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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNMore Than 90 Percent of the World's Fungal 'Hotspots' Are Not Protected, New Study SuggestsWhen you think of biodiversity, what comes to mind first? Perhaps you imagine the lush tropical rainforests of the Amazon or ...
How the climate crisis and aid cuts could devastate global supplies of vanilla - IN FOCUS: Vanilla farmers in Madagascar, a ...
The world’s rarest baobab species is Adansonia perrieri, seen here growing in the Ankarana Special Reserve, a protected forest in northern Madagascar. Scientists estimate only around 200 trees ...
Madagascar is home to many unique species, including a variety of lemurs. But there’s one species living in the island’s forests that scientists hadn’t quite been able to figure out until ...
Mountains are the “most convincing” hotspots of climate change, he told CNN. When he’s focused on the science, he keeps his emotions at arm’s length.
But there once was an even bigger bird, which roamed Madagascar before dying out roughly 1,000 years ago: the elephant bird. Scientists don't know much about these massive birds.
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