocide” after sacking of government coordinator

Top Brazilian experts have released a damning statement warning “genocide is underway” against uncontacted tribes. The warning follows the sacking of Bruno Pereira, the head of the government department charged with the protection of uncontacted tribes’ lands. The experts are “extremely wo

Over half of Europe’s endemic trees face extinction

Over half (58%) of Europe’s endemic trees, those not found in any other part of the planet are threatened with extinction, according to IUCN The newly published European Red List of Trees evaluated the conservation status of all 454 tree species native to the continent, and found that two fifths

Work less to save the planet? How to make sure a four-day week actually cuts emissions

Anupam Nanda, University of Reading Several reports and commentators have identified various ways a four-day week could reduce our carbon footprint. 10% reduction in work hours may lead to declines in ecological footprint, carbon footprint, and CO₂ emissions The idea of a four-day working week is

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