
Catrin Einhorn
Reporter at The New York Times
Reporting on biodiversity, climate and the environment for @nytimes. FATHER SOLDIER SON on @netflix. Telling stories every way I can. Send tips!
Articles
-
3 weeks ago |
nytimes.com | Catrin Einhorn
On this Earth Day, the Bible has been on my mind. I've been working on an article about evangelical Protestants in Indiana who are trying to help heal the planet. The relationship between the Bible and environmental efforts came into sharper focus with the death of Pope Francis, who used his enormous platform to exhort humanity to take better care of the Earth. For Francis and those evangelicals, the mission is rooted in Scripture.
-
1 month ago |
telegraphindia.com | Catrin Einhorn |Harry Stevens
Insects play an outsize role in supporting life on Earth, they pollinate plants, break down dead matter nourishing the soil, feed birds and myriad other creatures in the food web Catrin Einhorn, Harry Stevens Published 14.04.25, 10:28 AM A groundbreaking new study offers the most comprehensive answers to date about the status of butterflies in the contiguous United States.
-
1 month ago |
virginislandsdailynews.com | Catrin Einhorn
It’s hard to count insects. Even as scientists have found that many populations are in decline, they’ve struggled to understand the scale of what’s happening. Now, a groundbreaking new study offers the most comprehensive answers to date about the status of butterflies in the contiguous United States. In 20 years, the fleeting time it takes for a human baby to grow into a young adult, the country has lost 22% of its butterflies, researchers found.
-
1 month ago |
straitstimes.com | Catrin Einhorn |Harry Stevens
NEW YORK - It’s hard to count insects. Even as scientists have found that many populations are in decline, they’ve struggled to understand the scale of what’s happening. Now, a groundbreaking new study offers the most comprehensive answers to date about the status of butterflies in the contiguous United States. In 20 years, the fleeting time it takes for a human baby to grow into a young adult, the country has lost 22 per cent of its butterflies, researchers found.
-
1 month ago |
mahoningmatters.com | Catrin Einhorn |Harry Stevens
(Science Times)It’s hard to count insects. Even as scientists have found that many populations are in decline, they’ve struggled to understand the scale of what’s happening. Now, a groundbreaking new study offers the most comprehensive answers to date about the status of butterflies in the contiguous United States. In 20 years, the fleeting time it takes for a human baby to grow into a young adult, the country has lost 22% of its butterflies, researchers found.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →Coverage map
X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 7K
- Tweets
- 1K
- DMs Open
- Yes

Is there a connection between a tiny endangered fish and a lack of water for fighting the Los Angeles wildfires? Here's the truth. https://t.co/jHLlNX2dHQ

This is very important news. w/ Jason Gulley https://t.co/RDrQds28yB

People aren't the only ones affected. with @elenalingshao https://t.co/lSBbt2VCPn