Today’s Solutions: December 16, 2025

Conservation

Nature relies on a rich diversity of organisms to keep it in balance. Conservation plays a key role in ensuring that environmental equilibrium is preserved. Learn about the solutions spearheading our efforts to promote biodiversity, safeguard vital ecosystems, and protect endangered species.

Young sloth hanging from a low branch

This sloth orphanage nurses sloth babies back into the wild

As a result of decades of deforestation and other human activities, sloths are among the most endangered mammals in the world, with only about 1,500 remaining in the wild according to the WWF. In Costa Rica, sloths are often under threat from an early age. Many orphaned cubs are a common occurrence Read More...

hawksbill sea turtle swimming in ocean

This app could put a stop to the illegal hawksbill sea turtle trade

“Beauty comes with a price”—a saying that rings painfully true for the critically endangered hawksbill sea turtle.  Among the other numerous problems sea turtles have to worry about (ocean plastic, a warming planet, and habitat encroachment to name a few), humanity’s attraction to the Read More...

Voting for Climate Champions

Three things to keep in mind when voting on climate issues this fall

Like anything else in a democratic country, making decisions on climate change doesn’t depend just on the sitting president. There needs to be a majority of elected representatives acting concertedly in the interest of the people and the planet. The November elections are as important as the Read More...

New species of millipede named

New species of millipede named after singer Taylor Swift

There have been several newly discovered animals in the past year named after famous individuals. This includes Opaluma rupaul, a species of a fly named after the drag queen Ru Paul and the rain frog Pristimantis gretathunbergae, named after climate activist Greta Thunberg. Recently, 16 new Read More...

Nature landscape at dawn. Silhouette birds migrating flying in a row over a lake water sun on the colorful sky during sunset over the mountains at Krasiao Dam, Suphan Buri, Thailand.

Why birds migrate so far and how you can help them

Spring is in the air. This exquisite time of year signals the birth of new life, warmer weather, greener trees, and the return of migrating birds. In North America, most birds migrate to some extent, with more than 30 species traveling between climates in the U.S. and tropics each year. A bird Read More...

Spotted tree frog

80 endangered spotted tree frogs return to the Australian wild

While it might not seem like much because of its size, the spotted tree frog is a critical species for the biodiversity of its Australian habitats. Of the almost 300 of these endangered frogs released into the wild, only about 10 survived the wildfires of 2019 and 2020. This was disheartening, to Read More...

Neon-orange wildflower redisco

Neon-orange wildflower rediscovered in Ecuador after presumed extinct

Over 97 percent of forests in the western half of Ecuador have been turned into farmland over the last decades. This extensive deforestation led to the extinction of multiple species of flora, leading conservationists to think that those plants are gone for good. A recent expedition, however, has Read More...

Female Eastern Bluebird with Nesting Material on Flowering Eastern Redbud Branch

Want more nesting birds in your garden during spring? Follow these 5 tips

The warmth of spring and summer, also brings along with it the company of local and migrating birds. To simultaneously maximize your chances of viewing these beautiful creatures while supporting them and your garden’s ecosystem during this period, here's five gardening tips to follow. Ensure Read More...

Nuevo Laredo and Laredo city on a map

Sister Cities along Mexico-US border to construct a binational eco-park

The border towns of Laredo, Texas, and Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico, also known as the “Sister Cities,” are working together on a bold project: a binational river park to be developed where there was going to be a concrete and steel border wall. The plan to construct the wall (which Read More...

Close up photograph of an oval-squid in front of a blue background.

For the first time, scientists have recorded squids' camouflage abilities

Octopus and cuttlefish are known for their impressive ability to camouflage into their surroundings, changing the color of their skin to escape their predators and catch unsuspecting prey. Squids are cephalopods like octopus and cuttlefish, so one could assume they can camouflage too. However, Read More...