A biologist from Texas Parks and Wildlife, who is an alumna of West Texas A&M University, will be the featured guest at an ...
Scientists are researching ways to genetically modify plants and animals to be more resistant to threats like climate change.
Deep in Guatemala's Maya rainforest, a team led by Washington State University researchers captured more than just photos of ...
This week, members of the International Union of Conservation of Nature, one of the world’s largest conservation groups, voted against a moratorium on the release of genetically engineered species ...
Did you know that Blue Jay feathers aren’t actually blue, or that some foxes can climb trees? Join Brad Timm, author and ...
In this week's "Five questions with" feature, Malone University professor Jason Courter talks about his love of education and ...
Dan Pletscher left a job interview at the University of Idaho in 1984 and headed east along the Lochsa River. He’d substituted at the University of California at Berkeley for a short time and was ...
WASHINGTON— The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today that the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service unlawfully discounted the harms to threatened and endangered ...
Jerry Tupacz saw the ribbon first, dangling from the mouth of a petrel frantically flapping on the beach at Cape Island, one of the remotest islands in the remote Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge.
A team of students from Clark Magnet High School organized a special “Bio Blitz” on Wednesday in Deukmejian Wilderness Park as a way to raise community awareness about the surrounding biodiversity.