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Our brains can spot real biodiversity using sight and sound alone, according to scientists studying how humans perceive nature.
The EU adopted the Nature Restoration Law last Monday after months of gruelling negotiations and bitter disagreement. While the legislation is a clear win for biodiversity and the climate, both its ...
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For centuries, humans have lived underground. Today, that ancient practice is under dire threat—even as cave life makes more ...
Four years ago, summer floods in Limburg—in the south of the Netherlands—drastically altered the riverbed of the Meuse, ...
How Belgium executed a transformative project that took them from 71st to first place in the FIFA world rankings in eight years ...
People can intuitively sense how biodiverse a forest is just by looking at photos or listening to sounds, and their gut ...
Scott McTominay welcomes ‘incredible’ Kevin De Bruyne at Napoli and warns the Partenopei’s opponents: ‘We don’t want to be ...
People’s intuitive perception of biodiversity through visual and audio cues is remarkably accurate and aligns closely with scientific measures of biodiversity. This is according to new research ...
High heat and heavy metals dampen a bumblebee’s trademark buzz, threatening pollen release and colony chatter. Tiny sensors ...
The devastating floods that killed nearly 200 people in Germany four years ago could have been even more damaging, new ...
There’s a magical place along Lake Michigan’s western shore where the horizon stretches endlessly blue and time seems to slow ...