The continent’s ecosystems now run on less than two-thirds of their historical energy, with the decline of elephants, lions, ...
On this One Health Day of 2025, we the Regional Representatives/Directors in Africa representing the Quadripartite Regional Coordination Group comprising of the Food and Agriculture Organization of ...
A study of nine species of large mammals in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem has revealed that their behavioral responses to ...
Large mammals in Yellowstone adapt to summer heat by changing behavior—shaped more by landscape than biology, a new study ...
Green Matters on MSN
Rocky Mountain National Park’s Ecosystem Suffers Without Beavers — and Experts Blame Two Animals
The Kawuneeche Valley of Rocky Mountain National Park seems unusually dull due to the absence of one species that once ...
Scientists warn that losing Africa’s large animals is draining ecosystem energy and reshaping the continent’s biodiversity.
Learn how river turtles act as nature’s cleanup crew, spreading nutrients and keeping ecosystems balanced and full of life.
One of the most iconic ecosystems of the Peruvian plateau, the Junín Lake basin, suffers from "critical" levels of arsenic, ...
Brian Barczyk on MSN
The Great Texas Animal Quest: 5000 Species and Counting
What happens when one enthusiast pushes the limits of wildlife exploration? Over five days and thousands of creatures later, the journey through Texas’s animal world becomes a mix of education, ...
AZ Animals on MSN
Why River Turtles Are Keystone Players in Freshwater Systems
Freshwater turtles may be small, but they play a vital role in keeping river habitats healthy, both for themselves and other ...
Hosted on MSN
Unlikely culprits have rocked Colorado ecosystem and caused beloved animal's population collapse
These large mammals overgraze the willows, which are crucial for beavers' dams, causing a disruption in the ecosystem. But ...
4don MSN
Lionfish leather and python handbags: These accessories are made from exotic invasive animals
Invasive species are wreaking havoc on ecosystems around the world. US company Inversa is turning some of them into leather, which it says is more environmentally friendly than traditional leather.
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