“I colori sono i sorrisi della natura.”
“Colors are the smiles of nature.”
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“I colori sono i sorrisi della natura.”
“Colors are the smiles of nature.”
https://ko-fi.com/axololtls
The cracked surface you see here is dried mud from a lake that is steadily drying up. Once a thriving ecosystem filled with water and life, it's now a stark reminder of how environmental changes impact our natural landscapes. Each fracture in the mud tells a story of receding waters and an uncertain future for the flora and fauna that depend on it.
What are environmental science and ecosystem studies about?
Environmental science is the study of the natural world and how living things interact with their surroundings. It involves knowledge from many scientific fields, such as biology, chemistry, physics, and geography, to understand environmental processes. Scientists in this field study how air, water, soil, plants, animals, and humans affect each other. By studying these relationships, environmental science helps people understand environmental problems and find solutions that protect the planet. 🌍
Another important concept related to environmental science is the study of ecosystems. An ecosystem is a community of living things that interact with nonliving factors, such as sunlight, water, soil, and temperature. The study of ecosystems focuses on how these factors work together to support life. For example, plants use sunlight to make food, animals rely on plants or other animals for energy, and microorganisms break down waste to recycle nutrients. These interactions create balanced natural systems, which allow ecosystems to function properly. 🌱
The study of ecosystems also helps scientists understand how energy flows in nature and how nutrients cycle. Energy usually enters ecosystems through sunlight and travels through food chains and food webs as living things eat each other. Nutrients such as carbon, nitrogen, and water are constantly recycled through natural processes. By observing these processes, researchers can learn how ecosystems remain stable and how different species depend on each other to survive. 🐾
Both ecology and the study of ecosystems are essential to protecting the Earth. Human activities such as pollution, deforestation, and climate change can disrupt ecosystems and reduce biodiversity. Understanding ecological systems allows scientists and policymakers to develop policies for conservation and sustainable use of resources. When people understand how ecosystems work, they are more likely to support actions that protect nature. Thus, the study of ecology and ecosystems helps ensure a healthier and more sustainable future for all living things. 🌿🌎
Rachel Carson: The Woman Who Gave Nature a Voice
On 27 May, let us remember one of the most influential environmental thinkers of the twentieth century — Rachel Carson. More than a scientist, Carson was a writer, conservationist, and visionary who changed how humanity understands its relationship with nature. At a time when industrial progress was celebrated without question, she courageously warned that human actions were damaging the natural world in dangerous and irreversible ways.
Today, as climate change, pollution, biodiversity loss, and ecological crises dominate global conversations, Rachel Carson’s ideas feel more relevant than ever.
Read: https://righttotruth.in/2026/05/27/rachel-carson-the-woman-who-gave-nature-a-voice/
You can help stop animal deaths and vehicular damage with these simple tips:
Drive safe – Use extra caution during dusk and dawn because this is when many species are most active.
Slow down – Driving slower will give you better reaction time if you spot wildlife on or near the road. If you do see an animal, safely slow or stop your car to allow it to cross. Always check for more individuals before continuing the journey.
Watch out – Look out for animal road crossing signs because they indicate high wildlife trafficked areas.
Eyeball it –At night, look for an animal’s eyeshine where lights are reflected. Also, if you don’t see the road lines, this may be an animal blocking the line’s reflection.
Speak out – Let your government representatives know you want them to prioritize funding for wildlife crossings.
Support – Consider supporting nonprofits like Defenders that advocate for wildlife corridor planning and crossing development.
Roads can be dangerous places for cats of all sizes, from small, domestic cats to larger, wild cats like panthers and ocelots. Vehicle strik
Thoughts on the Arusha Manifesto - From then Until Now
When I first read Nyerere’s Manifesto on a relaxed afternoon after just having had very strong Tanzanian coffee in a hip coffee shop located in the same building as the Ngorongoro Conservation Office (outside of which the manifesto is displayed), I felt surprised. And intrigued. I took a picture. Then, I felt like I can pack my bags and leave Arusha, and my PhD project, behind. Upon giving it first read, the Arusha manifesto clearly eludes to the fact that Tanzania wants, even expects, outside intervention regarding nature protection. But the imposition of outside knowledge and best practices in Tanzania, especially regarding environmental governance in front of a (post)colonial legacy, is something I had meant to deconstruct and critique with my PhD project. However, now it turned out that the “father of the nation” as he is affectionately called (for good reason) by us Tanzanians, the Tanzanian champion and ”liberator of the people”, advocate of Tanzanian (intellectual) spirit and rebirth, explicitly invited outside expertise to protect cultural and environmental heritage. Hadn’t Tanzania, by the early 1960s, just emerged from a long and hard-fought struggle for self-rule? Weren’t the last British administrators barely out the door? And wasn’t the Zanzibar Revolution against the colonial Arab elite already simmering by 1963 and about to erupt in early 1964? But then I read the manifesto again. And again. And then, again.
