Prince Harry is to set to take charge of the National Geographic's Instagram account for a day to launch a campaign called Looking Up.
The 35-year-old will work with the magazine's photographers to help preserve indigenous trees and emphasis how vital they are for life on earth.
Harry will ask Instagram users to share their own pictures of trees from around the world and an image taken in Liwonde National Park, Malawi, where he is unveiling two initiatives to help preserve trees in the area.
His passion for trees and forests is "inspired by the work he does on behalf of his grandmother, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II".
The Prince has launched 15 of the Queens Commonwealth Canopy (QCC) projects across the world since it began in 2015, when Commonwealth countries were invited to submit areas of greenery or plant trees to preserve in the monarch's name, with almost 50 countries taking part.
During Harry's tour, there will be two other national parks committing to the project, as well as tree planting with schoolchildren in Botswana.
Harry has urged humans to learn from past mistakes and overcome "greed, apathy and selfishness" to protect the world.
Italy has banned two concerts involving US rappers Kanye West and Travis Scott due to take place in July in the northern city of Reggio Emilia, authorities said on Saturday.
Bret Michaels, frontman of Poison, the rock group best known for its working-class anthem 'Nothin’ But a Good Time', has withdrawn from a concert series commemorating the United States' 250th anniversary, the latest in a wave of cancellations.
An Austrian court has sentenced a 21-year-old man who admitted planning a foiled attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna in 2024 to 15 years in prison on Thursday, finding him guilty of various, mainly terrorism-related offences.
The personal assistant who injected "Friends" star Matthew Perry with a fatal dose of the hallucinogenic drug ketamine was sentenced to 41 months in federal prison on Wednesday, bringing to a close the prosecution of five people who admitted to playing roles in the actor's death.
Naomi Osaka had packed plain back-up outfits in case officials objected to her sparkling yellow-brown and gold dress during her French Open clash with Laura Siegemund on Tuesday, but she said she was happy to be able to continue setting the style standard.