The Amazon rainforest is a global hot spot of life and biodiversity. Spanning eight countries – Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana – this ...
The reality is that we all have a joint responsibility in protecting the Amazon. The food we eat is helping to fuel the deforestation ... Every hectare of the Amazon that is destroyed pushes the ...
"We are on the right path." Leaders strike historic deal that could change the future of the Amazon rainforest: 'The largest ...
In Brazil´s Amazonas state, almost 6,000 riverine dwellers authorized to fish have reported a significant drop in production ...
The world consumes not more than 200 of them. More than 80% of the food products of the world has its origin in Amazon rainforest. The alarming concern Due to deforestation, we are losing 1.5 ...
Atmospheric aerosol particles are essential for the formation of clouds and precipitation, thereby influencing the Earth's energy budget, water cycle, and climate. However, the origin of aerosol ...
Rock art found in the Amazon rainforest carries images of the area's earliest inhabitants living alongside giant Ice Age creatures, researchers say. The paintings are estimated to have been made ...
As a child, I dreamed of visiting the Amazon rainforest, but I always envisioned ... I'm vegetarian, and I was a little worried about the food and drink situation, but I didn't have any issues ...
The environment ministry said that efforts by inspectors were important in bringing about the fall, President Lula had promised to restore the Amazon rainforest when he was trying to get elected ...
The reality is that we all have a joint responsibility in protecting the Amazon. The food we eat is helping to fuel the deforestation ... Every hectare of the Amazon that is destroyed pushes the ...
Extreme drought across Brazil’s Amazon worsens local fears for the future Historically low water levels have affected hundreds of thousands of people and wildlife across Brazil’s Amazon and ...
Adventurer describes going where nobody has been before in the Amazon rainforest. Ash Dykes and his team kayaked 380 miles from the source of the Coppename river to the sea. More than 62,000 sq km ...