The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is removing the wood stork from the federal list of endangered and threatened wildlife.
A recent trip to the remote refuge shows that environmental restoration is possible with commitment from policymakers and the public.
The red-crowned Amazon is a beautiful parrot, but despite populations in the U.S., it may be going extinct in its ancestral ...
The fishers slipped into the Cabinet Mountains on New Year's Day 1989. Moving quietly and stealthily, their elongated bodies ...
Along California’s far northern coastline, the Pacific doesn’t just meet the land - it crashes, carves, and shapes it into ...
Two members of the Fish and Wildlife Commission are pushing back on newly surfaced allegations that they shunned government transparency laws and appeared to have colluded with the leader ...
The federal government is removing wood storks from the endangered species list. The marsh-dwelling bird can be found in South Carolina and across the southeast.
After 11 years of surveying eagle nests from a helicopter, Georgia DNR's Bob Sargent issues a warning about development and ...
The feds and environmental groups reignite a decades-long fight over how much development a conservation area — and the desert tortoise it was created to protect — can withstand as southwest Utah ...
Santa Cruz is a haven for newborn sea otters and their (protective) mamas, and a local expert shares the best places around ...
Columbia River salmon recovery programs fared better in the 2026 federal budget than tribes, advocates, bureaucrats and ...
Seabird populations across vast stretches of the Pacific and even into Antarctic waters are collapsing under a combination of ocean warming and infectious disease that scientists had not previously ...