Few trees can find a way to survive in the liminal space where dry land meets the sea. Mangroves are the exception.
Conserving and restoring Southeast Asia's carbon-rich peatlands and mangroves could mitigate more than 50 per cent of the region's land-use carbon emissions, according to a new international study.
The first “Peace Mangrove Festival” will be held over a three-day period in Koh Kong province, with the goal of raising ...
Climate scientists have predicted that climate change and warming ... than soil surface elevation gain in mangroves, compromising the permanence of these ecosystems, she said.
Award from Sustainable Blue Economies Programme Blue Social Challenge Fund reaffirms UK's commitment to collaborating with ...
According to the framework, Shenzhen and Hong Kong will collaborate on ecological baseline and waterbird monitoring, ...
Ricoh Dominicana, in collaboration with the Ministry of the Environment and the Dominican Navy, planted 3,000 red mangroves ...
India successfully restored 22,561 hectares of mangroves across 13 states through the MISHTI initiative, aiming to bolster ...
An environmental education project promoted by the nonprofit Peabiru Institute gives students a chance to learn more about ...
Indonesia's state-owned construction and investment firm, PT Pembangunan Perumahan (PT PP), supports the government's environmental preservation efforts to reduce carbon emissions by planting mangrove ...
Conserving and restoring Southeast Asia’s carbon-rich peatlands and mangroves could mitigate more than 50 per cent of the ...