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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • Press Releases
  • New Research Studies Adhesiveness in Ants as a Way to Improve Synthetic Adhesives

    Many of us are used to encountering ants scampering across a sidewalk, a trail path or even in our kitchen floor.

  • 'The Nemo Effect' Is Untrue: Animal Movies Promote Awareness, Not Harm

    The emotive warnings were made because of global reports that its precursor Finding Nemo had inspired a surge in purchases of clown fish, which in turn caused environmental and animal harm. 

  • Researchers Identify Type Of Parasitic Bacteria That Saps Corals Of Energy

    Researchers at Oregon State University have proposed a new genus of bacteria that flourishes when coral reefs become polluted, siphoning energy from the corals and making them more susceptible to disease.

  • University Doing Its Part To Protect Endangered Barn Swallows

    When Stephen King was growing up in North Portal, Saskatchewan, barn swallows were a common sight.

  • Collaboration Revitalizes Threatened Fish Species

    In the 1920s, scientists identified aurora trout as a new species native only to northeastern Ontario.

  • Green Turtles Eat Plastic That Looks like Their Food

    Green turtles are more likely to swallow plastic that resembles their natural diet of sea grass, new research suggests.

  • New Research on Garden-Variety Snake Sheds Light on How Reptiles Evolved

    New research on a garden-variety snake in Alberta provides an unprecedented look at how their skulls develop—and may offer new clues into how reptiles evolved.

  • 2018 Status of U.S. Fisheries Report

    This annual report highlights the work toward the goal of maximizing fishing opportunities while ensuring the sustainability of fisheries and fishing communities to support America's Blue Economy.

  • Penobscot River Salmon Run Highest Since 2011

    After dam removals and fish passage improvements, endangered Atlantic salmon are returning to the Penobscot River in encouraging numbers.

  • Counting Sheep

    From a rocky outcrop in the forest surrounding Penticton, members of the UBC Okanagan Wildlife Society gaze across a valley onto a steep sun-drenched slope, as government wildlife biologist Craig McLean details what he has spotted.

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