ecosystem health

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ecosystem health & bioacoustics
Credit: jomme/Flickr

Puerto Rico’s frogs reveal the island’s environmental health

Puerto Rico’s frogs, especially the coquis, are providing vital insights into the health of the island’s ecosystems as scientists use bioacoustics to monitor environmental changes.

Benji Jones reports for Vox.

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invasive species eradication programs
dany13/Flickr

Rat killers in paradise: An eradication program remakes a tropical atoll

Like many islands around the world, Tetiaroa Atoll in French Polynesia has been overrun by rats and other invasive species that profoundly affect its terrestrial and marine ecosystems.

Thousands of dead and dying frogs found across Australia

Thousands of dead and dying frogs found across Australia

Researchers are trying to decipher the mystery and prevent long-term damage to amphibian populations, an indicator of ecosystem health.
Drop in rain forest productivity could speed future climate change

Drop in rain forest productivity could speed future climate change

Tropical forests host a rich diversity of plant and animal life and process vast amounts of carbon dioxide. Therefore, researchers have been particularly interested in how these ecosystems might be affected by climate change.

When the bison come back, will the ecosystem follow?
undark.org

When the bison come back, will the ecosystem follow?

Can a cross-border effort to bring wild bison to the Great Plains restore one of the world's most endangered ecosystems?
old-growth clearcut logging
thenarwhal.ca

B.C.'s old-growth forest panel expert Garry Merkel weighs in on Fairy Creek

As tensions escalate and arrest tallies grow at logging blockades on Vancouver Island, The Narwhal spoke with one of the foresters tapped to help the province navigate its old-growth woes.

“We don’t know what else is out there.” Five ways new diseases emerge — and what we can do about them
ensia.com

“We don’t know what else is out there.” Five ways new diseases emerge — and what we can do about them

From forests and farms to our own back yards, there's a lot we can do to reduce future risks of pandemic outbreaks.

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