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The Amazon rainforest is able to endure decades of intense drought. Doing so means losing many trees, releasing stored carbon into the air.
The city is located nearly 930 miles (1,500km) from the nearest ocean and its population has doubled since 1990.
The Amazon rainforest may be able to survive long-term drought caused by climate change, but adjusting to a drier, warmer world would exact a heavy toll, a study suggests.
What consequences could the Amazon rainforest face as climate change continues to worse worldwide? This is what a recent ...
Amazon jaguars have shocked researchers by adopting a new hunting skill fishing like bears! In this video, we explore how ...
Peru’s state-run oil company failed to attract any bids to develop an oil field that overlaps ancestral territories of ...
The Amazon rainforest may be able to survive long-term drought caused by climate change but could experience other "profound ...
Even passing 1.5C of global warming temporarily would trigger a “significant” risk of Amazon forest “dieback”, says a new study.
Scientists have known for some time now that tropical birds are falling in number. In general, the cause has been attributed ...
The Amazon rainforest may be able to survive long-term drought caused by climate change, but adjusting to a drier, warmer ...
Pope Francis made a strong moral case for addressing climate change and respecting Indigenous rights. Will Pope Leo do the same?