Biodiversity
The biodiversity can be defined as the life richness on the earth planet: it means the millions of plants, animals and microorganisms, the genes which they contain, the complex ecosystems that they compose in the biosphere. The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) 1, proposed during the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, defines biodiversity as the variety and variability among living organisms and ecological systems in which they live, highlighting that it includes diversity at different level, such as genetic, specific and ecosystem. This variety does not only refer to the shape and structure of living beings, but also includes diversity in terms of abundance, distribution and interactions between the different components of the ecosystem. In conclusion, biodiversity also includes human cultural diversity, which also suffer the negative effects of these factors that act on the genetic biodiversity.
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Grosseto, Museum of Natural History of MaremmaApr 04, 2025 04:00 PM — Apr 04, 2025 06:00 PMMontagu’s harrier in Maremma
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Rome, Università LUMSA, Via Pompeo Magno 28,Mar 27, 2025 12:00 PM — Mar 27, 2025 02:00 PMRestoring nature in an intergenerational perspective: a dialogue between disciplines
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Rome, Auditorium Via Boccherini 15Mar 26, 2025 09:30 AM — Mar 26, 2025 04:00 PMPrevention of the risk of electrocution of avifauna
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Rome, Sala della Protomoteca, Piazza del CampidoglioMar 25, 2025 10:00 AM — Mar 25, 2025 01:00 PMWomen Agriculture Sustainability
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Mar 21, 2025 — Mar 21, 2025International Day of Forests 2025
- Reticula n. 37/2024 Monographic Number
- Monitoring potentially toxic Ostreopsis cf. ovata along the italian coasts. Year 2023.
- Guidelines for the conservation of Mediterranean trout and its habitat in protected areas and Natura 2000 sites
- Urban nature Plans: tools to bring nature back into our lives?
- Environment in Italy: an overview. Environmental Data Yearbook 2023
- Reticula n.36/2024
- Atlas of Environmental Data. Edition 2024
- Reticula n.35/2024
- Forgotten fruits and recovered biodiversity. The fruit and vine germoplasm of traditional Italian agriculture. Case studies: Marche and Tuscany
- Quaterly bulletin on a research funding