The experiment with photographs and forest sounds showed that people are able to identify how much biodiversity there are just observing or listening to walking through a forest is a multisensory experience. The intense green of foliage, the light filtering between the branches, the bird choir at dawn. But how much do we really capture the biodiversity that surrounds us?
A study by the University of Zurich found that trees that form alliances with two types of fungi can better bear climate change and expand to new areas.
Buenos Aires, August 2025 - The accreditation for Expoferretera 2025 is already enabled, the International Exhibition of Articles for Ferreterías, Sanitary, Pinturies and Construction Materials, which will be held from October 22 to 25 in La Rural, Fairground of Buenos Aires.
With more than 300 exhibitors and a strong commitment to innovation and sustainability, Fimma Brazil 2025 today opened its doors in Bento Gonçalves. The fair, one of the most important events for the wood and furniture industry in Latin America, will run until August 7 and promises to generate businesses for more than R $ 1.7 billion.
While accepting the hard truth that 2024 marked the first year in which global temperatures exceeded 1.5 ° C threshold established by the Paris Agreement, recognizing the vital role of forests and trees in climate regulation has never been more crucial
Researchers from Cardiff and Cambridge universities found the oldest fossil forest in Great Britain in Britain. Until before this discovery, that title belonged to the remains of another forest found in New York in 2019, which dates back to around 386 million years. This, discovered in 2024, is four million years older.
The Inta Soil Institute launched the Soil Information System (SISINTA), a platform that integrates more than 7,000 georeferenced soil profiles from all regions of the country. This digital, free and free access tool allows producers, technicians and decision makers to access precise and updated information on the characteristics and aptitudes of the soil in each territory.
It is an millenary engineering work. For more than 1,600 years, Venice remains firm thanks to a unique foundation system in the world. These are millions of wooden posts stuck with the tip down in the muddy background of the lagoon. This base, which looks like an inverted forest, is composed of aler, oak, aliso, pine, fir and elmo. Thanks to this millenary engineering work, the city was officially founded on March 25, 421. Taking advantage of the laws of physics, monumental buildings have been built on land that seemed unstable. Only Rialtos bridge rests on 14,000 piles, while the Basilica of San Marcos sits over 10,000 oaks. No one knows how many wooden posts there are in total under the entire city, but the Venetian foundations have more than 16 centuries fulfilling their function, unlike modern materials such as concrete or steel, which have a projected life of 50 years on average as according to Alexander Puzrin, professor of geomechanics and geosystem engineering at the Federal Polytechnic University of Zúric.
This submerged forest, with trees emerging from turquoise waters, creates a unique, surreal and captivating landscape of planet Earth.