How many cameras are at a Premier League match? 🤔🎥
They’ll all be at Old Trafford as we gear up for Manchester United v Liverpool 🔥
↳ Premier League. Live & On Demand with 4K on Football’s New Home, Stan Sport. Stream now.
#StanSportAU#PremierLeague
🚨🗣️ 𝗡𝗘𝗪: Pep Guardiola has shown support for the Palestinian people at the 'Concert for Palestine' in Barcelona:
"We are on the side of the oppressed. Today we STAND with Palestine, but not just Palestine, but with all causes... It is a statement for Palestine, and for humanity."
"Just like in Barcelona when we were bomb*d in 1938, today, as in London and Paris, we are standing before the world and openly showing that we stand with the weakest."
"I have seen a child recording himself, pleading ‘where is my mother?’ among the rubble, and he still doesn’t know what's happening..."
"And I always think: what must the children be thinking? I think we have left them alone, ABANDONED. I always imagine them saying, ‘Where are you? Come help us’."
"And so far, even now, we haven’t done it! We have left them ALONE!" 🇵🇸
The Northern White Rhino is now officially extinct in the wild. The last male has died, leaving only two females. This marks the end of a subspecies due to poaching and habitat loss.
This is absolutely heart-breaking! You could easily mistake it for the aftermath of a tsunami. 💔🇮🇩
At least 442 people are now confirmed dead after the devastating floods and landslides that hit Sumatra.
📍 Huta Garoga, North Sumatra, Indonesia
📹 Emis Iswandi Hutasuhut
How a single tree affects an entire forest
Suzanne Simard has fundamentally reshaped how we understand forests.
Through decades of field research, she demonstrated that trees are linked by vast underground networks of mycorrhizal fungi. These symbiotic partnerships allow trees to exchange carbon, nutrients, water, and chemical signals—sometimes over great distances and across species lines.
Her landmark 1997 paper in Nature provided the first clear evidence that paper birch and Douglas-fir seedlings transfer carbon to one another through fungal connections, with the flow shifting depending on which tree is shaded and needs resources most. This directly challenged the prevailing view of forests as arenas of relentless competition.
Instead, Simard’s work revealed cooperative dynamics: older, hub-like trees—what she calls “Mother Trees”—are the most highly connected nodes in the network. They recognize their genetic kin, allocate more resources to their own seedlings, and even bolster unrelated young trees, enhancing overall forest resilience.
The scientific community now widely refers to these fungal linkages as the “Wood Wide Web.”
Today, her work has inspired everything from Avatar to the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "The Overstory." Her memoir,
"Finding the Mother Tree," became a global bestseller and is now being adapted into a film starring Amy Adams.
On the ground in British Columbia, Simard partners with Indigenous communities to design logging practices that spare Mother Trees and old-growth networks. Early results show these areas store more carbon, retain more biodiversity, and regenerate decades faster than conventionally clear-cut sites.
Some researchers caution against terms like “mother” or “communication,” preferring strictly neutral language. Simard maintains that the underlying phenomena—resource sharing, kin recognition, and chemical alarm signals—are rigorously documented, and evocative words help people care about forests they might otherwise see only as timber.
In her words: “These forests can recover their complexity and strength, but only if we start managing them as living, connected systems”
#SaveTessoNilo
Currently, the Tesso Nilo National Park is in grave danger. Only 150 elephants left and 85% of the park is now illegal palm oil plantation. Rangers also received death threats from local thugs.
Efforts are underway to restore Tesso Nilo to it's proper condition
How does deforestation contribute to extreme weather events like floods?
Tropical deforestation exacerbates climate change, leading to more extreme weather events like floods, while also directly increasing flood risk through soil erosion. By releasing stored carbon into the atmosphere and reducing the planet's ability to absorb CO2, deforestation contributes to global warming. This warming, in turn, intensifies weather patterns, causing more severe and frequent floods, droughts, and storms, and disrupting rainfall patterns.
Hope it helps!
Seekor gajah sumatera ditemukan mati akibat banjir di Kabupaten Pidie Jaya, Aceh, Sabtu (29/11/2025).
Merujuk Antara, bangkai gajah itu berada di Desa Meunasah Lhok, Kecamatan Meureudu. Satwa berada di area terisolasi banjir bandang akibat luapan Sungai Meureudu yang hanya bisa diakses dengan berjalan kaki.
Gajah itu tertimbun dalam tumpukan kayu dan lumpur yang terbawa banjir.
“Di desa ini tidak ada gajah, warga belum pernah lihat gajah karena biasanya gajah ada di hutan. Baru sekarang ini kami lihat gajah mati karena banjir,” kata Muhammad Yunus, warga Desa Meunasah Lhok.
Yunus bilang, warga tak bisa memindahkan bangkai karena kondisi medan yang sulit. Ia menduga, gajah itu terbawa arus banjir dari hutan bagian hulu sungai.
“Kami juga kaget ada banyak kayu hutan terbawa sampai ke sini. Saya tidak pernah lihat kayu-kayu sebesar ini,” lanjutnya
Per Sabtu (29/11/2025), bangkai gajah masih tertumpuk di bawah material dan sudah berbau busuk.
| Narasi Daily