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  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Brazil records 65 percent drop in Amazon area burned by fire

In July, fire damage in Brazil's Amazon rainforest decreased by 65% year-over-year, with 1the smallest monthly total burned since 2019. Improved rainfall and increased monitoring contributed to this decline, as President Lula aims to end Amazon deforestation by 2030.
(c) Elias Tigisier

FRANCE 24

  • September 10, 2025
  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Scientists reveal hidden species in Cyprus’s ocean depths

A first-ever study mapped mesophotic zones (50–200 m deep) in Cyprus, uncovering over 200 species, including corals and sea pens never recorded there before. This baseline empowers action to protect fragile reefs and influence conservation policy for a richer future.
(c) Niklas Kiehl

OCEAN GRAPHIC MAGAZINE

  • September 8, 2025
  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Mexico’s jaguar population rises 30%—a hopeful leap for conservation

From 4,100 jaguars in 2010 to 5,326 in 2024, Mexico has achieved a 30% increase in its iconic feline’s numbers. Progress stems from protected areas, reduced rancher conflict, and growing awareness. A promising stride in a long fight to secure their future.
(c) Geranimo

THE GUARDIAN

  • September 8, 2025
  • Innovation, Uncategorized

Australia outlaws ‘nudify’ and stalking apps to protect digital dignity

Australia is demanding tech platforms ban 'nudify' and undetectable stalking apps—tools that create deepfake nudes and compromise privacy. This world-first move shifts responsibility to industry, offering a promising step to safeguard users and respect consent.
(c) JerzyGórecki

ALJAZEERA

  • September 8, 2025
  • Sustainability, Uncategorized

Onion-Peel Solar Shield Boosts Solar Panel Sustainability

Finnish researchers created a biodegradable UV-filter from red onion dyes and nanocellulose that blocks 99.9% of harmful UV light and lets through 80% of useful sunshine. It outlasted petroleum-based plastics—ups solar tech and honors Earth’s materials.
(c) Abishek Hayare

ZME SCIENCE

  • September 8, 2025
  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Scientists tap secret undersea freshwater to ease global needs

In a first-ever underwater drilling mission off Cape Cod, researchers uncovered a vast reserve of freshwater hidden beneath the ocean floor. This discovery offers hope for a water-stressed world—though tests continue to ensure safety, sustainability, and fair access.
(c) Artion Vallat

MONGABAY

  • September 8, 2025
  • Global Health, Uncategorized

3D printing ‘glue gun’ delivers bone grafts instantly in surgery

In South Korea, a modified 3D "glue gun" can print biodegradable bone grafts directly onto fractures. It allows precise healing, releases antibiotics, and speeds recovery—paving the way for smarter, faster, and more effective surgical care.
(c) Zhanat86

MEDICAL XPRESS

  • September 8, 2025
  • Global Health, Uncategorized

Diamond Breakthrough: Off-the-Shelf Immunotherapy for Kidney Cancer

UCLA scientists have engineered AlloCAR70-NKT—an “off-the-shelf” immune cell therapy, ready-to-use, that attacks kidney tumors directly, reprograms protective environments, and avoids need for custom patient cells. A hopeful leap for late-stage cancer treatment.
(c) Robina Weermeijer

MEDICAL XPRESS

  • August 30, 2025
  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Bubble Barriers Bring New Hope for Plastic-Free Rivers

A new “bubble barrier” designed in Derby lifts hidden plastic from riverbeds to the surface for collection, protecting marine life and stopping pollution before it reaches the ocean. If successful, 42 vessels could soon clean rivers across Europe—and make the UK a global leader.
(c) Pixabay

BBC

  • August 30, 2025
  • Global Health, Uncategorized

US Colleges Welcome Pets in Dorms to Reduce Students’ Stress

Several US colleges are allowing pets in dorms to help students cope with stress, anxiety, and homesickness and boost student engagement and connections. While service and emotional support animals are legally protected, more institutions are joyfully allowing pets with certain guidelines.
(c) Anastasiya Lobanovskaya

