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American bullfrogs are gobbling up everything in sight, including some of the rarest species in the Western US.
An international team of scientists has recently found that non-native species are expanding their ranges many orders of magnitude faster than native ones, in large part due to inadvertent human ...
Non-native plants, animals, algae, fungus, or disease-causing microorganisms are capable of causing severe damage to the economy, environment and human health, once they invade enough area outside ...
Some ant species that can only survive indoors in cooler regions could begin to move outdoors due to climate change, ...
In early July, a maintenance team discovered four ball pythons in a local nature preserve. These snakes, native to Africa, ...
Native species cannot move fast enough on their own to avoid climate-driven chaos AMHERST, Mass. – An international team of scientists has recently found that non-native species are expanding ...
For centuries, human activity has intentionally or unintentionally driven the spread of plant species to areas far outside their native habitat. On average, about 10 percent of non-native species ...
Everyone knows lions roam African plains, while kangaroos bounce through Australia. But now and then, an animal pops up in a ...
Spanish bluebells are similar to native UK bluebells, but have the potential to outcompete the species if left unchecked ...
The average annual movement of native species is only 1.74 kilometers. A non-native species, on the other hand, spreads at approximately 35 kilometers per year on its own.
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