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From the rainforests of Central and South America to the savannas of northern Australia, the world’s equatorial regions are ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNTropical Birds Are Struggling to Cope With Extreme Heat, Research Suggests
A first-of-its-kind data analysis links high temperatures caused by climate change to tropical bird population declines ...
Human-driven heat extremes reduced tropical bird populations by 25-38% between 1950-2020, threatening global biodiversity.
A study using more than 90,000 scientific observations shows Earth is getting too hot for many tropical birds.
PARIS: Tropical bird populations have plummeted not only due to deforestation but also extreme heat attributable ...
Climate change-driven heat extremes have wiped out 25-38 per cent of tropical bird populations since 1950, according to a ...
Bird populations in the tropics have dropped by roughly a third (25-38 percent) since 1980 due to intensifying heat extremes, compared to a world ...
4don MSN
Climate change and extreme heat play a role in decline of tropical bird population, study finds
The research examined bird data over a 70 year period, and found a near 40 per cent decline in the overall abundance of 3,000 ...
Carbon Brief handpicks and explains the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight.
These birds are almost extinct. A radical idea could save them. By Dino Grandoni and Matt McClain The Washington Post, Updated September 15, 2024, 8:08 p.m.
The study said long-term changes to the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle, with more frequent and intense hot, dry El Nino events due to climate change, disrupt the natural balance between El ...
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