Researchers studying proposal to restore sea otter populations
The Center for Biological Diversity filed the petitioned with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service, pointing to concerns about the otter's habitat and long term survival.
The Center for Biological Diversity filed the petitioned with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service, pointing to concerns about the otter's habitat and long term survival.
The hunt is on for a way to efficiently reduce the population of feral hogs, which have been destroying the U.S.
The U.S. Geological Survey found that the invasive Burmese python population in Florida has expanded from a small area near Everglades National Park to the bottom third of the Sunshine State
"I expect it to spread throughout S. Florida and northward along both coasts," UF researcher who discovered mosquito species said about Culex lactator
The only water source on George Tso's land is located on the southern side of his ranch, but the best grazing for his cattle is on the northern side.
Photos show the creature’s bright red coloring.
The protected bird which made headlines because of its bond with a local famer is taken to a sanctuary.
Researchers warn others to watch for a deadly strain of parasite that killed four California sea otters and could spread to other animals.
Opinion by Marek Warszawski: “This is excitement for Firebaugh — and worrying,” says motel manager with 6,000-sandbag wall.
Florida has plenty of invasive species, and scientists are keeping their eye on a new one that has made its way to the Sunshine State.
For the last two centuries, nearly all the concrete used in buildings, bridges, dams and roads has been held together with a key ingredient: Portland cement. The limestone and clay fusion is ubiquitous, inexpensive — and extremely carbon-intensive to produce.
Giordano Cipriani/Getty ImagesDiscoveries of aquifers – underground earth formations that hold water – often create excitement around their ability to ease water scarcity in a region. For instance, about 10 years ago a large aquifer was discovered in Kenya’s Turkana region. This is one of the hottest, driest parts of Kenya and it frequently suffers from drought. The government claimed that the aquifer could supply the entire country with water for 70 years. More recently, the US announced the di
Utilities in the past have said the structures would cost more and produce less energy, but now SRP and ASU are partnering to study possible effects.
A woman in Asheville, North Carolina captured the moment a black bear used a tree trunk to scratch its back outside her home.
You definitely don’t want these invasive plants, like poison hemlock, to take over.
The latest plans for the water supply galvanized opponents.
The new plant was found in several urban spaces.
STORY: Drone footage provided by the Spanish Guardia Civil last March 6 showed the 17-meter-long (55ft) specimen swimming near Cullera, in the Mediterranean Sea.The fIn whale, second largest species on earth after the Blue Whale, was examined by specialists from the Oceanography Foundation, who detected that the whale was not entangled but suffering severe scoliosis.“Due to the whale's size, being in the open sea and its malformation, it was not possible to remotely track it,” scientists said on Facebook last March 6.Experts said the fin whale could appear again due to its difficulty in swimming.
Mr. Pickles, a radiated tortoise at the Houston Zoo, and his partner, Mrs. Pickles, welcomed three hatchlings: Dill, Gherkin and Jalapeño.
An illustration of two giant Cape zebras alongside a much smaller plains zebra. Maggie NewmanTens of thousands of years ago, a huge horse species walked, trotted and galloped across the shifting sands of what is today South Africa’s Cape south coast. The Giant Cape Zebra (Equus capensis) weighed an estimated 450 kg. Its extant relatives in southern Africa are far smaller: the plains zebra weighs between 250 and 300 kg and the Cape mountain zebra is the smallest of all zebra species, with a mass
Climate skeptics say pictures of the Statue of Liberty taken 120 years apart are evidence against the global rise in sea levels. This is false; experts told AFP the claims omit the effect of tides, and US government data show the water in New York Harbor climbs by nearly a foot per century."This is what catastrophic sea level rise actually looks like," says a March 15, 2023 tweet with two photos of the New York City landmark, purportedly showing the sculpture in 1898 and 2017, with no discernibl