BBC Wildlife Magazine

GILLIAN BURKE

Something’s changed. I’ve been banging on about climate change since the days we called it global warming, but I feel like I’m being left behind. The thought struck me on the train, as I gazed out of the window at the latest solar farm to appear along the route. There is a certain irony that these shining symbols of progress

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Wildlife Magazine

BBC Wildlife Magazine2 min read
Female Of The Species
MAY IS MY FAVOURITE month in Britain. The countryside is bursting with fecundity as animals seek out partners to foster a new generation. As humans we like to think of these unions as romantic, but the truth is many are shaped by conflict. When males
BBC Wildlife Magazine2 min read
The Importance Of Child’s Play
NEW RESEARCH INTO THE BEHAVIOUR OF chimpanzee mothers, published in Current Biology, shows that they prioritise tickling, chasing and playing with their youngsters, in order to help give them the best start in life. Play is not very common in the wil
BBC Wildlife Magazine3 min read
Slime: Protector, Lubricant And Glue
GOO, GUNGE, GUNK… WHILE THERE are many names for the stuff that makes things slippery or sticky, slime isn’t a single material but a label for a variety of substances with similar physical properties. Those qualities are desirable to many living thin

Related Books & Audiobooks