“It can be difficult describe and convey our fascination for this ecosystem, that is in a way hostile but also very fragile,” says Polar Bears International climate scientist Flavio Lehner. Join us this Monday, Nov. 25, for a conversation on the science and the stories reshaping the Arctic with Lehner and Patagonia author and explorer Jon Waterman.
Our world doesn’t work without forests. The “earth’s lungs” are home to 80% of land-based species, absorb and hold billions of metric tonnes of CO2, and nurture water cycles. And they’re in trouble. Trees & Forests: wildlife, wildfires, water & climate change is a new 8-week course from Bio4Climate, taught by Hart Hagan. Registration is open now for December enrollment!
Get a bird’s eye view of the difference our Miyawaki forests can make. This interactive page from the City of Worcester explores both of our Miyawaki forests in the city and provides fresh perspectives for understanding how they can cool, green, and beautify the urban landscape while creating space for nature to thrive.
“I like to imagine the moment of liberation for a molecule of carbon dioxide. Imagine being held tight for centuries in the embrace of an ancient tree, locked up in lignin until… the gasp of a fungus-eating beetle sets you free to become a free-floating molecule, a thing of the air, a part of something vast and fluid. Is that how the spirit leaves the body? Released from the weight of wood, into the afterlife of cedars, there is no boundary between the sacred and the mundane.” Robin Wall Kimmerer reflects on the death of a tree during a recent a visit to the Andrews Experimental Forest in Oregon.