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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
  • Endangered Bahamas Bird May Be Lost From Island Following Hurricane

    The endangered Bahama Warbler may be surviving on just one island following Hurricane Dorian’s devastation in 2019, according to researchers at the University of East Anglia.

  • Study Reveals Biodiversity Engine for Fishes: Shifting Water Depth

    Yale researchers have found that the ability of fish in temperate and polar ecosystems to move between shallow and deep water triggers species diversification.

  • Hurricane Harvey More Than Doubled The Acidity Of Texas’ Galveston Bay, Threatening Oyster Reefs

    Most people associate hurricanes with high winds, intense rain and rapid flooding on land.

  • Uganda Sees Resurgence of Rhinos, Elephants, Buffaloes

    Endangered rhinos and elephants are rebounding in Uganda’s wildlife reserves, buoyed by decades-long conservation efforts, the state wildlife agency said Thursday.

  • Wild Bumblebee Queens Lured and Killed in Commercial Hives

    In the course of experiments to test how well commercial bumblebees pollinate early spring crops, researchers made a surprising discovery: dead wild bumblebee queens in the hives, an average of 10 per nest box.

  • Project Aims to Shield Cayman Islands Turtles From Climate Change Threats

    The islands’ sea turtles are recovering from over-harvesting – but climate change is causing habitat loss, an increasingly female population (the sex of turtle hatchlings is determined by temperature) and has the potential to reduce egg-hatching success.

  • Reef Fish Must Relearn ‘Rules of Engagement’ After Coral Bleaching

    Mass coral bleaching events are making it harder for some species of reef fish to identify competitors, new research reveals.

  • Cold Water Fish Can Adapt to Climate Change by Breeding With Warm Water Relatives

    Temperatures are rising faster than many species can evolve to cope with them, posing a long-term threat to their survival. 

  • Fishing in Synchrony Brings Mutual Benefits for Dolphins and People in Brazil, Research Shows

    By working together, dolphins and net-casting fishers in Brazil each catch more fish, a rare example of an interaction by two top predators that is beneficial to both parties, researchers have concluded following 15 years of study of the practice.

  • Shrinking Lake Abert

    Every year, tens of thousands of birds flock to Lake Abert as they journey from parts of the Great Basin toward the Pacific flyway, a migration route that extends from Alaska and Canada, through California, to Mexico and South America.

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