#aras

[ follow ]
US news
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Caracas' iconic macaws threatened by vanishing palm trees

The blue and gold macaws in Caracas face threats due to city authorities cutting down their nesting palm trees, risking their population decline.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

Exploring the green side of Rio de Janeiro: a vast urban rain forest

Tijuca National Park offers a unique urban rainforest experience with waterfalls and diverse wildlife amidst Rio de Janeiro's bustling city life.
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

The Spanish woman who spent a year on a Philippine island and discovered another way frogs reproduce

The 18th and 19th centuries were pivotal for natural history, with ongoing exploration and study of biodiversity continuing today.
Design
fromDesign Milk
3 days ago

Emma In Paraty: A Study in Stitch, Scale, and Sincerity

Childlike experimentation and the beauty of imperfection are celebrated in the unique, handcrafted embroidery pieces by Olga Treivas.
Social justice
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

We took clothes, a blanket and a dog': the people displaced by a dam 50 years ago, but still fighting for justice

The Itaipu hydroelectric dam construction displaced the Ava-Guarani people, disrupting their territory and culture, with ongoing struggles for justice and recognition.
#colombia
fromFortune
5 days ago
Agriculture

Colombia approves plan to kill cocaine hippos roaming through center of country | Fortune

fromFortune
5 days ago
Agriculture

Colombia approves plan to kill cocaine hippos roaming through center of country | Fortune

UX design
fromAwwwards
4 days ago

100 Lost Species

The project illustrates extinction's impact through an interactive digital experience, emphasizing time's role in species disappearance and human influence.
#conservation
Environment
fromEarth911
5 days ago

Take Action on Arbor Day to Help Our Planet

Trees are essential for a healthy planet, yet they face significant threats from wildfires, droughts, insect infestations, and deforestation.
Photography
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

For the first time in 10 years, imperiled cloud jaguar' makes an appearance

Wildlife corridors are aiding the recovery of the endangered cloud jaguar in Honduras, as evidenced by recent camera trap images.
Pets
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A dream come true': Brazil's blue-and-yellow macaws return to Rio after 200 years

The blue-and-yellow macaw is being reintroduced to Rio de Janeiro after nearly disappearing due to deforestation and wildlife trafficking.
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

How bad for humans is wildlife trade? A new study has answers

"There's been a consensus for a long time that the wildlife trade is a risk to human health, but a lot of what we know is from anecdotes."
Coronavirus
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

African scientists hail mushrooming global interest in conserving fungi

Fungi are some of the most important things in the world. They feed 90% of terrestrial plants. Without them, there is no life on the Earth.
Agriculture
Environment
fromNature
1 week ago

Biodiversity resilience in a tropical rainforest - Nature

Tropical forests face severe threats from human activities, necessitating urgent conservation efforts to restore biodiversity and ecosystem services.
Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Sara Flores, the Peruvian Indigenous artist bringing Amazonian traditions into contemporary art

Kene patterns of the Shipibo-Conibo people reflect their worldview and will be showcased at the Venice Biennale by artist Sara Flores.
Photography
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Portraits of the magic of Serra Grande, the bastion of Brazil's Atlantic Forest

The region of Serra Grande in Brazil showcases biodiversity and resilience amidst industrial threats and loss of traditions.
Environment
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 week ago

Argentina MPs approve bill allowing mining in glaciers

The Argentinian government approved a controversial bill allowing mining in ecologically sensitive glacier areas, sparking widespread protests and environmental concerns.
Arts
fromapps.npr.org
2 weeks ago

The busiest place you've never seen

Life on Tristan da Cunha is shaped by extreme isolation, with a small population relying on each other for daily tasks and community survival.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

It was bonkers': Samba the runaway capybara inspires a wild rodent hunt

Samba and Tango were brought to Marwell zoo, but Samba escaped through a hole in their enclosure, prompting a search that has gained national attention.
Pets
fromRealagriculture
3 weeks ago

