News

The Trump administration announced a plan on June 17 to open nearly 82% of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska to oil and ...
Caribou, migrating birds and many other types of wildlife rely on this expanse of wetlands and tundra. Humanity and the ...
Michael Dunn, the study's lead author, said, "We're not just predicting how wildlife might respond to shrinking sea ice and environmental shifts, we've had the rare opportunity to confirm it, using ...
You’re outside when suddenly you hear an unfamiliar chirp. Looking around, you wonder, “Is it a squirrel?” “Is it a bat?” And ...
A new study challenges recent claims about dramatic "greening" in Antarctica and how this conflicts with decades of ...
A new push for more oil and gas drilling, mining, and logging threatens irreparable damage to irreplaceable habitats.
The Trump administration wants to end federal funding for a program that gives states grants for wildlife conservation.
From the coast to mountains and from mild climates to nearly arctic conditions, Maine encompasses more than a hundred types ...
Among these animals is the Arctic hare, the largest hare in North America. The Arctic hare has large claws on all four feet, ...
A few snow drifts remain on June 18, 2004, on the Arctic coastal plain of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. (Photo by Craig McCaa/U.S. Bureau of Land Management) The Trump administration plans ...