AP NEWS

  • August 30, 2025
  • Innovation, Uncategorized

Vermont Man Brings Pay Phones Back to Life – for Free

Electrical engineer Patrick Schlott has refurbished and retrofitted used pay phones that the public can use for free around rural Vermont— internet-enabled and especially helpful where cell service is unavailable. Over 370 calls have been made so far. Retro tech that brings safety where mobile networks fail.
(c) Ambitious Studio Rick Barrett

POPULAR SCIENCE

  • August 30, 2025
  • Sustainability, Uncategorized

Nepal Halts Industry Around Buddha’s Birthplace, Home to Endangered Cranes

Nepal’s Supreme Court ordered all polluting industries within 15 km of Lumbini,  famed birthplace of the Buddha, to close or relocate within two years, preserving Buddhist heritage and Nepal’s largest population of sarus cranes, a threatened species with cultural and ecological value.
(C) WWF Neap Samir Jung Tapa/Mongabay

MONGABAY

  • August 30, 2025
  • social justice, Uncategorized

Supreme Court Secures Saugeen Beach’s Return After 170-Year Fight

Canada’s Supreme Court refuses a final appeal, ending a 170-year struggle and restoring a 1.5-mile stretch of Lake Huron shoreline to the Saugeen First Nation. This decision honors treaty promises, cultural heritage, and spiritual stewardship—sparking hope for reconciliation.
(c) Michael Rodock

THE GUARDIAN

  • August 30, 2025
  • Sustainability, Uncategorized

Oxford United Clears Green Milestone with UK’s First All-Electric Stadium

Oxford United’s new, 16,000-seat stadium has won planning approval as the UK’s first fully electric venue, powered by solar panels and heat pumps—cutting CO₂ by 80%. With transport links, wellness spaces, hotel and greenery, it promises community impact and sustainability.
(c) Tim Bernhard

SPORTS VENUE BUSINESS

  • August 23, 2025
  • Global Health, Uncategorized

Africa CDC Hails First-Ever Safe Malaria Treatment for Newborns

Coartem Baby, a sweet, dissolvable malaria medicine for infants under 5 kg, has been approved in Africa. Developed by Novartis and MMV with African-led trials, it fills a vital gap and brings hope to the continent’s youngest lives. A bold leap forward in child health.
(c) Егор Камелев

AFRICA NEWS

  • August 23, 2025
  • Conservation, Uncategorized

Scientists Map Hidden Fungi to Power Forest Recovery Worldwide

Conservationists have unveiled the first high-res maps of mycorrhizal fungi—earth’s underground lifelines—in soils across 130 countries. Yet 90% of fungal biodiversity hotspots lie unprotected. This atlas is inspiring restoration, climate resilience, and fresh conservation strategies.
(c) Wietse Jongsma

THE GUARDIAN

  • August 23, 2025
  • Innovation, Uncategorized

Crystal that “Breathes” Oxygen Paves Way for Smarter Clean Tech

Scientists in Korea and Japan created a stable strontium-iron-cobalt crystal that inhales and exhales oxygen on command—under mild conditions. Reversible and durable, it's a bright breakthrough for fuel cells, smart windows, and heat-controlling electronics.
(c) Bhautik Patel

DESIGNBOOM

  • August 23, 2025
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Most Read

A bold new commission launched by the IUCN will safeguard the tiniest but vital beings — microbes — often overlooked but essential for human health and planetary balance. This pioneering effort maps threats, sets priorities & ensures these unseen species won’t vanish without notice.
New IUCN microbe group bridges crucial conservation gap for invisible life
Studies suggest that people who read voraciously gain more than knowledge — they often experience better health, sharper minds, and greater well-being. From reduced stress to stronger empathy, reading proves to be a simple habit with extraordinary benefits for life.
Science Shows Avid Readers May Enjoy Better Health, Education, and Life
For the first time in history, solar energy outpaced all other sources to become the European Union’s main provider of electricity this June. This milestone highlights the continent’s accelerating shift toward cleaner, renewable energy and a more sustainable future.
Solar becomes EU’s leading source of electricity for the first time
Australia is demanding tech platforms ban 'nudify' and undetectable stalking apps—tools that create deepfake nudes and compromise privacy. This world-first move shifts responsibility to industry, offering a promising step to safeguard users and respect consent.
Australia outlaws ‘nudify’ and stalking apps to protect digital dignity

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