animal and plant extinction trends

Animal and plant extinction trends

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Mass extinctions tied to past climate changes
American Scientific
Fossil and temperature records over the past 520 million years show a correlation between extinctions and climate change
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When the party’s over: Permian mass extinction
Read The Science
Posts about mass extinction written by amyhuva
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Earth faces sixth ‘great extinction’ with 41% of amphibians set to go the way of the dodo
The Guardian
Analysis for prestigious Nature magazine sounds alarm on the way that human activity, from overfishing to agriculture, is forcing a vast number of species to vanish from the wild
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Awọn eniyan le fa iparun nla kẹfa ni idaji bilionu kan ọdun
Iroyin IRAN
Iwadi imọ-jinlẹ tuntun kan sọ pe bii 75 ida ọgọrun ti igbesi aye lori Earth le di parun nipasẹ ọdun 2200 nitori ọdẹ pupọ, iparun ibugbe, ati iyipada oju-ọjọ.
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Nínú ‘ìparun kẹfà’ ayé, ṣé asteroid làwọn èèyàn?
NPR
Awọn onimo ijinlẹ sayensi ro pe asteroid kan pa awọn dinosaurs. Ninu iparun ode oni, eniyan ni o jẹbi. Ni akọkọ igbohunsafefe Feb 12, 2014.
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Ocean life faces mass extinction, broad study says
New York Times
Scientists find what they say are clear signs that humans are beginning to damage oceans on an unprecedented scale.
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Before we damage the oceans any further, it would be nice to know what actually lives there
Awọn Washington Post
Scientists are using "underwater condos" to study the vast number of marine species that have never even been named.
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Dead zones without marine life found in the Atlantic ocean for the first time
Yibada
The size and number of marine dead zones have grown explosively over the past half-century. In an alarming discovery, marine biologists said they&#039
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Ẹri DNA ṣe afihan iyipada oju-ọjọ pa megafauna prehistoric
awọn ibaraẹnisọrọ ti
Awọn ẹranko ti ko le ṣe deede si imorusi iyara ti tẹriba.
awọn ifihan agbara
Stalling action on climate change means animal species will disappear
Washington Post
Regarding the Dec. 21 news article “Trump’s team asks State about environmental funding ”: This is bad news for the environment and the creatures we share it with. Long after President-elect Donald...
awọn ifihan agbara
Iparun ibi-kẹfa: Akoko ti 'iparun ti ibi'
CNN
Ọpọlọpọ awọn onimo ijinlẹ sayensi sọ pe o han gbangba pe Earth n wọle si iparun-ibi-kẹfa rẹ, ti o tumọ si idamẹta ninu gbogbo awọn eya le parẹ ni awọn ọgọrun ọdun to nbo.
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The terrifying phenomenon that is pushing species towards extinction
The Guardian
Scientists are alarmed by a rise in mass mortality events  when species die in their thousands. Is it all down to climate change?
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Our planet's largest mass extinction had warning signs - and they're happening again
Itaniji Imọ

Mass extinctions don't just come unannounced. In fact, we're staring down the barrel of the latest one, according to new research.
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Iwadi tuntun rii pe iyipada oju-ọjọ ṣe ihalẹ awọn agbegbe aabo omi
Eurekalert
Iwadi tuntun lati Ile-ẹkọ giga ti North Carolina ni Chapel Hill ati awọn alabaṣiṣẹpọ rii pe pupọ julọ igbesi aye omi ni Awọn agbegbe Idaabobo Omi kii yoo ni anfani lati farada awọn iwọn otutu ti o gbona ti o ṣẹlẹ nipasẹ awọn itujade eefin eefin. Iwadi na ri pe pẹlu awọn itujade 'owo-bi-iṣaaju' tẹsiwaju, awọn aabo ti o wa lọwọlọwọ kii yoo ṣe pataki, nitori nipasẹ 2100, imorusi ati dinku ifọkansi atẹgun.
awọn ifihan agbara
Idinku awọn olugbe ti o sopọ mọ oju-ọjọ igbona ni iyara
Awọn itọsọna ẹyẹ
Iyara ni eyiti ile aye n gbona jẹ ipa pataki ninu idinku ti awọn ẹiyẹ ati awọn eya ẹran-ọsin, iwadii tuntun ti ṣafihan.
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Half the planet should be set aside for wildlife – to save ourselves
New scientist
If we want to avoid extinctions and preserve the ecosystems all life depends on, half of the Earth’s land and oceans should be protected by 2050, say biologists
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Global species loss could be halved
Leeds
Extinction risk could decrease by more than 50% if at least 30% of land were to be conserved across the tropics, a new study reveals.
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One million species at risk of extinction, UN report warns
National àgbègbè
A landmark global assessment warns that the window is closing to safeguard biodiversity and a healthy planet. Yet solutions are in sight.