Biofuels, Brazil, and the cost of war: Suderman outlines key forces shaping grain markets

"I think it surprised me how easily people are swayed by headlines," says Suderman, noting that wartime information flows are often strategic and conflicting. "You have to learn in a wartime to take everything with a grain of salt in the context of what you observe."
World politics
#paraty
fromCN Traveller
2 months ago
Travel

In Brazil's Costa Verde, local communities are tapping into the ancient stillness beneath their town's thrum

fromCN Traveller
2 months ago
Travel

In Brazil's Costa Verde, local communities are tapping into the ancient stillness beneath their town's thrum

Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

If they pollute our rivers, what will become of us?': the town divided between hope and fear in Brazil's Amazon oil rush

Oiapoque, Brazil, is poised for development through oil production, raising concerns about environmental impacts and Indigenous rights amid a global energy transition.
Agriculture
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

How weaving, glamping and kayak tours are helping to tackle deforestation in Argentina's Gran Chaco

Jorge Luna chose forest tourism over timber sales to combat deforestation and support local conservation efforts in Argentina's Gran Chaco forest.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
4 weeks ago

They want to colonise us': Brazil's Lula warns of foreign interference

Brazilian President Lula criticizes US colonial approaches in Latin America and its interventions in countries like Cuba and Venezuela.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
3 weeks ago

The Brazilian House That Turns a Hillside Into a Feature - Yanko Design

The design follows a longitudinal layout, which makes complete sense once you understand what the architects were trying to accomplish. By stretching the house along the slope rather than fighting it, the building naturally orients itself toward the mountain views in the valley below.
Design
Pets
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Eight arrested for brutal' attack on capybara in Brazil

Eight people were arrested in Rio de Janeiro for brutally beating a capybara, highlighting extreme animal cruelty in society.
History
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Centuries before the Inca, Peru's wealthy imported parrots from afar

The Ychsma kingdom maintained a sophisticated long-distance trade network spanning hundreds of kilometers across the Andes to import live parrots from the Amazon rainforest centuries before the Inca Empire.
fromConde Nast Traveler
1 month ago

Exploring the Peruvian Amazon, One Riverbend at a Time, on Abercrombie & Kent's Debut Voyage

The 12-cabin cruiser Pure Amazon is Abercrombie & Kent's first voyage on these waters and is part of the brand's Sanctuary collection, which will also include the soon-to-launch riverboat After 25 years in Peru, the company is setting out to not just join a tradition but redefine smart river travel with design-led interiors that evoke a boutique hotel and with five-course dinners paired with Peruvian small-batch wines.
Travel
Arts
fromwww.dw.com
4 weeks ago

Amazonia's Indigenous peoples dismantle Western cliches

European depictions of the Amazon as a timeless wilderness ignore its cultural diversity and historical complexity.
Agriculture
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Agriculture of life': the Rio families growing bananas to protect the world's largest urban forest

Quilombola communities in Rio de Janeiro preserve banana cultivation traditions while contributing to biodiversity in the Pedra Branca state park.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

It creates a sense of belonging': Brazil bets on hiking trails for conservation

The idea that hiking trails are a tool for conservation is based on a simple premise: people protect what they know. That requires making conservation areas accessible. There's no point telling people you only protect what you know, if you don't give them the tools to know. The trail is this tool. People who hike, people who camp, these people often become defenders of the environment.
Travel
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Marsupials previously thought extinct for millennia discovered in New Guinea

Two marsupial species presumed extinct for 6,000 years were discovered alive in West Papua rainforests, representing rare Lazarus taxa that survived despite disappearing from fossil records.
fromwww.dw.com
3 months ago

How the EU-Mercosur deal could hit the climate

After a majority of EU leaders gave the green light last week to the free-trade deal that was 25 years in the making, von der Leyen said it would "create more business opportunities" and "give [European] companies better access to critical raw materials." Once approved by the European Parliament and ratified by both the EU and Mercosur, the massive accord often dubbed a "cows-for-cars" trade deal will open up markets on both continents to almost all goods, including cars, machinery and chemicals from Europe.
Miscellaneous
#climate-change
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago
Environment

