News and Opinion

Oil palm replanting may decrease arthropod biodiversity

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Oil palm replanting may decrease arthropod biodiversity

New study finds that oil palm replanting may decrease the biodiversity of arthropods, such as insects and spiders.

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Provide shady spots to protect butterflies from climate change, say scientists

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Provide shady spots to protect butterflies from climate change, say scientists

Butterfly species that mostly rely on finding shade to keep cool are at a greater risk of population decline due to climate change and habitat loss.

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Logging tropical forests jeopardizes fisheries important for food and livelihood

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Logging tropical forests jeopardizes fisheries important for food and livelihood

Logging activity in Solomon Islands is associated with lower coral cover and structural complexity on adjacent reefs, new research has found.

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Ecologists confirm Alan Turing’s theory for Australian fairy circles

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Ecologists confirm Alan Turing’s theory for Australian fairy circles

International research team led by Göttingen University shows patterned vegetation regenerates by “ecosystem engineering” of the grasses.

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Managing energy balance through lactation

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Managing energy balance through lactation

Recently published research in Journal of Animal Ecology explores how grey seal mothers maximize their chances of successfully rearing pups during an ‘energetic fast’.

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Development of a diagnostic tool for water bodies

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Development of a diagnostic tool for water bodies

If a river or stream is not doing well, there are many possible causes, but they are sometimes difficult to detect. Scientists from the University of Duisburg-Essen (UDE) have now developed a method that evaluates biological symptoms of rivers and calculates probable causes.

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To mate or be eaten: tree cricket behaviour in the presence of a predator

To mate or be eaten: tree cricket behaviour in the presence of a predator

In the presence of predators, male tree crickets but not females, change their mate-finding behaviour, according to a new study in Functional Ecology from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc).

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Indigenous knowledge still undervalued in environmental decisions

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Indigenous knowledge still undervalued in environmental decisions

New research published today in People and Nature finds that Indigenous knowledge is regularly underutilised and misunderstood when making important environmental decisions.

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The multiple benefits of conserving native forest

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The multiple benefits of conserving native forest

Research published in Journal of Applied Ecology shows how the presence of Chaco Serrano forest remnants in the vicinity of soybean fields has led to an increase in the diversity of insects that control pests

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Announcing the 2020 British Ecological Society award winners

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Announcing the 2020 British Ecological Society award winners

The British Ecological Society (BES) announced today the winners of its annual awards and prizes, recognising eleven distinguished ecologists whose work has benefited the scientific community and society in general.

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Tracking re-invasion of mice on offshore havens

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Tracking re-invasion of mice on offshore havens

Scientists highlight the importance of biosecurity as a study in Journal of Applied Ecology shows how easily pests can reinvade islands.

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Bee neighbourly: sharing bees helps more farmers

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Bee neighbourly: sharing bees helps more farmers

The benefits of cost-sharing the conservation of wild bee habitats on agricultural lands, especially in nearby farming communities, can help overcome the tragedy of the commons.

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The forgotten fauna: introduced seed predators are no surrogate for extinct seed-eating animals on islands

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The forgotten fauna: introduced seed predators are no surrogate for extinct seed-eating animals on islands

A new study led by Dr Jo Carpenter has shown that it’s not just the loss of mutually beneficial species like pollinators or seed disperses that have a severe impact on island ecology, the loss of “negative” interactions such as destroying seeds or parasitism is also important.

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Lianas strongly impact forests in southern Amazonia

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Lianas strongly impact forests in southern Amazonia

A team of Brazilian and British scientists has uncovered the extent to which trees across the southern edge of the Amazon are infested by woody climbing plants and the impact they have on the forests.

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