• Unsplash - Crono Nero, Italy. Credit: Zanon Luca - Storie di Ritratti. © Zanon Luca - Storie di Ritratti Unsplash - Crono Nero, Italy. Credit: Zanon Luca - Storie di Ritratti. © Zanon Luca - Storie di Ritratti

                                    IUCN, International Union for Conservation of Nature   
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                                  Two girls walk along a mountain road in Nepal In Nepal and elsewhere, haphazardly built rural roads have destabilised numerous mountain slopes, causing severe erosion. As rainfall has intensified due to climate change, landslides have become more frequent, leading to the loss of lives and the destruction of property and agricultural land. And even if roads survive the monsoon season intact, most require costly and labour-intense clearing efforts, slowing down the movement of people and goods. But a simple nature-based solution has begun to make a difference: planting grasses and plants such as broom grass or bamboo on the slopes has helped stabilise them, securing roads and reducing the risk posed by landslides. The IUCN Global Standard for NbS can be used to assess and scale up such solutions and their benefits. Photo: Emily Goodwin

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                                  NbS Standard: The first-ever global benchmarks for Nature-based Solutions

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                                  • Tapanuli orangutan
                                  Last chance for the rarest great ape?
                                  20.07.2024
                                  Erik Meijaard and Serge Wich of the IUCN Primate Specialist Group

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                                  • Mangroves are an important but fragile ecosystem Sustainably managed mangroves can provide ecosystem services such as coastal protection, food and medicines as well as carbon storage, positively impacting both biodiversity and human well-being. The IUCN Global Standard for NbS provides a tool to help ensure that projects labelled as Nature-based Solutions - for example through restoration of mangroves - do indeed deliver the anticipated benefits to both society and biodiversity. Photo: Maxwell Ridgway / Unsplash

                                    IUCN Standard to boost impact of nature-based solutions to global challenges


                                    Gland, Switzerland, 23 July 2024 (IUCN) – IUCN today unveiled a Global Standard providing the first-ever set of benchmarks for nature-based solutions to global challenges. The new IUCN Global Standard will help governments, business and civil society ensure the effectiveness of nature-based solutions and maximise their potential to help address climate change, biodiversity loss and other societal challenges on a global scale.
                                  • 免费翻国外墙的app Dr Bruno Oberle assumes the position of IUCN Director General on July 13, 2024. Photo: Bruno Oberle / EPFL

                                    Dr Bruno Oberle named IUCN Director General


                                    Gland, Switzerland, 13 July 2024 (IUCN) – The International Union for Conservation of Nature, IUCN, has announced the appointment of Dr Bruno Oberle as Director General, starting today. He succeeds Inger Andersen who served as Director General from 2015 to 2024 and is now Executive Director at the United Nations Environment Programme. Dr Grethel Aguilar, Director of the Regional Office for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, has been serving as Acting Director General since June 2024.
                                  • shadoweocket电脑端 The ring-tailed lemur (lemur catta) is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. This lemur is found in the dry forests, spiny bush, montane forest, mangroves, rocky outcrops, and one rainforest in southern and south-western Madagascar, and in one humid forest in south-eastern Madagascar. Despite the species' large range and flexibility, its population density is often very low and populations are largely restricted to isolated forest fragmentsExperts suspect that its population has declined by at least 50% over a three-generation period.  Photo: Zwennie (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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                                    Gland, Switzerland, 9 July 2024 (IUCN) – Almost a third (31%) of all lemur species in Madagascar are now Critically Endangered – just one step away from extinction – with 98% of them threatened, according to today’s update of The IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM. This update completes a revision of all African primate assessments, concluding that over half of all primate species in the rest of Africa are under threat. This update also reveals that the North Atlantic Right Whale and the European Hamster are now both Critically Endangered.

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                                  Last updated - Mon, 3 Aug 2024
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