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Forest Restoration: Trade-Offs Between Environmental And Wood Production Goals

Forest restoration schemes should prioritise restoring native forests for greatest climate and environmental benefits, but these benefits incur a trade-off with wood production in comparison with tree plantations.

UK Plants Flowering A Month Earlier Due To Climate Change

Climate change is causing plants in the UK to flower a month earlier on average, which could have profound consequences for wildlife, agriculture and gardeners.

Historic Buildings Could Use Solar Panels To Protect From Rising Energy Costs

Installing solar panels could help historic buildings beat the rising costs of energy, according to a new study.

Six New Species Of Tiny Frog Discovered In Mexico

The size of a thumbnail, they don't have a tadpole stage and live in a 'secret world' on the forest floor

Protected Areas Saw Dramatic Spikes In Fires During COVID Lockdowns, Study Finds

Scientists suggest that some staffing of protected areas should be considered “essential services” in future crises.

Developing Countries Pay The Highest Price For Living With Large Carnivores

A team of researchers has highlighted human-wildlife conflict as one of the globe’s most pressing human development and conservation dilemmas.

Accelerating Melt Rate Makes Greenland Ice Sheet World’s Largest ‘Dam’

The world’s second-largest ice sheet is melting from the bottom up – and generating huge amounts of heat from hydropower.

Faeces and algorithms: Artificial Intelligence to map our intestinal bacteria

RESEARCH The intestines and their bacteria are sometimes called our ’second brain’, but studying these bacteria in their natural environment is difficult. Now researchers from the University of Copenhagen have developed a method that uses artificial intelligence to map intestinal bacteria using faeces. The researchers thus hope to gain more knowledge of the role played by these bacteria in various diseases.

Before Global Warming, Was The Earth Cooling Down Or Heating Up?

Accurate climate models play a critical role in climate science and policy, helping to inform policy- and decision-makers throughout the world as they consider ways to slow the deadly effects of a warming planet and to adapt to changes already in progress.

Researchers develop promising way to find new cancer drugs

CANCER The enzymes in human cells known as histone deacetylases, or HDACs, are targets for a handful of anticancer drugs because of their ability to affect gene expression. Now, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have developed a new method to investigate how these enzymes work on a molecular level. This new method can also help identify more precise possible anti-cancer drug candidates at a very high pace.

Loneliness hits young people harder during lockdown

CORONA VIRUS People under 30 and people with a history of mental illness experience the highest levels of loneliness and anxiety during COVID-19 lockdown. Researchers from the University of Copenhagen and their international collaborators investigate how mental health is affected by the pandemic across Europe.

Pheasant Meat Sold For Food Found To Contain Many Tiny Shards Of Toxic Lead

Eating pheasant killed using lead shot is likely to expose consumers to raised levels of lead in their diet, even if the meat is carefully prepared to remove the shotgun pellets and the most damaged tissue.

Climate Endgame: Potential for global heating to end humanity 'dangerously underexplored'

Experts call for a new ‘Climate Endgame’ research agenda, and say far too little work has gone into understanding the mechanisms by which rising temperatures might pose a catastrophic risk to society and humanity.

Natural Clean-Up: Bacteria Can Remove Plastic Pollution From Lakes

A study of 29 European lakes has found that some naturally-occurring lake bacteria grow faster and more efficiently on the remains of plastic bags than on natural matter like leaves and twigs.

Solar-Powered System Converts Plastic And Greenhouse Gases Into Sustainable Fuels

Researchers have developed a system that can transform plastic waste and greenhouse gases into sustainable fuels and other valuable products – using just the energy from the Sun.

Experts Predict Top Emerging Impacts On Ocean Biodiversity Over Next Decade

Lithium extraction from the deep sea, overfishing of deeper-water species, and the unexpected ocean impacts of wildfires on land are among 15 issues experts warn we ought to be addressing now.

Scientists Develop New Method To Assess Ozone Layer Recovery

Researchers have developed a new method for assessing the impacts of ozone-destroying substances that threaten the recovery of the ozone layer.

New study: Malaria tricks the brain's defence system

RESEARCH Malaria is one of the most common causes of death in children in Africa and is triggered by a small parasite that lives in the blood. When the parasite builds up in the blood vessels of the brain, it develops into one of the most dangerous forms of the disease, cerebral malaria. So far, it has been the understanding that the malaria parasite was not able to penetrate the actual brain tissue, but now researchers from the University of Copenhagen have found malaria parasites can do that and have mapped the mechanism they utilise.

Satellite Images Reveal Dramatic Loss Of Global Wetlands Over Past Two Decades

An analysis of over a million satellite images has revealed that 4,000 square kilometres of tidal wetlands have been lost globally over twenty years.

Sea Ice Can Control Antarctic Ice Sheet Stability, New Research Finds

The eastern Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet has grown in area over the last 20 years, due to changing wind and sea ice patterns.