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.

Restore Nature – Cool the Planet

Only nature has the ability to both cool the planet and lower greenhouse gas levels.  Our planet is already too hot and too dry to maintain a stable climate and support life.  These 4 Climate Keys are interlocking pieces of the cycles we must repair to quickly stop warming and start cooling the planet.

Q:

What about atmospheric carbon dioxide – you know – the greenhouse effect?

A:

It’s an important part of the story, but not the whole story. Learn more.

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. 

River, nature landscape

Stay on Top of the
Climate Conversation

Join Our Mailing List

Through education, policy and outreach, we promote the great potential of inexpensive, low-tech and powerful nature solutions to the biodiversity and climate crises, and work to inspire urgent action and widespread implementation of many regenerative practices.

This Week

News and Insights

New Satellite Observations Show How and Where Earth’s Vegetation is Changing

Scientists from the German Center for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research (UFZ), and Leipzig University have created a new method to help us better understand how the living surface of our planet is reorganizing in a warming world. 

READ MORE

A Coordinated Conservation Effort Across Finland, the Canadian Arctic, and the United States is Working to Protect and Restore Peatlands in Europe and North America. 

Kunnijänkkä intact peatland
Kunnijänkkä intact peatland facing Northeast, the Pallas-Ounas National Park visible on the horizon. Image courtesy of Mika Honkalinna / Snowchange Cooperative.

Through grassroots mapping, community monitoring, and restoration projects rooted in traditional land use and knowledge, indigenous and local groups in Finland, Canada, and the United States are collaborating on a collaborative biodiversity replenishment model to protect and restore peatlands and surrounding forests. 

READ MORE

Events and Community

Courses

Upcoming course, Emergent Intelligence of Trees: How Symbiosis Shapes Living Systems, led by restoration biologist Jim Laurie. Beginning March 18, with an introductory webinar on March 11, this course explores how forests function as living climate systems regulating hydrology, stabilizing atmosphere, building soils, and generating resilience through symbiosis.

“There is a sky behind the forest. There are seas unbounded, seething waves made from the foams of dreams and churned by hands of light.” – My Story by the renowned Iraqi poet Nāzik al-Malā’ikah (translated by Emily Drumsta)

In the book The Genius of Trees, Harriet Rix opens with an image of forests as living interfaces between sea, sky, and land. In the cloud forests of La Gomera in the Canary Islands, where mist lingers and trees “chase” clouds, Rix shows how landscapes gather water from the air itself. But these hydrological partnerships are not confined to rare mountaintops. From Brazil to Borneo, Costa Rica to China, Australia to the Philippines, forests function as atmospheric engines.

Rix reveals a profound evolutionary insight – trees developed into trees to gain power over water. Through photosynthesis, they split water molecules using solar energy. Through vertical growth, they solved the paradox of needing both air and water reaching upward to harvest light and downward to access groundwater. Above ground, trees interrupt airflow, emit volatile organic compounds that seed clouds, and release water vapor through stomata helping to regulate rainfall. Below ground, roots collect, redistribute, and stabilize water tables. Across three trillion trees and 73,000 species, these minute adjustments accumulate into sweeping shifts in global water flow.

This understanding forms the scientific foundation of our upcoming course, Emergent Intelligence of Trees: How Symbiosis Shapes Living Systems, led by restoration biologist Jim Laurie. Beginning March 18, with an introductory webinar on March 11, this course explores how forests function as living climate systems regulating hydrology, stabilizing atmosphere, building soils, and generating resilience through symbiosis.

Learn More and Register

Your Weekend Read

A Forest Journey The Role of Trees in the Fate of Civilization John Perlin (Author)

Errata: Last week, we inadvertently misidentified the author of A Forest Journey. John Perlin is the correct author of this book. We encourage you to take a trip with John through the history of forests! 

A Forest Journey: The Role of Trees in the Fate of Civilization

By John Perlin

At first glance, you might think this is “just” a book about trees. But it is so much more! John Perlin shares the history of human civilization as it relates to forests. From commerce to conquest, every chapter of our history has been played out in relation to forests.

I first encountered John during our GBH talk and was fascinated to discover that our complex relationship with nature can be traced as far back as the epic tale Gilgamesh from 2100 BC. This reprint of Perlin’s 1989 book by Patagonia is full of stunning full-color pictures and was recently updated to include climate change and the biotic pump.

View on the Bio4Climate Bookshop

By purchasing this title through the link provided above, you’ll continue to support Bio4Climate. We are an affiliate partner of Bookshop.org and receive a portion of the sales price at no additional cost to you.

The 2025 Northeast Miniforest Summit featured more than a dozen speakers across two virtual half-days and an in-person bus tour, bringing together practitioners, researchers, and leaders from diverse fields to unpack the Miyawaki Method from root to canopy.

Recordings Are Now Live! Learn more and stay connected at miniforests.bio4climate.org

Watch here

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

― Beck Mordini

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).

Photos: Cuenca Los Ojos