Ecosystem Resilience

Ecosystem Resilience

A woman in traditional attire stands among a group of people, next to maps showing global data with colored grids and overlays.
A growing movement shows that protecting the world’s forests — and the people who have safeguarded them for centuries — is one of the most powerful, and overlooked, tools in the fight against climate change.
Skoll Foundation
a diagram of the ocean floor.
About six million years ago, the Mediterranean was sealed off from the Atlantic, and over centuries it ran dry. One megaflood reversed that.
Collage featuring "THE NIGHTCRAWLER" text, a black-and-white photo of a person, tree roots reminiscent of smart forests, and code fragments, all overlaid on a gray grid background.
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
Map showing Copenhagen, Denmark’s projected 2080 climate as similar to Demigny, France today, with a red arrow connecting the two cities and climate details listed in pop-up boxes.
“Climate analog mapping” finds the place that is currently as warm as your city might be in 60 years.
Target symbol over a world map with a central orange circle displaying "< 2°", surrounded by numbers on concentric circles.
5mins
“I think the key point is that doesn't mean game over. That doesn't mean we're flipped into a world, and to a point of no return.”
Pipette approaching a petri dish containing a shimmering dark substance on a purple gradient background.
“I want to change the way we think about the past altogether,” says Dr. Betül Kaçar, an astrobiologist who studies the origin of life.
Construction equipment stands poised near a large, partially demolished dam wall, signaling the ongoing dam removal process beside a pool of green water.
Retrofitting America's aging dams for hydropower — while removing ecologically harmful ones — may be a productive path forward.
A bear attempting to catch a jumping fish near a waterfall.
5mins
“While society's been humming along and enjoying all these advances in agriculture and medicine, in the last 50 or 60 years, ecologists have learned a lot about how nature works. I've codified these into a set of rules called the 'Serengeti Rules.'”
Close-up of a hornet with black and yellow stripes on its body, perched on small white flowers against a green background.
Researchers are working nest by nest to limit the threat while developing better eradication methods.
Three industrial smokestacks emit dense, white smoke against a blue sky.
7mins
“If given a chance, nature can rebound, and nature can rebound dramatically.” Biologist Sean B. Carroll discusses the resilience of nature and how humans can help it thrive. Humans litter, […]
As the world warms, trees in forests such as those in Minnesota will no longer be adapted to their local climates. That’s where assisted migration comes in.
A colorful village sits on the shore of a body of water.
Scientists are working to map out the risks of the permafrost thaw, which could expose millions of people to the invisible cancer-causing gas.
A picture of a serene forest with tall trees and a peaceful pond.
The ominous cloud of acid rain hasn't vanished but rather drifted toward the developing world.
A rainbow over wind turbines.
As wind power grows around the world, so does the threat the turbines pose to wildlife. From simple fixes to high-tech solutions, new approaches can help.
Comparison of pain relievers.
Pain relievers like acetaminophen and ibuprofen are made with chemicals derived from oil. Scientists have shown how to make them from trees.
a flock of birds flying through a cloudy sky.
Rich data on the global state of our feathered friends presents plenty of bad news — but also some bright spots.
a picture of a blue planet with a black background.
Frozen adversity set the stage for an explosion of diversity.
a polar bear rolling around on its back.
The jail environment teaches the animals that approaching humans results in a boring and annoying experience.
a very cute looking animal with a button on it's head.
At least one of Earth's creatures is able to survive the vacuum of space.
yeast cell colony humans
Left to their own devices, yeast cells will consume all available resources and poison themselves to death. Is humanity smarter than that?
The Black, Caspian, and Aral Seas are the last surviving fragments of a body of water that stretched from Austria to Turkmenistan.
It’s an agricultural moonshot: Scientists hope to increase plant yields by hacking photosynthesis, the process that powers life on Earth.
7mins
What astronaut Ron Garan saw in space changed his life forever – here’s what it taught him.
It's on a 100,000-year timescale, though, so the next few centuries might not be so comfortable.
We want to fight invasive species. But to wage a war, you have to know who your enemy is.
Based on data since 2000 alone, global warming is still occurring at a whopping 7-sigma significance. How hot will planet Earth get?
Overwintering is profoundly stressful for trees. So why do they bother?