Today’s Solutions: December 21, 2025

eco bridge

Bamboo bridge seeks to help reptiles cross over busy road

In the mountainous state of Uttarakhand in India, a bridge was built across a busy road that cuts through the forest. Not for humans or cars, but rather for reptiles and other small animals.  The new “Eco Bridge” is 90 feet long and made from bamboo, jute, and grass. Local officials say Read More...

This free streaming platform i

This free streaming platform is the Netflix of climate documentaries

Documentary films are some of the best ways to bring across and invite conversations about issues of universal importance. In recent years, this educative type of media has been particularly effective at raising awareness about the current state of our planet.  Building on this momentum, a Read More...

New Guinea singing dogs not ex

New Guinea singing dogs not extinct in the wild, as previously thought

For years, zoologists have assumed that the New Guinea singing dog is extinct in the wild. That assumption has been proven wrong after an analysis of the DNA of three wild dogs living 14,000 feet high on the island matched the DNA of captive New Guinea singing dogs. If you aren’t familiar with Read More...

One of UK’s most elusive pla

One of UK’s most elusive plants rediscovered after more than a century

After more than a century in hiding, one of the UK’s rarest plants has been discovered growing on the banks of a farmland pond in Norfolk, East Anglia, England. The pink-flowered plant, known as grass-poly, “came back from the dead” after recent restoration of the farmland involved removing Read More...

English moorland sees first be

English moorland sees first beaver dam after more than 400 years

A beaver reintroduction project in Exmoor, West England, has recently bore its first fruits: a group of beavers that were introduced not long ago have built the first dam in the area in more than 400 years. The semi-aquatic rodents were released into the wild in Somerset earlier this year as part Read More...

English nature reserve expects

English nature reserve expects a record-breaking year for seal pup births

Back in 1988, the Blakeney Nature Reserve in Norfolk, England, recorded the first birth of a grey seal pup. Since then, the reserve has become England’s largest seal colony, with a total of 3,399 pups born there just last year. When compared to the grand total of 25 pups born there in 2001, you Read More...

Birth of critically endangered

Birth of critically endangered black rhino caught on camera at UK zoo

The population of the critically endangered eastern black rhino has just gotten bigger, thanks to the birth of a healthy calf at Chester Zoo in the UK. Following 15 months of pregnancy, the celebratory event was caught on the zoo’s security camera which shows the young calf suckling from her Read More...

Ecologists discover two new sp

Ecologists discover two new species of fluffy marsupials in Australia

It’s a rare occasion when not one, but two new mammals are discovered by scientists in a single day, yet that’s exactly what happened in Australia this past week. In a new study published in Nature's public access Scientific Reports journal, scientists confirmed that there are actually three Read More...

Rising white shark populations

Rising white shark populations off California signals ‘a healthy ecosystem’

White sharks have long been impacted by humans. Commercial fisheries caught them for decades, and the sharks’ primary food—marine mammals—has been hunted to the brink of extinction. After California moved to protect its white shark population back in 1994, white shark numbers have risen Read More...

Colorado votes to reintroduce

Colorado votes to reintroduce wolves to the state

While most of America was paying attention to the messy madness surrounding the presidential elections, environmentalists in Colorado were quietly celebrating a little victory: the passing of Proposition 114, which tasks Colorado Parks and Wildlife with crafting a plan to reintroduce wolves to the Read More...