Upon careful re-reading, it turns out that Nyerere speaks of the natural heritage of the African continent as a whole, and does not specifically refer to Tanganyika (as Tanzania was called back then). It may be that he tried to highlight nature conservation as a pan-African effort, and saw the environmental legacy of Tanganyika as belonging to all of humankind. Perhaps to him, this was not about local vs. foreign but about the importance of preserving the countries’ spectacularly rich eco systems, while also seeing the financial potential in the protection of these environments for all of humanity. Furthermore if there is great value in the preservation of these regions natural environments, the next questions rightly so will center around how this should be achieved. Nyerere didn't go into the particulars of the action process but any governmental policies, without a doubt, are also always a product of their time.
The early 1960s were a time of hope on the African continent. During the famous independence movements, many African leaders envisioned a future in which the continent could chart its own political, economic, and cultural course. A new African confidence and pride was ignited and African socialism, as articulated by leaders like Kwame Nkrumah, Patrice Lumumba, and Julius Nyerere, was seen as not only political but also philosophical in nature. Communal values, human dignity, and collective prosperity were envisioned to lead the continent into a new postcolonial period. This was also the birth of pan-Africanism, where ideas about shared responsibility, mutual aid, and interdependence between peoples and nations was a pursuit towards a new, modern African spirit. Environmental protection, then, could fit within this vision as something that transcended borders because the ecological richness of the continent was understood as a legacy and obligation shared across generations and geographies.
In Tanzania, the Ujamaa (”unity”, “community”) movement was Nyerere’s version of African socialism. At its heart was the belief that Tanzanians could develop not by imitating the capitalist West, but by reviving and adapting the community oriented spirit of traditional African village life. Ujamaa emphasised rural development, collective farming, self-reliance, and national unity. For Nyerere it was especially important that this unity was more important than tribal or ethnic divisions between the many different tribes of Tanganyika (this stood in stark contrast to the social policies of Tanzania’s neighbour Kenya of the same time. For a deeper dive into this interesting contrasting approach of two bordering nations, stay tuned!) The spirit of Ujamaa was anti-imperialist, and aimed at defining how Tanzanians thought about themselves, their future, and the role of the state. So within this logic, the protection of natural heritage might have been imagined not as an imported idea, but as expression of national pride and care, even if later on realised through international influence.
But this idealistic vision soon collided with the realities of global capitalism. It is important tp understand that by the 1980s, Tanzania, like many other postcolonial nations at the time was plunged into structural adjustment programs (SAPs) imposed by the World Bank and IMF. These integrations forced the country to liberalise its economy, cut public spending, and open up to foreign investors. The language of self-reliance was replaced by the logic of market efficiency. In the tourism and conservation sectors, this meant a turn toward private-public partnerships, international NGOs, and foreign donors. It slowly became evident that protected areas began to be managed not only by the Tanzanian state but by outside actors importing world views on how nature is best to be governed. This shift modified the public sector’s autonomy and left it vulnerable to be dependent or integrated into international donor schemes, metrics of success set by external actors. Most importantly to understand here is that the global capitalism era commencing the 80s, laid the foundations for a new market view of nature as a commodity to be priced, marketed, and sold with solid integration into an emergingly popular (safari) tourism sector.
Zooming out, it is evident that we are still in this time period. Tanzania's conservation landscape today is not neutral, sovereign nor apolitical. So back at the trendy coffee house, I sit back down at my tiny table and take a moment to think. The caffeine has finally hit and I reflect on the words of one of my interview participants from a few days ago, a retired Tanzanian tourism expert who has been keeping an eye on the country’s wildlife protection and tourism sectors. He describes tourism in his country as inseparable from wildlife protection and natural resource management, which he views as an uncomfortable merge:
“To most politicians, they think the product we have here {is wildlife}… to them tourism is wildlife. They cannot differentiate between wildlife and tourism. (…) It would have been better if we had a ministry of tourism and the ministry of natural {resources} as two different ministries.”
If we are to understand Tanzanian tourism as synonymous with wildlife and natural resource protection, the country’s safari industry and the power dynamics it enflicts on wildlife and nature management become much more evident. With this insight, I pack up my bags and leave the cafe.
Highlights of my hike