climate change

Image of a coral reef
| 3 min read
Across the vast majority of our planet, the historical and current land-uses of Indigenous Peoples and local communities, together with their interwoven practices and knowledge systems, are essential for sustaining our planet's biodiversity.
| 2 min read
Image of a tropical forest cannopy
| 2 min read
Aerial view of a forest and mountains
| 4 min read
Ice flow in antarctica
| 3 min read
At the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, not only dinosaurs went extinct. The loss of species in the upper part of the ocean had profound impacts on its diversity and function. Image shows small deprived Cretaceous fauna after the extinction.
| 2 min read
Stratospheric clouds above the Arctic, like those seen here over Kiruna, Sweden, provide ideal conditions for chemical reactions that transform chlorine to a form that depletes the Earth's protective ozone layer
| 4 min read
Birds in a nest
| 3 min read
The National Wildlife Federation and partners are installing climate-adapted pollinator gardens in Philadelphia; their work differs from business-as-usual conservation by altering their planting mix to include a greater diversity of native species that are well-suited to future climate conditions, for example by being drought- and heat-tolerant
| 2 min read
Image of a sunset over the ocean
| 2 min read
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CURRENT ISSUE - October 2025

Turning Safety Principles Into Daily Practice

Move Beyond Policies to Build a Lab Culture Where Safety is Second Nature

Lab Manager October 2025 Cover Image