Topic | Natural world | WAtoday

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Natural world

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‘Tears of happiness at the sight of you’: Our love affair with urban trees

‘Tears of happiness at the sight of you’: Our love affair with urban trees

New research demonstrates the deep personal connections people forge with the urban environment around them, particularly city trees.

  • by Bianca Hall

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Councils race against climate clock to save heritage trees

Councils race against climate clock to save heritage trees

Councils across the state are adopting new tree management policies to save old trees from destruction and increase tree coverage, as they respond locally to rapidly increasing urban heat.

  • by Anthony Segaert
Months alone and a 50-kilo pack: The Murray Fredericks guide to photography

Months alone and a 50-kilo pack: The Murray Fredericks guide to photography

There’s landscape, and then there’s a Murray Fredericks landscape – and the story of how he got there is on display in a major retrospective.

  • by Karl Quinn
Firefighters on edge as weather phenomenon threatens WA

Firefighters on edge as weather phenomenon threatens WA

Fears of lightning storms in air so hot that it evaporates rain have firefighter strike teams and water bombers on standby, preparing for a nightmare week.

  • by Sarah Brookes
Branching out: West Australian cattle station launches ‘dingo tours’

Branching out: West Australian cattle station launches ‘dingo tours’

When a Victorian sanctuary asked these two West Australian farmers for help, they knew they were right for the job. But there was a challenging road ahead.

  • by Emma Young
What actually happens if you chop down that verge tree? Well, it depends where you live
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Local council

What actually happens if you chop down that verge tree? Well, it depends where you live

Whether you get a warning or a $10,000 fine for interfering with your local suburban streetscape might depend on little more than luck in Perth.

  • by Heather McNeill
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Yes, Brissie backyards come with snakes. Removing them creates another risk
Perspective
City life

Yes, Brissie backyards come with snakes. Removing them creates another risk

There’s a perception that snakes don’t belong in urban environments and that, if spotted, need to be relocated. Should we rethink that?

  • by Courtney Kruk
Underwater cyclones off Sydney are giant floating laboratory’s next mission

Underwater cyclones off Sydney are giant floating laboratory’s next mission

Massive heated whirlpools that occur off the Australian coast are the focus of a fascinating new multimillion-dollar mission.

  • by Angus Dalton