New research indicates lichens may not have arrived on land before vascular plants.
Natural genetic engineering allowed plants to move from water to land, according to a new study by an international group of scientists from Canada, China, France, Germany and Russia.
Runoff from soils and surrounding environments provide life-sustaining carbon.
Wetlands are dynamic in nature, growing and shrinking within and between years in ways far less predictable than croplands, forests, or established urban areas.
New findings from a study at Trent University on the feeding habits of walleye may be an important element to future conservation and management plans for the popular sport fish.
A Texas A&M AgriLife Extension economist lays out what you need to know about the reports of a looming 2020 bacon shortage.
"Every land has its own seed.”
Major storm events have short-term impact, but Bay remains resilient in the long run, scientists say.
The spring season is lengthening in some regions of the U.S. and compressing in others, potentially disrupting species’ migration patterns and development, a new study finds.
A recently published study, completed by researchers from the University of Helsinki together with Dr Katerina Machacova, a visiting scholar, demonstrates that boreal forests of the Northern Hemisphere are sources of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O).
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