气候变化如何同时威胁物种、服务与文化记忆
A forest can be measured in hectares, carbon and species counts. Yet these metrics overlook another form of richness: generations of knowledge about which plants feed, heal, shelter or symbolize a community.
Research on the Amazon frames this inheritance as biocultural heritage. Climate change can disrupt it twice—first by altering the distribution of useful species, and again by weakening the practices and relationships through which knowledge is transmitted.
Inspired by a public Nature title/summary · Rewritten by Vocabsavvy · Vocabsavvy Original (public-snippet inspired)