Falemos do Top de Posts mais lidos 2020. Um ano menos activo, que se reflectiu ainda mais no segundo semestre, devido aos constantes confinamentos, escolas e universidades encerradas, mal estar geral de todos nós. Difícil de gerir. Sem poder ter aulas presenciais, a nível secundário e universitário foi-nos difícil gerir o ensino à distância. Sentimos a falta do convívio dos colegas e dos professores.
Embora com menos regularidade, continuamos a propor alguns temas relativos à fauna e flora, temáticas relacionadas com a biodiversidade e extinção das espécies. O semestre foi muito reduzido, a nível de publicações, portanto.
A pack of wild smooth-coated otters crosses Penang Road in Singapore.
The otters are well known locally and are nicknamed the Zouk family
credits: Xinhua/Rex/Shutterstock
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/
Tal como fizemos em 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, e 2019, não resistimos a partilhar convosco algumas fotos deliciosas de animais de secção Wildlife do The Guardian.
A selecção é baseada no número de visitas de cada publicação e não pela ordem temporal.
A langoor with her newborn baby at the Van Vihar National Park
in Bhopal, India
Hello, again! Let's continue to the Top2020 on environment and biodiversity. After the Top2020 #semester2, here our Top2020 #semester2.
We still continue to face the terrific pandemic time, and better days are coming. In-presence lessons, start tomorrow, only for the kids at Primary School. Next elementary school next 5 April. And next secondary schools and colleges next 19 April. Finally! We miss so very much our classmates at University and our professors.
"We are facing a devastating pandemic, new heights of global heating, new lows of ecological degradation and new setbacks in our work towards global goals for more equitable, inclusive and sustainable development."
Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary-General, in The State of the Planet
Elephants in the Kimana Sanctuary, part of a wildlife corridor that links the Amboseli National Park to the Chyulu Hills & Tsavo protected areas, within the Amboseli ecosystem in Kimana, Kenya.
First, we don't resist to share with some amazing photographs of Wildlife/ The Guardian, picked from awesome photographers. Such great photos. Beautiful wild animals!
Looking back 2020, we have come up with our roundup of what's been most-read, #semester2 on our Blog Geração Verde. The selection is based on page views of the most read posts, not so many the last year:
Here the most popular posts 2019, #semester2:
Pausa Férias : Conheces o Pika-de-ili ou Ili Pika ?
Lince Ibérico Portugal no National Geographic !
Espécies protegidas Europa : Destruição de abrigo de morcegos deu multa em Inglaterra
Pausa Natal : Europa Selvagem no National Geographic : Wild Wonders Europe
The great gray owl / Finland
credits: Sven Zacek
National Geographic
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/
Our crush #2semester? Europa Selvagem no National Geographic : Wild Wonders Europe.
In 2010, 69 photographers, 46 countries, 15 months, one mission: to celebrate wildlife and wild places on a continent more famous for monuments to human ingenuity—cities, railways, cafés—than for nature preservation. European continent.
European Union protects nature though the biodiversity strategy for 2030 and rules such as the Birds and Habitats Directives. The EU has also built Natura 2000, which is the largest coordinated network of protected areas in the world.
Caretta caretta
credits: Magnus Lundgren
Have a good schoolar year. After all, we must be happy to back to school and college.
Geração 'green'
13.03.2021
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