New study: Tropical forests, once destroyed, can rapidly regenerate
A major international study shows that tropical forests, once destroyed, have the capacity to restore themselves over a period of decades, offering hope that they can play an important role in the…
Read the full articleYou might also wanna read

Daily weather tracker: Red alert for rain in West Bengal-Sikkim, Orange alert in Uttarakhand and Northeast; humid heat to persist in several states
downtoearth.org.in·1h ago

Climate statistics for Australian locations
bom.gov.au·3h ago

Melting ground: How climate change reshapes faith, culture and tourism in the Himalayas
downtoearth.org.in·4h ago

When the rains miss ‘Ashar’: El Niño, a shifting monsoon, and the smallholder sowing window
downtoearth.org.in·4h ago

When El Niño stops being a probability: A field journey into Marathwada with SukhaRakshak AI
downtoearth.org.in·4h ago

A-23a is dead: World’s largest iceberg has fallen apart into pieces
downtoearth.org.in·4h ago

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.