Red deer on a Scottish island are providing scientists with some of the first evidence that wild animals are evolving to give birth earlier in the year as the climate warms.
Monarch numbers have declined about 82% over the last 23 years, and road mortality can significantly contribute to their dwindling numbers.
New genetic research has identified fin whales in the northern Pacific Ocean as a separate subspecies, reflecting a revolution in marine mammal taxonomy as scientists unravel the genetics of enormous animals otherwise too large to fit into laboratories.
Mitch Aide, a tropical ecologist based in Puerto Rico, thinks we should listen to the earth a lot more than we do now — and not just listen to it, but record and store its sounds on a massive scale.
Research highlights that mercurcy concentrations in fish cannot be predicted by emissions inventories alone.
Birds come in an astounding array of shapes and colours. But it’s their physical prowess—like a bald eagle’s incredible ability to soar—that captivates human imagination.
Social networking, even between competing species, plays a much bigger role in ecology than anyone previously thought, according to three biologists at the University of California, Davis.
Researchers have revealed how marine sponges contribute to the ecological functioning of global oceans.
Study will include experts in hydrothermal geochemistry, trace element chemistry, physical oceanography, and biology.
Page 152 of 302