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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
  • Clues At Fish Auction Reveal Several New Species Of Opah

    As commercial fishermen sold their catch at the busy United Fishing Agency (UFA) auction house in Honolulu, Hawaii, fish buyer Garrett Kitazaki noticed something curious about the opah changing hands: some had much bigger eyes, and their spots and color looked different.

  • Steelhead life cycle linked to environment, pink salmon abundance

    A new SFU study has found that steelhead trout have a remarkable life-cycle variation that responds to changes in temperature and numbers of other species of salmon.

  • Research explores smell’s role in bird mating

    When it comes to a song sparrow attracting a mate, the little feathered fellow may want forget about the singing audition and worry more about his smell, according to one Western PhD student.

  • Finding Middle Ground on the Range

    Cattle ranching and conservation may seem an unusual pair in the American West, but new research reveals a clear link between the economic health of ranches and the ability to maintain habitat for an iconic wild bird that for years has been at the center of public land policy debate: the greater sage grouse. 

  • Chinese Researchers Discover How Bird Feathers Resist Tearing

    Chinese researchers have discovered and characterized a sophisticated mechanism in bird feathers that enhances tear resistance, overturning a centuries-old explanation of how bird feathers work.  

  • PCB Pollution Threatens to Wipe Out Killer Whales

    More than forty years after the first initiatives were taken to ban the use of PCBs, the chemical pollutants remain a deadly threat to animals at the top of the food chain.

  • How Some Algae May Survive Climate Change

    Green algae stole genes from bacteria to survive in harsh environments, study suggests.

  • New Invasive Bryozoan in Alaskan Waters

    Local citizen scientists help biologists detect and track Alaska’s marine invaders.

  • Hairy legs and inflatable abdomens: How female dance flies attract males

    When it comes to the mating game, it’s true that size does matter for North American male dance flies, who are most attracted to mates who display the largest inflatable abdominal sacs, says Rosalind Murray, a post-doctoral researcher in biology at the University of Toronto.

  • NOAA and Florida Keys fishing guides partner to support sustainable recreational fishing

    Long considered an angler’s paradise, the sandbars, flats, channels, and reefs in the Florida Keys provide year-round opportunities for anglers who dream of catching a “fish of a lifetime."

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