News

Many urban canopies across U.S. cities are dominated by only a handful of tree types, putting them at risk of being wiped out ...
The winners of the Mangrove Photography Awards shed light on the ecologically valuable but highly threatened coastal ...
A climate change-induced surge in brief but intense thunderstorms poses a growing but underrecognized threat to trees in ...
Ape behavior just got a name upgrade — “scrumping” — and it might help explain why humans can handle alcohol so well.
Invasive plants aren’t always thick weeds or tall grasses, plant experts say, but can be the colourful flowers and luscious ...
By Karen Perrell Campbell This week, I took a quiet walk through the woods surrounding my home at Stillwood Pond and felt something I think many of us are longing for — peace, connection and a deep ...
A new paper led by Dartmouth and University of St Andrews researchers coins the word “scrumping” to describe the fondness African apes have for eating ripe fruit from the forest floor. Though recent ...
A catbird was skulking around the forsythia in my backyard one random morning, but she was stealthy enough to keep their nest ...
Everything has changed on Dartmoor since Richard Gray was a boy. Every winter his family farm at Holne would be cut off by ...
In this Bird of the Week segment, Maine Audubon's Sally Stockwell helps us get to know the great crested flycatcher.
The jewel of this region, however, is undoubtedly the lush Terai woodlands and wetlands found in Dudhwa National Park. It is ...
A bright red bird is one of the most eye-catching wonders of nature. Beyond their beauty, there is a reason behind that pop ...