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Forests

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putting up a tent

Deep in the Ndoki Jungle, A Few Sheets of Nylon Can Feel a Lot Like Home

The founding editor of Outside magazine explains why a tent is sometimes the difference between life and death
June 2012 | By Tim Cahill

Leaping Frogs on Leap Day

In honor of Leap Day 2012, learn a bit about how frogs leap
February 29, 2012 | By Joseph Stromberg

How Much the Hope Diamond is Worth and Other Questions From Our Readers

From American art, history and culture, air and space technology, contemporary art, Asian art and any of the sciences from astronomy to zoology, we'll find an answer
February 07, 2012 | By Aviva Shen

water cannons

The Devastating Costs of the Amazon Gold Rush

Spurred by rising global demand for the metal, miners are destroying invaluable rainforest in Peru's Amazon basin
February 2012 | By Donovan Webster

Ancient Popcorn Unearthed in Peru

New discoveries indicate people were eating our favorite movie snack far longer ago than we thought
January 27, 2012 | By Joseph Stromberg

Corals Crawling With Crustaceans

Smithsonian scientist Laetitia Plaisance talks about her recent study and its finding that coral reefs support even more biodiversity that we thought
November 10, 2011 | By Megan Gambino

Six-Million-Year-Old Whale Fossil Discovered by NMNH Researchers in Panama

This story has been temporarily removed as it is undergoing further review. Please explore other ocean-related content here.
July 12, 2011 | By Smithsonian Staff

Inambari and Araza rivers

A Mega-Dam Dilemma in the Amazon

A huge dam on Peru's Inambari River will bring much-needed development to the region. But at what cost?
March 2011 | By Clay Risen

STRI Tracks Mountain on the Move in Colombia

The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, a UNESCO world heritage site just 26 miles off the Caribbean coast of Colombia, is the tallest coastal mountain in the world. It's peak towers at 18,942 feet, and it hosts 36 different streams and rivers.No human force—be it faith or muscle—could move such a mounta...
September 28, 2010 | By Jess Righthand

Three New Frog Species Face an Uncertain Future

According to Andrew Crawford, a former postdoctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) and a current researcher at the Universidad de los Andes, the amphibian skin disease chytridiomycosis (known as chytrid) has already eliminated nearly 100 different frog species in Panam...
August 23, 2010 | By Jess Righthand

Brain Food for Busy Bees

In Panama, at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute's new neurobiology laboratory, researchers are studying how the brain of the tropical sweat bee Megalopta genalis relates to the behavior of the species' social queens and solitary queens. The study is helping scientists make large strides i...
April 01, 2010 | By Erica R. Hendry

Three toed sloth in Panama

How Sleepy Are Sloths and Other Lessons Learned

Smithsonian scientists use radio technology to track animals in an island jungle in the middle of the Panama Canal
February 03, 2010 | By Megan Gambino

Ecuador wilderness animal trade

Wildlife Trafficking

A reporter follows the lucrative, illicit and heartrending trade in stolen wild animals deep into Ecuador's rain forest
December 2009 | By Charles Bergman

Researchers in Worcester

Invasion of the Longhorn Beetles

In Worcester, Massachusetts, authorities are battling an invasive insect that is poised to devastate the forests of New England
November 2009 | By Peter Alsop

Dispatch from Panama: Getting In the Mood

ATM blogger Megan Gambino spent a week in Panama reporting on research taking place at two locations—Barro Colorado Island and Bocas del Toro—of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI). Read on in this final dispatch to follow her day-to-day adventures.Day 5 and Day 6: Coral Spawning!B...
September 16, 2009 | By Megan Gambino

Dispatch from Panama: Bocas del Toro

ATM blogger Megan Gambino spent a week in Panama reporting on research taking place at two locations—Barro Colorado Island and Bocas del Toro—of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI). Read on to follow her day-to-day adventures.Day 3: Arriving at BocasToday I left Panama City for ...
September 15, 2009 | By Megan Gambino

Dispatch from Panama: Hanging Out with the Bat Lady

ATM blogger Megan Gambino is spending this week in Panama reporting on research taking place at two locations—Barro Colorado Island and Bocas del Toro—of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI). Read on in this dispatch and in future installments to follow her day-to-day adventures.Day 1...
September 11, 2009 | By Megan Gambino

Dispatch from Panama: Arriving at STRI

ATM blogger Megan Gambino is spending this week in Panama reporting on research taking place at two locations—Barro Colorado Island and Bocas del Toro—of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI). Read on in this dispatch and in future installments to follow her day-to-day adventures.Day 1...
September 09, 2009 | By Megan Gambino

Scientists Race to Salvage Fossils Before Panama Canal Expansion

There was a time when North and South America did not share a land border. Instead, a large river separated the two land masses. The animals and plants on the continents kept to themselves mostly, with the exception of the birds that refused to call any one place home.Then, 15 million years ago, th...
June 24, 2009 | By Joseph Caputo

Smile! Elusive Jaguar Caught on Camera in Panama

Dry season on Barro Colorodo Island brings sun and low humidity to the plants, animals and researchers that dwell on this scientific nature reserve in the middle of the Panama Canal.Just the right conditions for scientists Jackie and Greg Willis to take their their annual 62-mile walk to count the ...
April 30, 2009 | By Joseph Caputo


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