A Charles Darwin University (CDU) study shows for the first time how animal biodiversity can be measured for assessing how well an ecosystem has been restored. According to CDU Research Institute for ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scientists probing the bottom of the Pacific Ocean made a surprising discovery: animals living underneath the seafloor in an area ...
According to a new study, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch has supplied the durable surfaces needed for an accidental ...
Scientists are reintroducing large animals to Siberia's Pleistocene Park. This project aims to restore ancient grassland ...
eDNA is genetic material naturally shed by animals in the environment. Many scientists and conservationists collect eDNA to better understand different ecosystems. eDNA can help scientists identify ...
KS3/GCSE Geography. Join Ferne Corrigan as she investigates the Alpine Mountains of Italy. Suitable for teaching Geography at ...
When we encounter a raccoon, deer, bat, fox, or some other wild animal in our neighborhood, we’re often pleasantly surprised—but not as amazed, perhaps, as our recent urban forebears might have been.
Climate change is melting away glaciers around the world, but in the Andes Mountains, a wild relative of the llama is helping local ecosystems adapt to these changes by dropping big piles of dung.
How does an ecosystem distribute its energy across body sizes? A new study suggests the answer depends on where you are—and how much humans have altered the landscape. Analyzing communities of birds ...
Scientists probing the bottom of the Pacific Ocean made a surprising discovery: animals living underneath the seafloor in an area with volcanic activity. Giant tubeworms, which are known as the ...