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#SaveNature

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🪶 Ein guter Hausmeisterfreund von mir hat zusammen mit nem Kollegen einen Turmfalkenkasten in einer St.Antoniuskirche in Berlin gebaut und installiert ... und auch mit LIVE-Cam 🤗 ... seit ein paar Stunden neu am Start: 👉🏼 youtube.com/@StAntoniusBerlinT 👀

#Nature #Berlin #Turmfalke #Live #LiveCam #Natur #Ornitologie #SaveNature #Vogel #Greifvogel #Kestrel #Brutkasten #Naturschutz #NaBu #BirdWatching @BUNDBerlin @Naturschutzring @wwf_deutschland

youtube.comBefore you continue to YouTube

Fieldwork with illustrious guests: two pairs of golden lion tamarins (L. chrysomelas) in the middle of a bamboo grove of the species Bambusa tuldoides. Atlantic Forest, RJ, Brazil.
#agroecology #ATR #GoldenLionTamarin #Tamarin #EndangeredSpecies #WildlifeConservation #BrazilianWildlife #AtlanticForest #Biodiversity
#Conservation #SaveNature #ProtectWildlife
#Sustainability #EnvironmentalEducation
#SaveTheRainforest #ProtectOurPlanet

🌿 Shrub or bush? The difference isn't clear-cut! Generally, bushes are a type of shrub, but not all shrubs are bushes. Size, shape, and growth habits can help distinguish them. Learn more about these versatile woody plants that add structure and beauty to your garden! #GardeningTips #PlantFacts 🌳

thespruce.com/difference-betwe

#savenature 💓

The SpruceWhat Is the Difference Between Shrubs and Bushes?Discover the difference between shrubs and bushes in terms of horticulture, location, and foliage.

From 2023: #OneidaNation's #environmental restoration project to receive funding in proposed [#Wisconsin] state budget

#Wildrice, or manoomin in #Ojibwe, is central to Ojibwe identity and is part of the culture’s migration story.

by Frank Vaisvilas
February 17, 2023

ONEIDA – "Part of Gov. #TonyEvers’ proposed budget includes $875,000 to help fund the Oneida Nation’s environmental restoration project on the reservation.

"Over the past year, the tribe has restored about 3,000 acres of #wetlands, #grasslands, #prairies and #forests on the reservation.

"The governor’s budget includes an annual investment of $175,000 for five years for continuing the Oneida Nation’s #HabitatRestoration work and bird monitoring project just west of #GreenBay.

"'We know that #nature can provide for itself if allowed to. A years-long restoration of Oneida’s lands in Northeastern Wisconsin has led to improvements in water quality and the return of #wildlife,' said Oneida Chairman Tehassi Hill in a statement. 'We appreciate Governor Evers for supporting our work to restore and protect Wisconsin’s natural spaces.'

"The Oneida Nation also started a bird monitoring project on its restoration sites in coordination with the Northeastern Wisconsin #Audubon Society and UW-Green Bay’s Cofrin Center for Biodiversity to research how birds are responding to the tribe’s conservation efforts.

"'We’ve witnessed firsthand as state-threatened bird species, like the #HenslowsSparrow, have returned to restored Oneida Nation lands, an incredible testament to the importance of this restoration work,' said Erin Giese, president of the Northeastern Wisconsin Audubon Society, in a statement.

[...]

"Evers’ budget proposal also includes a $200,000 investment in restoring and protecting natural wild rice areas in Wisconsin.

"Experts say wild rice is an essential food source for many of the #MigratorBirds in the area, including many species of #ducks, #pheasants, #owls, #cranes, #geese and #songbirds.

"The plants also help to improve the #environment.

"'Emergent plants, including wild rice, help promote #water quality through the filtering and storage of nutrients and slow down wave action in the #CoastalWetlands of Green Bay,' said Dr. Amy Carrozzino-Lyon, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay restoration project manager in the natural and applied sciences department. 'A diversity of native wetland plants helps the community function at its best.'"

Read more:
greenbaypressgazette.com/story

#RestoreNature #WaterIsLife #RestoreTheWetlands
#SaveTheMarshes
#SaveNature #NatureBasedSolutions
#IndigenousWisdom
#Collaboration

Green Bay Press-Gazette · Oneida Nation's environmental restoration project to receive funding in proposed state budgetBy , Green Bay Press-Gazette

States Are Eyeing Bird-Friendly #Wetlands to Help Rid the #GreatLakes of #ToxicAlgae

"The #OneidaNation has restored wetlands that help to improve water quality in Wisconsin’s Green Bay while creating valuable habitat that attracts many birds."

Words by Andy McGlashen
Senior Editor, Audubon Magazine
Published June 17, 2024

"In the ongoing effort to bring the problem under control, the region’s leaders are increasingly reaching for a primitive but proven tool for capturing and cleaning water before it enters the lake: wetlands. No one believes that #swamps and marshes alone can starve the algae blooms, but experts say they are an important part of the solution. 'Wetlands are wonderful filtration systems,' says Richard Stumpf, an oceanographer with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric administration who monitors #algae outbreaks. And because wetlands around the Great Lakes offer vital habitat where birds can rest during migration or raise their young, restoring them not only improves water quality but also brightens the outlook for vulnerable avian species.

“'There’s momentum building behind #NatureBasedSolutions,' says Kyle Rorah, regional director of public policy for Ducks Unlimited. 'There’s a huge opportunity to get serious about taking a chunk out of the problem.'"

audubon.org/magazine/states-ar

Audubon · States Are Eyeing Bird-Friendly Wetlands to Help Rid the Great Lakes of Toxic Algae By Andy McGlashen

The #nature cure: how time #outdoors transforms our #memory, #imagination and #logic

Without engaging with #NaturalEnvironments, our #brains cease to work well. As the new field of environmental neuroscience proves, exposure to nature isn’t a luxury – it’s a necessity

by Sam Pyrah
Mon 27 Nov 2023 05.00 EST

"You are probably aware of studies showing that green (#vegetated) and blue (moving #water) environments are associated with a reduction in stress, improved mood, more positive emotions and decreases in anxiety and rumination. But there is growing evidence that nature exposure also benefits cognitive function – all the processes involved in gaining knowledge and understanding, including perception, memory, reasoning, judgment, imagination and problem-solving. One study found that after just 40 seconds of looking out at a green roof, subjects made fewer mistakes in a test than when they looked at a concrete one."

theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2

The Guardian · The nature cure: how time outdoors transforms our memory, imagination and logicBy Sam Pyrah
Replied in thread

@brianvastag Global man-made climate-change disasters urgently require immediate remedial response!

The heat waves, droughts, floodings, hurricanes we're seeing... are not a drill!

It's a war we started against a superior force, and it's in our hands to stop it & pay tribute to nature, which has been so merciful with & trustful towards us through countless millennia, that we seem to have forgotten to show our gratitude & loving care to preserve it as carefully as it guaranteed our survival.