Deforestation has reduced the plants and animals on which mosquitoes feed.
U.S. forests have stored more carbon in the past two decades than at any time in the last century, an increase attributable ...
Once mosquitoes acquire a new food source, they tend to develop a preference for that particular blood—and humans are one ...
In the rapidly disappearing Atlantic Forest, mosquitoes are adapting to a human-dominated landscape. Scientists found that ...
U.S. forests have stored unprecedented levels of carbon in recent years, driven by a mix of climate forces and human land-use ...
A new study finds mosquitoes in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest are increasingly feeding on humans as deforestation reduces wildlife ...
As deforestation shrinks Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, mosquitoes that once fed on many animal species are increasingly turning to human blood.
Hosted on MSN
Human impact on Amazon forests is transforming its ecological functions and evolutionary history
A new study reveals that the impact humans are having on the Amazon rainforest is so profound it is even changing the evolutionary history and functionality of the forests. Subscribe to our newsletter ...
Between busy streets, parks and shopping centres, a green transformation is quietly underway, bringing nature back to the urban sprawl of cities. Micro-forests, small areas of densely planted woodland ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results