In a new study published today in the Journal of Animal Ecology, researchers have discovered significant variations in the ability of different UK butterfly species to maintain a suitable body temperature.
A warming climate and more frequent wildfires do not necessarily mean the western United States will see the forest loss that many scientists expect.
SFU researchers are among recipients of $4 million in funding grants announced by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) today.
CU Boulder co-led study completes first global detection of nitrous acid in wildfire plumes
Global populations of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish have declined by over two-thirds in less than half a century.
Drought-parched wetlands in South America have been burning for weeks.
Barren fields and eerie, dead forests on Maryland’s Eastern Shore are some of the obvious signs of an “invisible flood”.
The research conducted by a team from Texas Tech University utilized UAV flights to collect data and display how honey mesquite and yellow bluestem spread, potentially giving landowners a way to control the species population.
UM Rosenstiel School-led study has important implications for soil fertility in Amazon Basin
The Canadian Barley Research Coalition (CBRC) announced today it will invest $2.7 million over five years in the University of Saskatchewan’s Crop Development Centre (CDC).
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