Wild animals: The original and best carbon-capture ‘technology’

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Animating the Carbon Cycle – TWS WebinarsAugust 2025

Animating the Carbon Cycle – TWS WebinarsAugust 2025

by ACC Admin | Aug 29, 2025 | 2025, Event, More In-depth, Resources

The webinar presents the latest scientific insights about how animal species restoration and conservation can contribute to nature-based climate solutions via their underappreciated functional roles in protecting and enhancing carbon capture and storage across a broad...

Yellowstone’s free-moving large bison herds provide a glimpse of their past ecosystem functionAugust 2025

by ACC Admin | Aug 28, 2025 | 2025, Peer Reviewed Scientific Paper, Resources, Technical / Scientific

Editor’s summary Bison once migrated across the western United States in enormous herds, shaping the landscape in ways that they currently cannot because smaller populations are now mainly constrained to specific properties. The population in Yellowstone National Park...

Context matters when rewilding for climate changeFebruary 2024

by ACC Admin | Feb 15, 2024 | 2024, Peer Reviewed Scientific Paper, Report, Resources, Technical / Scientific

There is a crosssectoral push among conservationists to simultaneously mitigate biodiversity loss and climate change especially as the latter increasingly threatens the former Growing evidence demonstrates that animals can have substantial impacts on carbon cycling As...

Rewild the Planet – Background MaterialJanuary 2023

by ACC Admin | Jan 1, 2023 | 2023, Briefing for Policy-makers and Decision-makers, More In-depth, Resources

Four case studies (2022) Four case studies from the first 2 years of work are provided to illustrate how we plan to go about our future work: ● Building the science foundation – Animating the Carbon Cycle initiative ● Delivery at scale – Promoting the six GRA...

How ‘Natural Geoengineering’ Can Help Slow Global WarmingJanuary 2016

by ACC Admin | Jan 25, 2016 | 2016, More In-depth, Press Article, Resources

By Oswald Schmitz As natural wonders go, perhaps the most awe-inspiring is the annual migration of 1.2 million wildebeest flowing across East Africa’s vast Serengeti grassland. It would be a tragedy to lose these animals. But we almost did in the mid-20th century...

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