A review of some of the latest UNESCO World Heritage sites

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The UNESCO World Heritage Committee has added 24 new sites to its list by 2024. From a Scottish peat bog to a very important stopover for migratory birds in China, we take a look at some of the world’s newest sites.

Note: Transcripts are generated by machines and humans and are modified for accuracy. They would possibly involve errors.

LAURA BARRON-LÓPEZ:

Finally, tonight we leave you scenes from some of the world’s newest sites, courtesy of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee.

LAURA BARRON-LÓPEZ:

This vast landscape in northern Scotland will fight the climate by storing more than 400 million tonnes of carbon at its dense peak.

MILLY REVILL HAYWARD, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds: This is a brilliant example of what a canopy bulb can look like and what kind of species can be seen here. Flow countries account for five percent of all canopy bulb searches worldwide.

LAURA BARRON-LÓPEZ:

Today, UNESCO has named it one of the most productive examples of a crucial, yet threatened, ecosystem that is helping the planet continue to breathe. Throughout its 1,500 square miles there is a diversity of animals and plants, as well as mosses that store gigantic amounts of water in their cells. Another in China is a stopover for millions of migratory waterfowl in the Yellow Sea.

WU WEI, Chonming Dongtan National Nature Reserve (via translator):

On our right is the limit of our area. Among the species of nesting birds recorded here are the stilt, the ringed plover and the laughing gull.

LAURA BARRON-LÓPEZ:

The site supports habitats for birds that migrate between the Arctic, Southeast Asia and Australasia.

Laura Barron-Lopez is a White House correspondent for PBS News Hour, where she covers Biden’s tenure for the nightly newscast. He is a political analyst for CNN.

Lorna is an Emmy and Peabody Award-winning producer at PBS NewsHour. During his two decades at NewsHour, he has covered America’s reporting on challenges ranging from the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, to tsunami preparedness in the Pacific Northwest to the politics of poverty during the North Carolina election campaign. North. Additionally, she spoke about the challenge of sea turtle nest poaching in Costa Rica, the unique architecture of Rotterdam, Netherlands, and world-renowned landscape architect Piet Oudolf.

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