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Some species of fig trees store calcium carbonate in their trunks—essentially turning themselves (partially) into stone, new ...
Forests don’t just grow—they’re built, tree by tree, root by root. Here's how scientists, communities, and nature itself work ...
Connecticut’s forests were largely replanted 150 to 250 years ago. “A large majority of it is what we would refer to ...
Some carbon dioxide absorbed by fig trees gets turned into calcium carbonate within the wood and the surrounding soil, ...
The technique can revive the pores of soil, so it regains its ability to hold water and transport it to the plants.
New images from the European Space Agency’s Biomass mission show how the satellite uses advanced radar to map flows of carbon ...
Hidden fungal networks influence which trees thrive, offering new insight into forest biodiversity and resilience in a ...