Botanists have found a stand of rare trees in Tanzania’s Zanzibar archipelago not known to grow wild anywhere else in Africa.
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allAfrica.com on MSNClimate Change a Reality - It's Time to Face ItOur environmental heritage is in the grip of an urgent and unprecedented crisis.Once celebrated for its predictable climate and fertile lands, Zimbabwe now faces severe climate change impacts.Over the ...
Rhino Conservation for Community Empowerment in Zimbabwe will be presented at 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 19, at the Global Village Museum of Arts and Cultures in Fort Collins, just one of many ...
For Gokwe and Guruve to reclaim their title as Zimbabwe’s cotton bowl, a collaboration between farmers, Cottco and ...
Bulawayo-based 10-year-old model, Nomqhele Nikita Mdlauzo is seeking financial assistance to travel to Egypt, where she is ...
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Hosted on MSNBerries Exports Surge 50 PercentBERRIES export volumes rose 50 percent from six million kilogrammes in 2023 to eight million in 2024 with stakeholders calling for Government-backed structured financing to encourage indigenous ...
In the northern region of the Sonoran Desert, surrounded by five mountain ranges and 350 days of sunshine, lies Tucson, where native edible plants grow. The saguaro, barrel and nopal cacti are ...
“Rainforestation” projects led by Indigenous communities in the southern Philippines are reaping benefits for both native trees and local wildlife, reports Mongabay’s Keith Anthony Fabro.
DUE to the absence of a documentation culture, it has remained difficult for African elders to convince the young generation about the benefits of consuming indigenous food. This challenge has ...
Johannes has a MSci in Neuroscience from King’s College London and serves as the Managing Director at IFLScience.
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