Dear Substackers
This list on Substack has been quiet, and now we're shutting down our account entirely. Why? Well it’s because Substack is on the same route as X. I’ll explain why I think that is and, if it bothers you, what some alternatives are.
This list on Substack has been quiet, and now we're shutting down our account entirely. Why? Well it’s because Substack is on the same route as X. I’ll explain why I think that is and, if it bothers you, what some alternatives are.
Orchids are one of the most successful plant families on the planet, with over 20,000 species, but many of those species are endangered. For the orchids of Serbia, help is at hand.
Only invasive weeds thrived when scientists warmed island soil, while native plants stayed hungry despite being surrounded by potential food.
This week we have a plant that's gone its own way, how you can know a tree as an individual and Duarte Figueiredo on the hidden complexity of plant biology.
"Our findings show how a hybridization event between species can spark the evolution of new traits, allowing even more species to emerge. We've finally solved the mystery of where potatoes came from." - Sanwen Huang
Dykes are a lifeline for bees. Researchers found nearly half of all Dutch bee species live on river dykes, with 10% being endangered red-listed species.
Scientists cracked how plants reproduce without sex. The finding could improve crops and on Earth and beyond. But the key to this discovery comes from a plant that annoys many gardeners.
New research shows how an invasive plant in China is using copper and lead pollution to oust its native neighbours.
This week we have a project to spotlight women's role in botany, an interview with Ana Bedoya and her work on aquatic plants, and why flowers are about more than pollinators.
In the forest understorey, Spring fires the starting gun on a race to catch sunlight before the forest canopy fills. But changing climates means different plants now start at different times.
How can isolated trees survive rising heat? Botanists have been looking for microrefugia, small locations with favorable conditions for stressed plants.
Botanists are hearing an alarm call alerting the world to habitat loss in Colombia, but it’s not a noise that they hear, it’s silence caused by vanishing bird calls marking lost ecosystems.
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