The Sumatran rhino, the smallest, shaggiest, and most endangered of the world’s five rhinoceros species, is found only on the Indonesian islands of Sumatra and Borneo.
Safe passages for species adapting to climate change aren’t always being protected, a new study by the University of Liverpool warns.
The world’s oceans are becoming increasingly stressful places for marine life, and experts are working to understand what this means for the future.
NOAA and university scientists deploy underwater listening devices in the Gulf of Mexico to study marine mammals, soundscapes, and noise impacts.
Urbanization is one of the most drastic forms of land-use change, and its negative consequences on biodiversity have been studied extensively in temperate countries such as Germany.
The San Nicolas Island fox, a subspecies of the Channel Island Fox only found on the most remote of California’s eight Channel Islands, is at a low risk of extinction, new research published last week in Ecosphere shows.
Climate change has severely reduced the length of the seal hunting season in a rural Alaska village, potentially threatening a key feature of the community’s Indigenous way of life.
We are collectively failing to conserve the world’s biodiversity and to mobilize natural solutions to help curb global warming.
This year, the annual grasslands in part of California turned brown a month earlier than usual, shortening the grazing season.
A $2.2 million National Science Foundation grant will establish the center, where scientists will research the farming of insects as a potential food source.
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