A new Colorado State University study of the interior U.S. West has found that tree ranges are generally contracting in ...
Climate change and habitat destruction are driving species to extinction at an alarming rate. The impact extends across all ...
Rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, and other climate impacts are throttling cocoa production and driving up chocolate ...
Alpine plants, fragile and adapted to live in a limited ecosystem, may be the canary in the coal mine of climate change.
Rising temperatures and shifting rainfall patterns in West Africa, which supplies around 70% of the world's cacao, are ...
A study tracking rainfall patterns over thousands of years has found that more arid periods coincided with ages of dynastic ...
Climate change drove weeks of crop-withering temperatures last year in the West African countries that underpin the world's ...
Money can’t buy you love — or as much cocoa as it used to, with adverse weather denting West African crops and chocolatiers ...
A new long-term study reveals alarming insights into the impact of climate change on the European beech (Fagus sylvatica), one of Europe's most widespread and ecologically important tree species.
A new long-term study reveals alarming insights into the impact of climate change on European beech (Fagus sylvatica), one of Europe's most widespread and ecologically important tree species.
The trees are being planted as part of the council's climate change action plan and the first stage of its tree management ...
This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Another casualty of Trump’s funding freeze: New Orleans’ tree ...