Why and how crows have colonised the world?

Humans, crocodiles and crows have something in common. They have all spread to every corner of the planet. If we travel from Barcelona to Australia, in spite of the enormous distance, we will find groups of animals that also live in our home, we will see for example owls, swallows, turkeys, crows and certainly humans, all these animals are so far away because they have been able to colonise the planet almost entirely. But what is it that they have been able to do so while other animal groups have been reduced to small areas of the planet?

Corvus Crow Daniel sol Joan garcia-porta Niche expansion and adaptive divergence in the global radiation of crows and ravens

We have developed a software that connects meteorological information from all over Spain

The data scientist Víctor Granda from CREAF's new programming unit, the Ecosystem Modelling Facility (EMF), has developed a package of meteorological data and models for the R programming system, a computer language widely used in scientific research. This data package is called meteospain and contains all the meteorological information collected by AEMET, Meteocat, Meteo Galicia and Andalucía meteo stations in one place.

Emf Meteocat Meteospain Predictive models R coding language Weather

Science calls on the European Comission to take into account the uniqueness of the Mediterranean forest

The Mediterranean forest suffers from a lack of management due to its peculiarities: low productivity, low economic profitability of its use, lack of incentives, lack of timber industry and different types of ownership, among others. This situation affects its biodiversity and the ecosystem services it provides. That is why science demands management aimed at guaranteeing challenges such as its survival, resilience and adaptation to climate change.

Diana pascual sánchez Eduad pla ferrer European forest strategy 2030 Life project Midmacc

Social impact can revolutionize scientific culture

If we were today to climb into the time machine that H.G. Wells imagined, we could, for example, travel back to the 19th century to witness the dawn of modern science. In those days, the boundaries between science and society were not as clean-cut as they are now, and scientific research was greatly influenced by public interests and needs.

Ciència contemporània Cultura científica Impacte social @es Impacts Networks Science & society Social conflicts
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Project / Initiative
European Union Projects
Active

Biodiversity Knowledge Agora: Developing the Science Service for European Research and Biodiversity Policymaking

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Project / Initiative
Regional projects
Inactive

Life Tritó Montseny: Monitoring of habitat improvement actions and manual of good practices of the riparian forest

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Project / Initiative
European Union Projects
Active

Wetland restoration for the future

GREEN-RISK
Project / Initiative
Projectes nacional
Inactive

Evaluation of past changes in ecosystem services and biodiversity in forests and restoration priorities under global change impacts