This amazing photograph of a male gharial carrying lots of little ones was taken by Dhritiman Mukherjee, external in India's National Chambal Sanctuary. It served as inspiration for a piece of artwork Davide Bonadonna created for the Big 8 exhibition in Hong Kong (1/3).
Our latest @ConLetters study highlights how replacing 50% of green space with concrete halves bird fledgling numbers. But to build truly sustainable #cities, we need ecological insights from #BeyondTheWest.
https://t.co/AU75YCddjb
https://t.co/qVVZHTQyML
#DecolonizingScience
Im więcej betonu, tym mniejsze lęgi ptaków w miastach. Takie wnioski płyną z badań kierowanych przez prof. @MartaSzulkin z @BiolUW. Artykuł na ten temat ukazał się na łamach @ConLetters. Praca jest pionierska dla obszaru Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej i dostarcza danych twórcom polityk miejskich.
🔗https://t.co/ARSwEr3mVh
We've been relatively quiet on Twitter lately, and it's mainly because of what this platform has become. The air is cleaner on our other account - please consider giving us a follow at @consletters.bsky.social. This account will still be maintained and periodically posting.
New research published in @ConLetters says the world's peatlands — squishy, waterlogged, buggy habitats — are vastly under-protected, despite vital role they play in regulating the environment. Canada is home to a quarter of the world’s peatlands. @TheWCS https://t.co/1tnHCC0tK4
SSRI co-fund @AnnePisor (@PSU_Anthro) recently contributed to a study about how long-distance friendships can provide benefits to community-based conservation in @ConLetters. Pisor examined 28 fishing villages in northern Tanzania.
Full Article ➡️ https://t.co/D3pVO6bZDV
Calling all artists & creatives -
Help shape the face of Conservation Letters! We're seeking iconic, stylized art that captures the beauty & diversity of #conservation science for the new cover of @ConLetters. 🎨📸🌍
Learn more and submit by 31 January: https://t.co/2MSmc6YBPt
A nature #conservation paradox: A study led by biologists from the University of Vienna and La Sapienza University in Rome shows that some of the species introduced by humans are themselves endangered in their native areas. Study from @ConLetters
https://t.co/0cvc8FiPll
Calling all our multi-talented readers 📢 As we shift in 2025 to continuous publication, Conservation Letters will start using a single cover image. We'd like your help with finding a good design! For more details please see here: https://t.co/QtneZ0sodF
@CallumS_nature @SCBEurope I can't speak for the author, but IMHO they are absolutely essential for both long-term biodiversity conservation and human wellbeing. Many of nature's contributions to people are delivered 'on site'.
For those who are in the process of shifting, please note that we have a new journal account in a place with better air quality: @consletters.bsky.social
This account will stay operational, and we'll duplicate many posts between the two.
The expansion of #wildliferanching has been broadly linked to #conservation benefits, #jobcreation, and economic contributions.🐂 Check out Denner et al's article, availble at https://t.co/YiAB7v6NSY
New research in @ConLetters from @AlexJB497, @MarsKlaassen, Richard Kingsford, @rohanclarke01, and I demonstrating the potential for HPAI H5N1 virus transmission via food-theft (kleptoparasitism) in seabirds: https://t.co/loM1DmwH2l
Pic: David Tipling
Our new paper shows fisheries data are usually too noisy to resolve model uncertainty. Thus, typical sustainability targets (e.g. maintaining 60% of carrying capacity) might be too aggressive, w V Cattoni @LeahFSouth @DavidJWarne @cboettig @SMB_MathBiology https://t.co/SUtqJL858S