Morning Overview on MSN
Forests do far more than store carbon, they literally keep humans alive
Forests are often called the “lungs of the Earth,” as if they single-handedly supply the air humans breathe. In reality, NASA ...
A camera-trap survey conducted throughout 2025 has revealed the bewildering breadth of biodiversity hidden within the ...
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Human activity continues to expand ever further into wild areas, throwing ecology out of balance. But what begins as an environmental issue often evolves into a human problem ...
Conservationist Paul Rosolie recalls the dangers when he came face to face with the Mashco Piro tribe deep in Peru’s jungle.
Pucha and his family have spent years recreating their own piece of jungle with rescued species on a 32-hectare farm called ...
For many years the prevailing debate about the Maya centred upon why their civilisation collapsed. Now, many scholars are asking: how did the Maya survive?
On a recent journey into the Ecuadorian Amazon jungle, Ramón Pucha realized he was being trailed. Unfazed, he continued his ...
A 2025 survey in the forests of Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia uncovered several rare and endangered animals.
A University of Florida professor visited the University of Connecticut on Thursday, Feb. 5, to discuss the impact of habitat fragmentation and drought on tropical plants.
Opinion
PublicSource on MSNOpinion
Six weeks in the Amazon’s headwaters helped me to love post-industrial Pittsburgh
Seeing illegal gold mines despoil remote Ecuadorian forests helped me to understand what happened to Pittsburgh — and to appreciate what we still have. The post Six weeks in the Amazon’s headwaters ...
Agentic robots that shop and pay without human involvement could potentially render retail marketplaces obsolete – and big ...
The world's largest isolated tribe reappears in the Peruvian Amazon as illegal logging increases the risk of contact and disease ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results