Nature Is Climate
At Bio4Climate, we contribute to planetary regeneration through research, education, collaboration and action to restore essential global biodiversity . . . and create a new climate story.
Biodiversity loss is not just the result of climate change, it is a primary driver of climate change. Only solutions that prioritize this web of life will create a truly livable climate for all.

Upcoming Events and Courses

Northeast Miniforest Summit 2026
Registration is now open for the 2026 Northeast Miniforest Summit: Root to Canopy: Growing the Miyawaki Method
Across the Northeast and beyond, communities are planting and stewarding miniforests in schoolyards, parks, campuses, farms, urban spaces, and other underused landscapes.
This year’s Summit brings together practitioners, researchers, educators, community leaders, and forest stewards to share lessons, refine practices, and explore how miniforests can restore ecological function and reconnect people with place.
The Summit unfolds across three connected virtual and in-person events:
- July 15, 2026 – Making a Mini-Forest Documentary Screening
- July 18, 2026 – Massachusetts Miniforest Bus Tour
- July 22–23, 2026 – Virtual Summit
Join us for the Summit featuring opening keynote by Ethan Tapper, forester and author of How to Love a Forest, and closing by keynote Mio Urata, Miyawaki Method Forest Maker, alongside 20+ speakers and panelists.

Cool the Planet
convert
Converting heat islands caused by spreading urbanization into natural cooling systems turns down the heat.
More Nature = Less Heat.
Hydrate
Keeping water in the ground supports plants, crops and people. Beavers, insects and microbes are part of the Infiltration Team
Plant
Planting for biodiversity creates healthy ecosystems. Forests sequester carbon and use water vapor to move heat away from the Earth
Protect
Indigenous leadership and wisdom can help us. Stop deforestation, industrial ag, mining, and pollution that kill off biodiversity.
What about CO₂ and the greenhouse effect?
It’s part of the story — but not the whole story.
Who We Are
Bio4Climate Tells the Hidden Stories
For nearly a decade we have looked behind, around, and under the prevailing climate narratives for the missing pieces of the puzzle. We continue to bring you authors, ecorestoration specialists, and scientists from around the world who explore the interlocking systems that create a livable climate.

Join a community that believes nature can heal the climate
Weekly stories of restoration, climate science, and action — including our Featured Creature series, where biodiversity comes to life one species at a time.
This Week
News and Insights
Community / Events
Music as Climate Inspiration

This week’s screening of Thinking Like Water, Country Roads City Roads included the lovely “Sing Back the River” by Petey Mesquietey. The song is both a tribute to the beauty of the rich nature around the Santa Cruz River in Arizona and a lament for what has been lost now that the River is mostly dry and the banks devoid of life.
Guest speaker Brad Lancaster shares his curated playlist that motivates and inspires his work.
Session 2 of Bio4Climate Mini-Conference Series: Forests: Past, Present, Future

Saturday, July 18, 2026 | 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM ET
Free and open to all
Forests have shaped human civilization for thousands of years and they are essential to the future we must now build.
At just nine years old, Felix Finkbeiner planted his first tree and helped spark what became Plant-for-the-Planet, a global youth movement for forest restoration, climate justice, and ecosystem protection.
Join us for Forests: Past, Present, Future, a Bio4Climate Mini-Conference conversation that brings together youth-led climate action and deep forest history. John Perlin, author of Forest Journey: The Story of Wood and Civilization, will show how forests have sustained civilizations and how their destruction has contributed to ecological and social decline. Felix Finkbeiner will share how young people around the world are transforming concern into restoration.
Together, they offer a powerful multigenerational perspective: to protect the future, we must learn from the past, restore what has been damaged, and support the young leaders already working to regenerate the living systems that sustain us.
Miniforest Summit Registration Is Open

Have you registered for the 2026 Northeast Miniforest yet?
There is so much to choose from including: a documentary film screening, an in-person tour of four Massachusetts miniforests, and two virtual half-days with more than 20 speakers and panelists. Don’t miss our amazing keynote speakers.
Mio Urata, a Miyawaki forester who trained directly under Dr. Miyawaki and has more than two decades of restoration experience in Japan. Urata recently translated Hannah Lewis’s Mini-Forest Revolution into Japanese, helping strengthen connections across the international miniforest community.
Day two keynote speaker, Ethan Tapper, is an internationally recognized forester, ecologist, educator, and bestselling author of How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World. Here is a sample of his dynamic story telling.
The Summit creates space to share lessons learned, explore emerging questions, and strengthen relationships across a growing movement of people working to bring miniforests to life.
Tom Wallace Lyons: A Living Legacy
At Bio4Climate, our work grows from relationships with the land, with communities, and with people who believe in restoring the living world around us. Our new blog post, A Living Legacy: The Lyons Family, Restoration, and the Work Ahead, shares the story of Tom Wallace Lyons and the lasting impact of his family’s generosity, care, and commitment. Support from people like Tom is what makes our work in the field possible, helping us plant, restore, educate, and build hope for future generations. We are deeply grateful for the people who walk alongside us in this work and help turn restoration into a living legacy.
Transformation in Mexico
Eco Restoration Works
Watch what happens! A degraded landscape in Mexico is transformed by regenerative management. It took only two years (the arrow points to the same tree).

Tell nature’s climate story, the story of connection and life.
― Beck Mordini