Quit fossil fuels to stem deadly floods in Brazil's coffee heartland, say scientists

Record floods in Brazil's coffee region caused by extreme rainfall will intensify with continued fossil fuel burning, threatening lives and global coffee prices.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago
Environment

Some of world's oldest trees hit by climate-fuelled wildfires in Patagonia

Human-caused climate change greatly increased the likelihood of extreme hot, dry, windy conditions that fueled deadly wildfires in Chile and Argentina.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Quit fossil fuels to stem deadly floods in Brazil's coffee heartland, say scientists

Record floods in Brazil's coffee region caused by extreme rainfall will intensify with continued fossil fuel burning, threatening lives and global coffee prices.
Agriculture
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Villagers on Principe, the African Galapagos', to be paid for protecting the ecosystem

Principe islanders receive quarterly dividends for following environmental protection codes, with nearly 3,000 participants receiving their first payment of €816, creating economic incentive for conservation.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

Science and Culture in Latin America, Alejo Stark

Scientific knowledge is culturally embedded; Indigenous and colonial practices fundamentally shaped modern science, and values and power influence inquiry.
Remodel
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

Corrego do Bispo Linear Park / Natureza Urbana

Córrego do Bispo Linear Park is a landscape and urban infrastructure project in Cachoeirinha, São Paulo, linking urban areas and Cantareira State Park.
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

10 of the Greenest Places to Visit on Earth for a Lush Getaway in Nature

According to color psychology, this soothing shade helps decrease stress and improve focus-and travelers can reap these much-deserved benefits in lush landscapes around the world. Here are 10 of the greenest places on earth, which combine serenity with unforgettable adventures.
Miscellaneous
History
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Who Decides What Is Worth Preserving? Power and Heritage in Latin America

Heritage is a community-rooted process linking identity, place, and memory, shaped by contested professional decisions amid inequality and ecological crisis.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

How a teen's AI model could help stop poaching in rainforests

Both species are under threat. But while African savanna elephants are endangered, forest elephants are critically endangered. They're also highly elusive. Living in dense tropical rainforests in central Africa and parts of West Africa they're very hard to find and study.
Science
fromDaily Coffee News by Roast Magazine
2 months ago

Brazilian Researchers Promote Targeted Application of Bees for Coffee

A small, stingless bee may be able to raise coffee yields while fitting into real-world pest control programs, according to a new study from Brazil. In a field study on full-sun arabica farms, researchers reported a 67% higher fruit yield on coffee branches closer to colonies of the native stingless bee Scaptotrigona depilis, compared with branches farther away. The study was recently published in Frontiers in Bee Science.
Coffee
fromwww.archdaily.com
2 months ago

Pinheiro Farm / Equipe Lamas

Among the wooded hills of the Sao Paulo countryside, Fazenda Pinheiro reaffirms that architecture can evolve in dialogue with time.
Remodel
Travel
fromCN Traveller
2 months ago

14 rainforest hotels that put you right in the jungle

Luxury rainforest hotels offer immersive, eco-responsible stays with high-end amenities and direct access to diverse wildlife in regions like the Amazon, equatorial Africa and islands.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The river won': how campaigners in Brazilian Amazon stopped privatisation of waterway

The river won, the forest won, the memory of our ancestors won, said the campaigners in Santarem when it was clear their actions had forced the Brazilian government into a U-turn on plans to privatise one of the world's most beautiful waterways and expand its role as a soy canal.
Environment
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

'These are dirty funds': Indigenous Brazilian leader slams Science Museum for oil sponsorship ahead of climate show

