Add To Watchlist

ENDANGERED-SPECIES

The Wire

Conservationists Sue Gov't for Records

A conservation group sued the Interior Department on Thursday seeking documents about decisions on endangered species the group alleges were tainted by political pressure from a former high-ranking Interior official.

Jumping Mouse Considered for Protection

The New Mexico meadow jumping mouse is among a handful of species from the Southwest that is being considered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as candidates for protection under the Endangered Species Act.

Reversal of Endangered Species Rulings

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday reversed seven rulings that denied endangered species increased protection, after an investigation found the actions were tainted by political pressure from a former senior Interior Department official.

Judge OKs Rule That May Endanger Species

A federal judge has upheld the government's practice of allowing development to proceed even if it is discovered after a project begins that the work could endanger protected species.

The Vine

African giraffes endangered

Source: Reuters

NAIROBI (Reuters) - At least six distinct species of giraffe, the world's tallest land animal, may be in existence and some of them are critically endangered, scientists in the United States and Kenya have found.

New Zealand Builds a Nest Big Enough to Save Kiwis

Source: The New York Times

In the thousand or so years since humans discovered the remote islands that make up New Zealand, three-quarters of the indigenous bird species have been driven to extinction, and until recently, it looked as if the kiwi could follow.

Orphaned tassie devils released into the wild

Source: abc.net.au

There is finally some hope in the battle to save the threatened tasmanian devil population.

Australian navy may track Japan's whaling fleet

Source: Reuters

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Australia's new government may send a navy ship to Antarctica to track Japan's whaling fleet and gather evidence to mount a legal challenge, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said on Thursday.

Mexico peyote site suffers onslaught of tourists, mining

Source: The San Diego Union-Tribune

Pity the peyote, the legendary cactus whose hallucinogenic powers inspired gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson and an entire generation of hippies.

The Other Climate Change Issues: Deforestation, Adaptation, and Endangered Species

Source: The Nature Conservancy

Read what experts have to say about the other climate change issues – deforestation, adaptation and protecting endangered species.

Knocking out top predator may not save prey: study

Source: Reuters

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Removing what appears to be a predator at the top of the food chain may not necessarily save an endangered prey, a study in New Zealand has shown.

Mysterious mammal caught on film

Source: BBC News

An "extraordinary" desert creature has been caught on camera for what scientists believe is the first time. The long-eared jerboa, a tiny nocturnal mammal that is dwarfed by its enormous ears, can be found in deserts in Mongolia and China.

Scientists hope superstition can help preserve coral

Source: The Taipei Times

For time beyond memory on this remote bay of neon fish and underwater gardens, people have avoided the masalai, taboo waters, where a monster octopus might lurk or spirits dwell in coral caves. Now it's science that wants no-go zones in Kimbe Bay, and it's because of a new fear.

Nature Conservancy to use $60.8M to protect Indiana lands

Source: The Indianapolis Star

Indiana's great outdoors is about to get greater because a local nature conservation group has raised $60.8 million to protect imperiled landscapes statewide. "We are just trying to protect the state for future generations," said Betsy Smith, director of philanthropy for The  …

B.C.'s directive to scientists under fire

Source: The Globe and Mail

Two environmental groups are calling for a federal investigation after obtaining documents that show the B.C.

Alaskan birds in jeopardy

Source: Alaska Report

The little-known Kittlitz's murrelet - a species so elusive that scientists didn't record its croaking call for the first time until a few years ago - has crashed by more than 80 percent since the 1970s throughout its icy range rimming the Gulf of Alaska.

Endangered species questions expand

Source: OregonLive.com

The Interior Department's inspector general will expand an investigation into the alleged political manipulation of decisions on 18 endangered species, including the northern spotted owl, marbled murrelet and bull trout. In a letter Friday to Sen.

A Rising Number of Birds Are Threatened

Source: The New York Times

Relentless sprawl, invasive species and global warming are threatening an increasing number of bird species in the United States, pushing a quarter of them — including dozens in New York and New Jersey — toward extinction, according to a new study by the National Audubon Soci …

Pair to pay for quokka abuse

Source: Australian News Network

THE chairman of the Rottnest Island Authority has applauded the punishment handed out to two Western Force rugby players, who face thousands of dollars in fines after they abused a number of the island's endangered quokka population. The players, including former Wallaby Scott F …

One last chance for the 'Boss'

Source: The Age

One of more than 500 endangered orangutans in a newly-discovered population in Indonesian Borneo, West Kalimantan, the boss is blissfully unaware of plans to clear this tropical peat forest for a palm oil plantation.

Canibalism within Polar Bears

Source: news.worldwild.org

Polar bears in the southern Beaufort Sea may be turning to cannibalism because longer seasons without ice keep them from getting to their natural food, a new study by American and Canadian scientists has found.

The bone eaters

Source: news.worldwild.org

The seemingly macabre diet of these animals and their imposing physical features (including a menacing-looking "eyebrow" of dark feathers above each eye) spawned European fables about the birds being vicious predators that killed domestic sheep, wild game-and even young child …

Red alert

Source: The Age

TO SOME it is liquid gold, to others, the harbinger of death - but to most Australians, palm oil is a complete mystery. Yet, production of this oil - an ingredient in many of the foods we eat and products we use each day - comes at a devastating environmental cost.

Innovative Hooks save Caught Turtles

Source: Reuters

Endangered sea turtles accidentally caught by fishermen off Latin American coasts usually die but innovative hooks that are too big to swallow are increasingly saving the reptiles' lives.

When Conservation Becomes Unrealistic

Source: News at Nature

Not all species can be saved from extinction. Emma Marris talks to conservation biologists about prioritization and triage...

Explosives Aid Wetland Restoration in Oregon

Oregon Boom View a video of the explosion! First come the blasts: The thunderous sounds of more than 100 tons of explosives ripping through tightly packed soil. Then, the water — more than 2,500 acres flooded.

California's Natural Born Killers: Earth, Wind and Fire

Source: BBC News

Earth, wind and fire formed a deadly trilogy in California this month to reduce an estimated 700 square miles to ash and charred remains in a matter of days.

< Previous(Showing: 1 – 25)Next >