
3D image of Ethiopian church forest insect
Enjoy this cool critter, in the family Scutelleridae. Via Josh Martin: We nick-named this one “Punisher Beetle”, but 1) that’s not it’s name, and 2)

Enjoy this cool critter, in the family Scutelleridae. Via Josh Martin: We nick-named this one “Punisher Beetle”, but 1) that’s not it’s name, and 2)

Most children have a bug period. — E.O. Wilson, Harvard entomologist and biodiversity expert I love insects, which is probably why I became a scientist

From The FT magazine: Dining with the Colombian ambassador at his London residence is a challenging culinary adventure – and not for those of a

Here are a few of the critters we were surveying — got 135 birds, but all but about 11 were outside the church forests. We

CanopyMeg is delighted to share a recent feature from the French science magazine Les Explorateurs, which spotlighted the exciting world of canopy exploration and the

Margaret “Meg” Lowman Ph.D. AFFECTIONATELY KNOWN THROUGHOUT THE WORLD AS “CANOPYMEG” Meg Lowman Margaret “Meg” Lowman Ph.D., known affectionately throughout the world as “Canopy Meg,”

Research and Scholarship GROUNDBREAKING WORK IN THE “EIGHTH CONTINENT” Photo credit: Roger Winstead For more than 40 years, Margaret “CanopyMeg” Lowman Ph.D. has pioneered the

Canopy walkway, Penang Hill, Malaysia Scientists estimate that 50% of the land-based biodiversity, or plants, insects, and animals, live in the forest canopies i.e. off

From NationalGeographic.com: In some ways, crown shyness is the arboreal version of social distancing, says Meg Lowman, a forest canopy biologist and director of the

Arnot Art Museum presents a conversation with Dr. Meg Lowman: BREATHING GIANTS Saving Trees From Elmira to Ethiopia Thursday, August 1 at 7pm in the