CLIMATE change, admittedly a challenge confronting today’s world leaders, is seen as the single biggest health threat facing humanity, and health professionals worldwide are already responding to the ...
When the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reintroduced 14 gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park in 1995, the animals were, in some ways, stepping into a new world. After humans hunted wolves to ...
Each second of filmmaker Daniel Raven-Ellison's short film represents one percent of the Earth's surface. Only eight seconds show intact forest. A wetland in the U.K., seen from above. The short film ...
A man in glasses looks into a fish tank in which fish of many colors are swimming. Ecotoxicologist Bob Wong studies how fish change when exposed to the antidepressant medication fluoxetine. Credit: ...
A new study reveals that the impact humans are having on the Amazon rainforest is so profound it is even changing the evolutionary history and functionality of the forests. As the world gathers at ...
DeepSeek makes first public appearance in almost a year Company has kept low profile since global breakout in January Researcher spoke at Chinese government-organized conference Chen expresses concern ...
In this excerpt from "Sink or Swim," author Susannah Fisher explores the future of human migration, and what that will look like based on the difficult choices we make in the coming years. When you ...
Cocaine shark. I’m not talking about a budget horror movie but a peek into how our global drug habits have long-lasting consequences. Last year, a group of scientists took to the waters off the coast ...
Climate change, pollution, and fishing are pushing oceans closer to their limits at an unprecedented rate. The pressure of that human impact is expected to double by 2050, according to a new study.
Please join us for the discussion “Fostering Peaceful Coexistence Among Humans, Livestock and Wolves” on Saturday from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Third Street Center in Carbondale. Recovering and living ...
For millennia, the ocean has fed, protected, and inspired us. Yet a new forecast from UC Santa Barbara’s National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) shows our cumulative footprint is ...