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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
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • Forest Corridors Vital For Wildlife

    Canada has committed to protecting nearly 20 per cent of the country’s landscape by 2020.

  • Diving Deeper Into Coral Research

    Growing up in Idaho, far from any coastline, Danielle Claar says her curiosity about the underwater world was sparked as a teenager on a scuba diving trip with her parents.

  • To Learn How Poison Frogs Are Adapting to Warmer Temperatures, Scientists Got Crafty

    There’s a species of poison frog called the “strawberry poison frog” or the “blue jeans frog,” depending on who you ask. 

  • Study Suggests Economic Growth Benefits Wildlife but Growing Human Populations Do Not

    In a world first, researchers at ZSL and UCL compared changes in bird and mammal populations with socio-economic trends in low- and lower-middle income countries over the past 20 years. 

  • Animal Friendships ‘Change with the Weather’ in the Masai Mara

    When it comes to choosing which other species to hang out with, wild animals quite literally change their minds with the weather, a new University of Liverpool study reveals.

  • Conservation or Construction? Deciding Waterbird Hotspots

    Imagine your favorite beach filled with thousands of ducks and gulls.

  • Study Shows Non-Lethal Impacts of Seabirds’ Plastic Ingestion

    An IMAS-led study of seabirds that had ingested plastic debris has revealed a range of non-lethal impacts on their health and physiology.

  • New Funding Turns the Impossible to Possible for Long-running Lynx Study

    Researchers in the Integrative Wildlife Conservation Lab, led by Dr. Dennis Murray from the Department of Biology, recently secured $149,694 from the National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada’s (NSERC) Research Tools and Instruments (RTI) grants program.

  • Elephant Extinction Will Raise Carbon Dioxide Levels in Atmosphere

    One of the last remaining megaherbivores, forest elephants shape their environment by serving as seed dispersers and forest bulldozers as they eat over a hundred species of fruit, trample bushes, knock over trees and create trails and clearings.

  • Monarch Butterflies Rely on Temperature-Sensitive Internal Timer While Overwintering

    The fact that millions of North American monarch butterflies fly thousands of miles each fall and somehow manage to find the same overwintering sites in central Mexican forests and along the California coast, year after year, is pretty mind-blowing.

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