GND Faune & Flore

GND Faune & Flore 

All creatures are intertwined and connected in a myriad of ways.  We as a species are natural to this planet and share it with all the other natural entities.  Birds make nests, beavers build dams, humans make nuclear plants and plastics. Its natural for humans to do this.  Its also human to repair our damage and enhance our plantet so all it’s “Natural” occupants thrive.  Its “Natural” for all organisms on this planet to survive so the planet thrives.

Coronavirus: Track the virus’ spread with this world map tool Heres to All Dads…

A year-long timelapse showing all the wild life that gathers around a single tree

 This Is Not The Sixth Extinction. It’s The First Extermination Event.

These tree-planting drones are firing ‘seed missiles’ into the ground. Less than a year later, they’re already 20 inches tall.

GND Aquatic

White House eliminates advisory boards for marine life, invasive species

The U.K. creates one of the largest marine protected area in Atlantic Ocean

Manta rays form close friendships, shattering misconceptions

How the global fish market contributes to human micronutrient deficiencies

New marine heat wave resembles killer ‘Blob’ that devastated sea life on West Coast, NOAA say Drones with Flamethrowers are Now a Thing Coral reefs: breakdown in iconic spawning puts species at risk of extinction – new research NOAA Is Investigating 70 Gray Whale Deaths Along the West Coast

GND Insects

California: Bees drop dead around 5G towers  California: Shocking footage shows lots of dead bees on the floor, immediately around two 5G towers installed in the region.

Because ‘A World Without Insects Is Not Worth Living In,’ Germany Announces Plan To Ban Glyphosate

How Mosquitoes Changed Everything They slaughtered our ancestors and derailed our history. And they’re not finished with us yet.

Plants

WHY WE CAN’T JUST #PLANTATREE

Demandez une information détaillée sur les Groupements Fonciers Forestiers The North American Forest and Climate Movement Convergence 2019   Birds

In a New Study on Bird Loss, Some Scientists Say Subtlety Is Lost, Too

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