BP's sponsorship of the museum has long drawn ire, in part because the oil company pursues an "all out for oil and gas" strategy, including plans to exploit deep drilling at the recently discovered Burmerangue site off the coast of Brazil. The project has been criticised by campaigners and oil and gas unions due to its threat to ocean ecosystems, elevated carbon dioxide levels, and lack of revenue flowing back into the Brazilian economy.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Postcard-pretty and filled with pollution: how Brazil's fishers are reviving Rio de Janeiro's famous bay

Raw sewage and solid waste flow into the bay from surrounding cities, home to more than 8 million people. Cargo ships and oil platforms chug in and out of commercial ports, while dozens of abandoned vessels lie rotting in the water. But at the head of the bay, between the cities of Itaborai and Mage, the environment feels different. The air is purer, the waters are empty but for small fishing canoes, and flocks of birds soar overhead.
Environment
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

Brazil's soy industry gives deforestation a green light

A moratorium that has protected vital rainforest since 2009 is on shaky ground as several players from Brazil's soy industry say they are pulling out. Specifically, the Brazilian industry association ABIOVE, whose members include global companies such as Cofco International, Bunge, Amaggi and JBS, have said they will no longer refrain from growing soy on deforested land. Environmentalists fear this could fuel a new wave of Amazon logging.
Environment
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Pure apocalypse': a photographer's journey through the Pantanal wildfires

A documentary photographer documents catastrophic Pantanal and Amazon fires, chronicling environmental destruction, wildlife loss, and ongoing return visits to record the aftermath.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Nearly 200 arrested in cross-border crackdown on gold mining in Amazon

Police and prosecutors from Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana and Suriname have arrested nearly 200 people in their first joint cross-border operation targeting illegal gold mining in the Amazon region, authorities said. The operation was backed by Interpol, the EU and Dutch police specialising in environmental crime. It involved more than 24,500 checks on vehicles and people across remote border areas and led to the seizure of cash, unprocessed gold, mercury, firearms, drugs and mining equipment, Interpol said.
Environment
Environment
fromNature
2 months ago

Marine protection in the Azores: a triumph for conservation and sustainability

The Azores established in 2024 the North Atlantic's largest MPA network, protecting 30% of its sea with half fully closed to extractive activities.
Environment
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

The truth behind wildlife tourism

Wildlife tourism in Kenya and Tanzania threatens migration corridors and Maasai land rights, requiring integrated approaches to reconcile conservation, community livelihoods and economic benefits.
Environment
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Rewilding Rejects the We're-So-Special Exceptionalism

Rewilding requires rehabilitating human hearts, overcoming self-centeredness, and treating nature with compassion so ecosystems and nonhuman lives can flourish.
fromwww.dw.com
2 months ago

The business of saving nature

The world spends 30 times more money destroying nature than protecting it. That's according to a new report from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) that exposes a massive gulf between so-called "harmful investments" and financing that promotes nature preservation. The global environment agency's latest "State of Finance for Nature" (SNF) report is calling to phase out the US$7.3 trillion (6.2 trillion) in global investments that damage nature including into high-emissions energy infrastructure and manufacturing, for example.
Environment
Environment
frombigthink.com
1 month ago

Widening the frame: Indigenous land rights and the future of climate policy

Indigenous land rights are essential to climate action, with Indigenous representatives at COP30 demanding recognition of their ancestral land ownership and management authority.
fromFast Company
2 months ago

These digital tools are stepping up the global fight against wildlife trafficking

In late 2025, Interpol coordinated a global operation across 134 nations, seizing roughly 30,000 live animals, confiscating illegal plant and timber products, and identifying about 1,100 suspected wildlife traffickers for national police to investigate. Wildlife trafficking is one of the most lucrative illicit industries worldwide. It nets between US$7 billion and $23 billion per year, according to the Global Environment Facility, a group of nearly 200 nations as well as businesses and nonprofits that fund environmental improvement and protection projects.
Environment
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Floating cities of logs: can the lungs of Africa' survive its exploitation?

Millions depend on the Congo River basin for livelihoods while facing dangerous river travel, corruption, and threats to biodiverse forests that trap massive carbon.
[ Load more ]