Environment | Inhabit
- Climate change goes to court
The judicial system is taking on a new role in the arc of America's climate narrative, as activists increasingly bring climate grievances to court.
- In the Sunshine State, a vision for a sustainable town
Florida's Babcock Ranch aims to mix environmental sustainability into a traditional small-town mold, weaving eco-friendly innovations with traditional models of development.
- How Florida fends off its slippery, scaly invaders
Wildlife biologists are tracking, trapping, and tallying the more than 50 species of non-native reptiles and amphibians that are threatening delicate ecosystems in the Everglades.
- Salvage archaeology: When rising seas threaten to wash away history
As storm surge and gradual erosion eat away at the Louisiana coastline, one archaeologist is doing all he can to document archaeological treasures before they are lost to the sea forever.
- FocusIn race against rising seas, Louisiana scrambles to save dwindling coast
In the absence of broad federal support, state managers in Louisiana have had to go it alone in the quest to save the state's eroding coastline.
- Tactical retreat? As seas rise, Louisiana faces hard choices.
As rising seas encroach on the Louisiana coast with increasing regularity, state managers face difficult choices about whom to relocate – and how.
- From coral sperm banks to climate action: What's best to save reefs?
Scientists have developed a technique to cryopreserve the reproductive cells of fish, and hope to use it to preserve the diversity of imperiled coral reefs. But not everyone agrees that species-focused conservation is worth the effort in the face of global threats.
- Antarctica’s big break: What role for climate change?
Sometime between Monday and Wednesday this week, a trillion-ton iceberg broke away from the Antarctic Peninsula. It’s a fascinating geological phenomenon to watch, but the causes and implications are often misunderstood.
- Extreme botany: How far should we go to save a plant species?
Self-described extreme botanist Steve Perlman goes where no man – nor goat – has gone before to find and save the rarest plants in Hawaii.
- Women take southern India's drought into their own hands – one shovel at a time
Three years of drought have driven many farmers to desperation. But thousands of women in Karnataka state are desilting lakes to deepen them, helping them retain water when the rains one day come again.
- FocusChina spent $100 billion on reforestation. So why does it have 'green deserts'?
Beijing's Grain-for-Green program has helped blanket the country's hillsides with trees, undoing damage from decades of blistering development. But fostering biodiversity remains a challenge, conservationists say.
- Bears Ears rift reveals monumental federal-county chasm
Opposing philosophies of land ownership and conservation in Utah keep San Juan county officials and federal agencies from seeing eye-to-eye.
- FocusKiwis take front line in global war against invasive species
New Zealand is home to one of the highest proportions of threatened species in the world. Desperate to save its beloved wildlife, the archipelago nation is seizing on a drastic and controversial strategy: kill all the predators.
- What US exit from Paris accord would – and wouldn't – mean
Indications are that Trump will withdraw from the landmark climate agreement, which could have big impacts. But global and local efforts are likely to continue, with or without the White House.
- Harris vs. Trump: Where they stand on the big issues
- Intel is coming. Ohio community colleges say the state’s workers will be ready.
- An unwanted kiss shook Spanish soccer – and society. A new documentary explores why.
- Election week could be just as long, and fraught, as in 2020
- CommentaryNew editor at The Christian Science Monitor