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23 votes
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Greenhouse gas emissions in US beef production can be reduced by up to 30% with the adoption of selected mitigation measures
18 votes -
Dogs with bags of native wildflower seeds are helping rewild English nature reserve
23 votes -
'Absolute miracle' breakthrough provides recipe for zero-carbon cement
25 votes -
What is a keystone species, and why are they so important?
8 votes -
Landmark study definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss
17 votes -
GlobalUsefulNativeTrees, a database documenting 14,014 tree species, supports synergies between biodiversity recovery and local livelihoods in landscape restoration
31 votes -
China and California are leading the way on climate cooperation. Others should follow.
12 votes -
Why the world cannot afford the rich
43 votes -
Bioluminescent houseplant hits US market for first time
46 votes -
Norway's decision to permit exploratory deep-sea extraction of valuable minerals breaks a promise to the other nations on the Ocean Panel and to scientists
14 votes -
The site of a mining town on Svalbard is now being returned to nature in one of Norway's biggest-ever restoration projects
4 votes -
Since 1978 ice shelves in North Greenland have lost more than 35% of their total volume, with three of them collapsing completely
23 votes -
Greenland's massive ice sheet could experience runaway melting if the world overshoots climate targets – but even then quick action could stabilize it
6 votes -
A redistribution of nitrogen fertiliser across global croplands can help achieve food security within environmental boundaries
6 votes -
Two women were killed by bears on a day in 1967, the first such deaths in Glacier Park. Park policies completely changed in response.
9 votes -
Respect laws of nature by moving to a circular economy
9 votes -
Widespread retreat of coastal habitat is likely at warming levels above 1.5 °C
16 votes -
Human alteration of the global floodplains 1992-2019
9 votes -
Global mass of buoyant marine plastics dominated by large long-lived debris
6 votes -
How familiar are you with your local environment?
We often talk about the environment in abstract terms, using phrases like "good for the environment", "bad for the environment", "environmental problems", and so on. Obviously there is a place for...
We often talk about the environment in abstract terms, using phrases like "good for the environment", "bad for the environment", "environmental problems", and so on. Obviously there is a place for this, but I think it also serves to abstract what is a very immediate and concrete thing that we interact with each day — our local environment.
So I wanted to ask, how familiar are you all with your local environment?
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Do you recognize (or even identify) different plant and animal species in your area? Do you know which are native and which might be invasive?
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Do you notice changes in your environment throughout the year? Do you know why these changes happen?
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Thinking longer term, if you have lived in one location long enough, have you noticed changes over the years? If so, what?
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Do you know what the most pressing local environmental issues are?
I'm hoping this can be a thread for people to talk about their local environments, but also to share tips on how to be more tuned in to your local nature.
I myself would not say I am very familiar with the flora and fauna of where I live, but I have been trying to get better. I use the app Seek (which is similar to iNaturalist for those who might be familiar, but with better recognition capabilities in my experience) to identify plants around where I live, and I'm slowly trying to get better at recognizing them. The process of stopping to take a photo has really helped me slow down and pay attention to things around me — I notice a lot more garbage, roadkill near the big crossings, etc. In addition, seeing pictures of some of these plants online have made me realize just how water deprived a lot of the ones around me are, which is no doubt an effect of the drought my area has been experiencing. This has lead me to be more intentional with seeking out news regarding water laws and rights and trying to be more tuned in to these issues.
Edit
Some great additional questions from this comment of @skybrian's:
- Do you know where your water comes from?
- Do you know where sewage goes?
- Where is the landfill that your garbage goes to?
- How is recycling done?
46 votes -
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Rampant groundwater pumping has changed the tilt of Earth’s axis
34 votes -
Landmark ‘kids’ climate trial begins: how science will take the stand
13 votes -
Is it time for a baseline reset of environmental science?
4 votes -
Scientists raise alarm over ‘dangerously fast’ growth in atmospheric methane
12 votes -
Scientists: Don't feed the doubt machine
5 votes -
The nation’s first regenerative dairy works with nature to heal the soil—at scale
7 votes -
Rights of nature: How granting a river personhood could help protect it
5 votes -
More trees do not always create a cooler planet (and in some places deforestation cools more)
4 votes -
Illegal CFC emissions have stopped since scientists raised alarm
17 votes -
When travel restrictions stopped bird-watchers from visiting the Swedish island of Stora Karlsö, hidden ecosystem dynamics were revealed
6 votes -
An earth system model shows self-sustained melting of permafrost even if all man-made GHG emissions stop in 2020
15 votes -
Gas hydrate dissociation linked to contemporary ocean warming in the southern hemisphere
4 votes -
Finland has become the latest destination to introduce a tourism pledge – asking visitors to the country to promise to respect its nature, culture and inhabitants
8 votes -
Scientists are setting a forest on fire and studying it with drones
5 votes -
Plants and birds need privacy online, too
9 votes -
Halving warming with idealized solar geoengineering moderates key climate hazards
7 votes -
Recently published study in Nature shows that tropical storms have slowed by 10% over seventy years
4 votes