Rhino Horn and Tiger Wine: How the Illegal Wildlife Trade Is Growing Bolder
Wildlife author and journalist Rachel Nuwer discusses her new book Poached about one of the world’s fastest-growing contraband industries
Diving Deep to Reveal the Microbial Mysteries of Lost City
An expedition sets out this week to explore a field of hydrothermal vents in the deep Atlantic, one of the most extreme ecosystems on the planet
Drones Will Track One of the Largest Dam Removals on the East Coast
When a Maryland dam comes down this fall, a team of scientists will deploy drones to monitor the flow of more than two million cubic feet of sediment
New Software Can Predict Landslides Weeks Before They Happen
Australian researchers are using AI and mathematics to detect tiny changes that may precede the often-deadly events
When Rhinos Once Roamed in Washington State
Road-tripping through prehistoric times on the West Coast
What the Surging Glaciers of Svalbard Tell Us About the Future of Rising Seas
Scientists look to the Norwegian archipelago’s fast-moving glaciers to better understand how other accelerating glaciers will behave
Tracing Alfred Russel Wallace’s Footsteps Through the Jungles of Borneo
A biologist treks to the site where the little-known naturalist penned a paper on evolution that would spur on a rivalrous Charles Darwin
Prospects Are Looking Up for This Gulf Coast Tribe Relocating to Higher Ground
As Louisiana’s Isle de Jean Charles slips away, the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw tribe plans community renewal and a museum for their new home
Why the Ocean Needs Wilderness
A new study finds that only 13 percent of the ocean can be classified as “wilderness.” But what does this even mean?
Will China’s Growing Appetite for Meat Undermine Its Efforts to Fight Climate Change?
The country consumes 28 percent of the world’s meat—twice as much as the United States. And that figure is only set to increase.
A Photographer Documents the Effects of Climate Change on Maine’s Intertidal Zones
A marine biology student at Northeastern University captures the vulnerable organisms that have to survive high and low tide
This Simulation Maps the Rise and Fall of Species Over 800,000 Years
Biogeographers have built a virtual world to trace the emergence and extinction of species during the last eight glacial cycles
National Parks Can Be Just as Smoggy as Major Cities
And it’s scaring away visitors
50 Years Ago, the Whole Earth Catalog Launched and Reinvented the Environmental Movement
The publication gave rise to a new community of environmental thinkers, where hippies and technophiles found common ground
Is the Key to Saving Pollinators … Honey Bee Semen?
In the hopes of preserving their genetic diversity, entomologists are collecting and freezing this valuable fluid
Can We Create Sunscreen That Protects Both Humans and Coral Reefs?
Sunscreen is vital for skin protection. But researchers are finding that even ‘reef-friendly’ versions may pose serious environmental threats
How Data-Gathering Seals Help Scientists Measure the Melting Antarctic
Stumped on how to take the temperature of the ocean floor, oceanographers turned to the cutest, most competent divers they knew
A Never-Before-Seen Virus Has Been Detected in Myanmar’s Bats
The discovery of two new viruses related to those that cause SARS and MERS marks PREDICT’s first milestone in the region
The Botanical Artist Who Translates Plant Science Into Beautiful Art
The Smithsonian’s first and only botanical illustrator brings her subjects to life in all their scientific glory
How the Tiniest of Parasites is Taking Down the Mightiest of Monk Seals
Toxoplasmosis is now the number one disease threat to the recovery of this endangered marine mammal
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