News

The new images were captured by cameras maintained by the University of Arizona and a team of citizen scientists.
The new images were captured by cameras maintained by the University of Arizona and a team of citizen scientists.
The story highlights the benefits of trail cameras in conservation efforts as a non-invasive way to track the numbers and needs of the most elusive creatures on the planet. With the insights gained, ...
One-third of shark species are at risk of extinction, yet scientists still lack basic data on their habitats, populations, ...
A research team from the Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC) has published a study in Communications Biology showing how ...
Gov. Gavin Newsom is asking the Legislature a lot on climate and energy. Here’s where things stand a week before legislators ...
Romania’s growing bear population has turned conservation into confrontation for people living in the shadows of the ...
A conservation group says it has photographic evidence of the presence of a female lion in a national park in northeastern ...
How can fragile, century-old oil paints - dulled with dirt, spread over vast areas, and exposed bare to the environment in absence of a varnish layer - be safely and consistently cleaned? And how can ...
After nearly a century, gray wolves are roaming California again — igniting a fierce mix of wonder, fear, and conflict.
Wildlife experts said a mystery animal caught on camera in northeast Kansas is not a bear -- but they disagree about what the creature might actually be.