Research on global biodiversity has long assumed that present-day biodiversity patterns reflect present-day factors, namely contemporary climate and human activities.
Life cycles for birds, insects and trees are shifting in this current era of a rapidly changing climate. How migration patterns, in particular, are changing and whether birds can track climate change is an open question.
Natural resilience is more important than ever in the face of unprecedented climate change.
Savannah monitor lizards have a unique airflow pattern that is a hybrid of bird and mammal flow patterns, Utah biologists discover.
The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission takes us over the green algae blooms swirling around the Baltic Sea.
In the largest-ever caribou study a University of Maryland-led team disputes long-held assumptions about migration timing and suggests warming summers may negatively affect calving.
As wild pig territory expands into city limits, public health and safety concerns increase, according to the Texas A&M AgriLife Extensive Service.
A new study in the journal PLOS One says Glacier National Park’s iconic mountain goats are in dire need of air conditioning.
Study highlights importance of estuaries as prime habitat for the endangered southern sea otter.
Abundant food helps offset higher temperatures for fish. But there’s a catch.
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