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An initiative of the Center for Biological Diversity

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Search Results for: endangered species

Public Lands & Protected Spaces

There Is No Border Between Humans and Nature

What can Germany’s long-defunct Iron Curtain tell us about our place on Earth?
June 26, 2024
by
Kerstin Lange
What can Germany’s long-defunct Iron Curtain tell us about our place on Earth?
A woman lying on a beach with a book above her head
Reviews

Summer Reads: Lost Birds, Pummeled Pumas and Climate Anxiety

We have the word on several great new books, including a look at how to fight climate disinformation and a satire of the extinction crisis.
June 24, 2024
by
John R. Platt
We have the word on several great new books, including a look at how to fight climate disinformation and a satire of the extinction crisis.
A tiny brown and white, hairy butterfly sits in dry grass
Voices

Species Spotlight: The Laguna Mountains Skipper Butterfly — What’s in a Name, Anyway?

These butterflies are no longer present in their namesake range, but a collaboration aims to bring them back.
June 12, 2024
by
Ester Chang
These butterflies are no longer present in their namesake range, but a collaboration aims to bring them back.
A Uros woman in colorful skirt and jacket stands amidst drying reeds
Climate Change

Titicaca in Crisis: Climate Change Is Drying Up the Biggest Lake in the Andes

Persistent drought has caused havoc for the Indigenous peoples who live on floating islands and depend on rains that have stopped falling.
June 10, 2024
by
Tim Brinkhof
Persistent drought has caused havoc for the Indigenous peoples who live on floating islands and depend on rains that have stopped falling.
A green sea turtle underwater.
Extinction Countdown

Should Tourists Swim with Endangered Sea Turtles?

Researchers in Barbados found that ecotourism sea-turtle encounters created some very human problems for the animals.
June 6, 2024
by
John R. Platt
Researchers in Barbados found that ecotourism sea-turtle encounters created some very human problems for the animals.
A row of wind turbines rise out of the ocean
Wildlife

How to Account for Offshore Wind Impacts on Oceanic Wildlife? Make a Plan.

As wind energy develops in the Atlantic Ocean, experts unite to ensure it’s done in the most eco-friendly and environmentally responsible way.
June 3, 2024
by
Emma Denes
As wind energy develops in the Atlantic Ocean, experts unite to ensure it’s done in the most eco-friendly and environmentally responsible way.
Extinction Countdown

Goldenrod Isn’t Causing Your Spring Allergies — But It Is Killing Europe’s Ants and Butterflies

The North American plants look pretty, but they also causes havoc in places where humans have allowed them to spread.
May 31, 2024
by
John R. Platt
The North American plants look pretty, but they also causes havoc in places where humans have allowed them to spread.
Hundreds if not thousands of birds sit in or near the water in a wetlands while a mountain looms behind them
Public Lands & Protected Spaces

Water and Cooperation Breathe New Life Into Klamath Basin Wildlife Refuges

Agriculture drained this ecosystem. Now, under the specter of future drought, the same systems have started to bring back both water and wildlife.
May 29, 2024
by
Juliet Grable
Agriculture drained this ecosystem. Now, under the specter of future drought, the same systems have started to bring back both water and wildlife.
A sheet of stamps depicting endangered species
Extinction Countdown

Can Collecting Stamps Help Rare and Endangered Species?

One scientist’s passion for owl stamps shows: It’s not just about the collection. It’s about what you do with it.
May 24, 2024
by
John R. Platt
One scientist’s passion for owl stamps shows: It’s not just about the collection. It’s about what you do with it.
A collage of photos: Brazil flooding, guinea pig, red and black frog, legless lizard
Op-Eds

Could Brazil’s Catastrophic Flooding Cause Extinctions?

Rising sea levels may cause the local extinction of three small, threatened vertebrates in southern Brazil.
May 22, 2024
by
Fernando Marques Quintela
Rising sea levels may cause the local extinction of three small, threatened vertebrates in southern Brazil.

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