Discover how tech like GPS collars and mobile apps is used in Zimbabwe to track wildlife, prevent human-wildlife conflict, and help communities coexist.
How are biodiversity losses reshaping how ecosystems function? A recent study quantifies the impact of biodiversity and ...
Rohit Gupta [email protected] Most people don’t think of cities as ecosystems that are thriving. High-rise buildings ...
Environmental crime is now one of the world’s most profitable illegal industries, driven by illegal logging, wildlife ...
I try survive 3 days eating only what I catch tracking down deadly animals to stay alive. This catch and cook journey tests ...
An FWC survey team spotted an endangered right whale entangled in lines off the coast of Jekyll Island the same day a new ...
This video follows the puzzling disappearance of a dominant bull elephant whose sudden absence unsettled wildlife experts. It ...
The Flathead Indian Reservation is divided into 18 units to make sure each area is covered at least once every five years.
A group of Palm Springs homeowners have banded together in an attempt to stop a 98-home development they say is proposed in a ...
Interpol says a monthlong operation led by the international police body resulted in the rescue of nearly 30,000 live animals that were being trafficked ...
Van der Heide got her start at Cal Poly, tagging monarchs by numbering their wings in Sharpie and trying to find them later ...
GPS collars on cattle are letting ranchers remove fences in the West. That’s good for wildlife and for the land.