The forest of Jennifer Wilds

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April 2025

🌱 Nurse Objects: Innovation in Restoring Degraded Ecosystems

In degraded areas lacking mature trees to serve as nurse plants, we employ nurse objects—physical elements such as rocks, fallen logs, or polycarbonate structures—to replicate their essential functions. These objects

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10 Apr 2025

Trees Like Water

Well, they do when they're growing at the Equator and its the dry season! Climate change is making rainfall patterns in the tropics ever more spora...

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March 2025

🌱Monitoring and Maintenance: Keys to the Survival of Our Trees

As part of our commitment to ecological restoration and social empowerment, we carry out regular monitoring activities in our project to ensure the healthy development of the trees we’ve planted. Through a community-based

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30 Mar 2025
Oriana Medina TN
Oriana Medina TN · 11 days ago

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This young oak is making its way up in the heart of a dense forest—slowly growing into one of the future giants of the canopy.

28 Mar 2025

Beavers play a surprisingly big role in the health of Canadian forests.

By building dams, they create wetlands that improve water retention, support biodiversity, and help regulate local ecosystems.

Their natural engineering also reduces erosion and creates vital habitats for

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28 Mar 2025

Did you know the Northern Bobwhite Quail is one of the few quail species native to the United States?

Recognizable by its distinctive "bob-white" call, this ground-dwelling bird depends on healthy grasslands and open woodlands to thrive.

Unfortunately, habitat loss has led to

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28 Mar 2025

One thing we do that makes a big difference? We plant with the future in mind. That means using locally adapted seeds—trees that are genetically suited to the exact environment where they’ll grow. It’s a small step that helps build stronger, more resilient forests in the long run

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28 Mar 2025

This little guy is a mudskipper—part fish, part land explorer.

Found in healthy mangrove ecosystems like those in Madagascar, mudskippers can breathe through their skin and even “walk” on land using their fins.

Their presence is a great sign that the mangroves are thriving.

28 Mar 2025
carmen xiomara segovia vivas

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Did you know?

Mangroves can survive in saltwater by filtering out up to 90% of the salt through their roots—or excreting it through their leaves. It’s one of the reasons they thrive along Madagascar’s coasts where few other trees can.

28 Mar 2025

First seedlings being propagated in ourt new Bore Mau nursery. Thanks for helping us expand in this way!

23 Mar 2025

Really excited to highlight our new community nursery on our latest Bore Mau planting site in Narok County. Its been quite hard work for the team, getting it all together but luckily project manager Alex Katana knows everything there is to know about propagating tree seedlings! More

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19 Mar 2025
NAKEDFOOD.CH Ltd.
NAKEDFOOD.CH Ltd. · 22 days ago

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Cashews are centre stage in our nursery at the moment, as we gear up for the coming planting season. These lovely trees are actually related to cactii - they have waxy leaves that reduce transpiration and are able to store up water in their trunks. This makes them incredibly drought

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10 Mar 2025
NAKEDFOOD.CH Ltd.
NAKEDFOOD.CH Ltd. · 22 days ago

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February 2025

Our planting team is made up of local community members who live near our restoration sites. Many rely on fishing for their livelihoods, and planting mangroves plays a crucial role in strengthening coastal ecosystems.

Mangroves provide essential breeding and nursery grounds for

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28 Feb 2025
The Creative Pixels
The Creative Pixels · a month ago

I wonder if there are any mangrove projects in Mexico we can plant on. We are...

Mangrove forests are vital for coastal stability, biodiversity, and carbon storage, acting as a natural barrier against storms and erosion.

Fun fact: Mangroves can filter up to 90% of salt from seawater before absorbing it, allowing them to thrive in harsh coastal environments where

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28 Feb 2025

The boreal forest, also known as the taiga, is the largest land-based biome, stretching across North America, Europe, and Asia.

It acts as a massive carbon sink, storing more carbon than any other terrestrial ecosystem, making it crucial in regulating the Earth's climate.

Fun

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28 Feb 2025
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