Conservation
Unesco Weighs Changes to Stonehenge's Cultural Heritage Status
A new report also cited Venice and the Great Barrier Reef as sites that might be placed on the World Heritage in Danger list
In a Remote Amazon Region, Study Shows Indigenous Peoples Have Practiced Forest Conservation for Millennia
Smithsonian researcher Dolores Piperno says native people have always played an important role in sustainability
Dead 'Murder Hornet' Found North of Seattle
The dried out male hornet is 2021's first confirmed sighting of the Asian giant hornet, but scientists say the corpse doesn't look fresh
Gray Wolf Pups Seen in Colorado for the First Time in 80 Years
Wildlife officials spotted at least three pups around a den site located near the Wyoming border
Florida's Manatees Are Dying at an Alarming Rate
Experts say starvation appears to be the main cause of death. Polluted waters are likely smothering the manatees’ favorite food: seagrass
Humans, We've Shrunk the Whales
North Atlantic right whales born today are three feet shorter on average than whales born in 1980—and commercial fishing could be to blame
Archaeologists Discover—and Crack—an Intact, 1,000-Year-Old Chicken Egg
Human waste in a cesspit in Israel preserved the shell and its contents for a millennium
A Herd of 15 Elephants Is Wandering North Across China—and Nobody Knows Why
Experts are unsure why the group began its journey, which now spans more than 300 miles, or where it will end
Italian Art Restorers Used Bacteria to Clean Michelangelo Masterpieces
Researchers deployed microbes to remove stains and grime from the marble sculptures in Florence's Medici Chapels
Reptile Traffickers Often Target Newly Described Species
Traders trawl recently published scientific papers to get the names and locations of animals to sell to collectors
Meet Fernanda, the Galápagos Tortoise Lost for Over a Century
Now that researchers have confirmed the animal belongs to the previously vanished species, conservationists are planning to search the islands for a mate
Giant River Otter Spotted in Argentina for First Time in Decades
The first wild sighting of the species in Argentina since the 1980s, this surprise offers hope to conservationists looking to bring the otters back
Tasmanian Devils Born on Mainland Australia Offer Hope for a Species at Risk of Extinction
Seven infant devils born inside an enclosed nature preserve represent a conservation milestone
The Positive and Negative Impacts of Covid on Nature
The absence of humans in some places led animals to increase, while the cancellation of conservation work in other places harmed species
It's Time to Reintroduce Jaguars in the U.S. Southwest, Scientists and Conservation Groups Say
Hunting decimated the big cat’s population in the United States by the mid-20th century
An Estimated 50 Billion Birds Populate Earth, but Four Species Reign Supreme
House sparrows, European starlings, barn swallows and ring-billed gulls all occupy the billion-bird club with gargantuan population numbers
How the Inca Discovered a Prized Pigment
The centuries-old history of titanium white
After Last Year's Deadly Fires, the California Condor Soars Once Again
A colossus of the sky, the bird of prey was nearly gone when biologists rescued it from extinction. Then came a terrible new challenge
Globally, Forests the Size of France Have Grown Back Since 2000
New research illustrates the capacity of forests to regenerate if given the chance
Gas Shortages in 1970s America Sparked Mayhem and Forever Changed the Nation
Half a century ago, a series of oil crises caused widespread panic and led to profound shifts in U.S. culture
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