Latest News About Population Biology

Updated 2026-05-10 07:06

Here are the latest broadly reported developments in Population Biology as of 2025–2026, with quick pointers to where you can read more.

Would you like me to pull the most recent articles from specific journals or university centers, or set up alerts for “population biology” in a couple of trusted sources? I can also summarize a recent paper if you provide a title or link. [cite]

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News & Stories

One fifth of flowering plant evolutionary history is at risk of extinction, experts warn on May 8, 2026 at 1:20 pm In a new study published in the journal Science, researchers from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, ZSL (Zoological Society of London) and their international collaborators including Boise State University present the first global assessment of risk to the angiosperm (flowering plants) tree of life, warning that more than a fifth of all angiosperm evolutionary history is at risk of...

biologydictionary.net

Blog - Population Connection

The Population Connection blog covers topics like abortion, biodiversity, climate change, environmental justice, family planning, and more.

populationconnection.org

news - WorldPop

Stay up to date with the latest WorldPop news - stories, research and program updates on high-resolution population data, geospatial modelling, climate health projections, COVID-19 insights, and more from the world's leading spatial demographic research group.

www.worldpop.org

Population News

Environmental science and conservation news

news.mongabay.com

Archives: News - Population Institute

Although women have been having far fewer babies on average compared to previous generations, the world’s population is still growing overall. The United Nations says only around 60 countries are seeing their populations decline, but the population in more than 120 other countries, including the United States, is still growing and appears on track to keep growing for the next 30 years. Mogelgaard sees it this way: We are not living in a period of demographic decline, but demographic diversity....

www.populationinstitute.org