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Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery
@naturerecovery.bsky.social
Working to understand & support what it takes to deliver effective, inclusive & scalable nature recovery at scale.
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They reveal that microbes living in bark, or in the wood itself are removing atmospheric methane on a scale equal to or above that of soil, making trees 10% more beneficial for climate overall than previously thought. naturerecovery.ox.ac.uk?post_type=news

Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery
Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery

Professor Yadvinder Malhi, Director of the Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery, is among an international team of colleagues who have found tree bark surfaces play an important role in removing methane gas from the atmosphere.

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LC
Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery
@naturerecovery.bsky.social
Working to understand & support what it takes to deliver effective, inclusive & scalable nature recovery at scale.
114 followers39 following64 posts