Results 161 to 170 of about 3,451 (290)
More-Than-Human Perspective in Indigenous Cultures: Holistic Systems Informing Computational Models in Architecture, Urban and Landscape Design towards the Post-Anthropocene Epoch [PDF]
Yannis Zavoleas +3 more
openalex +1 more source
Abstract The world is experiencing a biodiversity crisis. Steep declines in habitat quality and ecosystem services have resulted in interest in markets to help fund ecological restoration. One way that ecological restoration is assessed is through indicators of ecosystem condition, namely, a measurement of how different a landscape is from its ...
James M. Furlaud +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Paper presented on August 2, 2024, at La Sapienza University, Rome, as part of the XXV World Congress of Philosophy, Thematic Section 63: Philosophy of History.In the Anthropocene, our power to shape Earth`s destiny is unmatched.
Mendes, João
core
Abstract The rapid expansion of biodiversity data presents new opportunities to understand and forecast biosphere dynamics. However, disparate and dispersed data, taxonomic and geographic inconsistencies, pervasive quality issues, and a lack of reproducable workflows hinder synthesis, introduce biases and limit accurate assessment of biodiversity ...
Brian J. Enquist +38 more
wiley +1 more source
Microbiome-inspired solutions to save human and planetary health. [PDF]
Berg G +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract In recent years, Berlin has emerged as an epicenter of climate activism in Germany. There, a range of groups have mobilized in opposition to the role of the German state and the EU in accelerating the climate crisis. Many activists now see conventional political responses as exhausted and have turned to increasingly radical forms of civil ...
Max Jack
wiley +1 more source
Scientists' Warning on the Rapid Evolution of Parasites in the Anthropocene. [PDF]
Poulin R +30 more
europepmc +1 more source
Researching Rupture: Engaged and Ethical Research on Extreme Nature–Society Disruption
Abstract Global escalation in social and environmental disruption raises crucial methodological and ethical questions for researchers working in impacted communities. Interpretive social science and humanities research can make visible the experiences of those living through socio‐ecological “rupture”.
Sango Mahanty +5 more
wiley +1 more source

