Biodiversity crisis News

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First ever picture of long lost rainbow toad

Climate change to push over 10 percent of the world’s species to extinction by 2100

Ocean prognosis: mass extinction

Over 900 species added to endangered list during past year

Amphibian-plague strikes frogs harder in pristine ecosystems

New paper stirs up controversy over how scientists estimate extinction rates

3,000 amphibians, 160 land mammals remain undiscovered—that is if they don’t go extinct first

Cambodia’s wildlife pioneer: saving species and places in Southeast Asia’s last forest

Save the Frogs Day focuses on banning Atrazine in US

From the Serengeti to Lake Natron: is the Tanzanian government aiming to destroy its wildlife and lands?

New method to measure threat of extinction could help conservationists prioritize

More biodiversity equals cleaner water, but why?

The value of the little guy, an interview with Tyler Prize-winning entomologist May Berenbaum

Kepunahan massal keenam di dunia masih bisa dicegah

Goodbye national parks: when ‘eternal’ protected areas come under attack

15 conservation issues to watch

Rich plant diversity leads to increased productivity, ecosystem services

Dari Kamboja ke Kalifornia: 10 hutan yang paling terancam di dunia

World’s sixth mass extinction still preventable

Parks key to saving India’s great mammals from extinction

Top 25 most endangered turtles: Asian species in crisis

Worldwide search for ‘lost frogs’ ends with 4% success, but some surprises

The ocean crisis: hope in troubled waters, an interview with Carl Safina

Paradise & Paradox: a semester in Ecuador

From Cambodia to California: the world’s top 10 most threatened forests

Study: REDD could save species from extinction, if well-funded

Earth could see 4 degrees Celsius warming in less than a lifetime

Ad warning of mass extinction appears in Times Square

Will biodiversity agreement save life on Earth?

Harrison Ford chides US for spurning international biodiversity treaty

The march to extinction accelerates

Environmentalists must recognize ‘biases and delusions’ to succeed

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