Whether a species has just freshly emerged, or it has been around for millions of years does not dictate its vulnerability.
More than 47,000 species face extinction today, a figure that grows daily as habitats shrink and human pressures intensify.
With the major die-off in the Florida Keys in 2024 and 2025 resulting in the mortalities of at least 65 large sawfish (and ...
Hidden in Bolivia’s seasonal wetlands, a small fish that scientists had written off as extinct for more than two decades has ...
The Amazon rainforest has yielded yet another new species, according to a recent study published in Zootaxa. Discovered in ...
American bald eagles need towering trees to raise young. Blanding’s turtles thrive in undisturbed freshwater habitats. Presidio manzanita, an evergreen shrub, requires unusual serpentine soils to grow ...
On a lawn inside the Bronx Zoo, rows of headstones display multiple animal species, making for an eerie display during the ...
Having been nearly wiped out altogether, UK otters are making a come back and some are even now seen in cities.
Over a million species of animals and plants are now hanging by a thread, more than ever before in human history, says the International Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering rule changes to the law, which could have impacts on the Sooner State’s flora and fauna.
The Navy must provide more evidence to plaintiffs alleging the military and federal government failed to protect endangered ...
Among sharks and rays, species within the first four million years of existence are significantly more likely to go extinct than older species, according to a study led by researchers from the ...