Many non-native plants could survive in the Arctic, as rising temperatures and human activity make it easier for invasive plants to arrive.
More than 2,500 plant species have the potential to invade the Arctic at the expense of the species that belong there. Norway is one of the areas that is particularly at risk.
Palm Beach Fire-Rescue responded to an increase in calls, some related to fireplace mishaps. Palm Beachers pulled out their ...
As Arctic temperatures linger across the region, horticulturist Dan Gill says now is the time to give your landscaping a little extra attention, especially tropical plants that are more vulnerable to ...
A new study highlights the importance of caribou and muskoxen to the greening Arctic tundra, linking grazing with plant phenology and abundance in the Arctic tundra. The story of Arctic greening has ...
The Arctic is not just getting warmer. It is starting to behave in new manners in ways that are dangerous for nature. For ...
Chapter 1. Arctic Tundra: Where There Are No Trees -- Chapter 2. Arctic Is Not One -- Chapter 3. Arctic Plants in Different Tundras -- Chapter 4. Arctic Plants in Svalbard- Who are they and what do ...
Blacksburg, Va. — Tiny tropical plants survived their continental-drift relocation to the Arctic by adapting to its harsh climate. Research into such adaptations of millennia ago, when ancient ...
Researchers at the TSU Siberian Botanical Garden (SibBG), the Institute of High Current Electronics SB RAS (IHCE), and Tomsk Polytechnic University have implemented an interdisciplinary project to ...
A team of Russian scientists reported Monday that living plants have been generated from the fruit of an arctic flower that died 32,000 years ago. Scientists excavating in northeastern Siberia found ...
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