Newsletter Restoring Biodiversity - 7/29/2025 How to rebuild a burned forest. A hugely significant discovery which offers a new perspective on the earliest human occupation. And more...
Resources Onlookers Watch as Large Bison Dies in Scalding Yellowstone Hot Spring Onlookers at one of Yellowstone National Park's most popular sites watched a large bison take its final steps into a scalding hot spring and die in a horrifying reminder of what can happen away from the safety of marked paths.
Resources Archaeologists Found 11,500-Year-Old Tools That Reveal an Incredible Human Adventure They took a one-way ticket through Doggerland
Wild Horse Fire Brigade Rewilding Versus Fertility Control: A Clash of Visions For Wild Horse Management Mounting evidence suggests fertility control’s genetic and ecological flaws make it an unsustainable solution.
Resources Hiker Survives Mountain Lion Encounter A hiker is taking a sigh of relief after coming face to face with a mountain lion. CBS News Los Angeles' Gio Insignares reports.
Resources A Sweeping New Report Shows U.S. Birds Declining Sharply Across a Range of Habitats Scientists checked in on species all over the country for the latest State of the Birds report. Nearly everywhere they looked, birds were struggling—including some that have been resilient in the past.
Resources Restoring Biodiversity - 7/15/2025 The U.S. has again halted livestock imports from Mexico. Meet tawny crazy ants. Wolves wreak havoc on cattle herds in California. And more...
New World screwworm U.S. Halts Livestock Imports From Mexico Again. Here Is The Reason Why The U.S. has again halted livestock imports from Mexico after the parasitic New World screwworm fly closer to the border.
Resources The Miracle Dogs of Chernobyl Have Evolved Into Something New, Studies Show Despite dealing with extremely cold temperatures, food scarcity, and long-term radiation exposure, the Chernobyl dogs aren’t just surviving—they’re thriving.
Tawny Crazy Ant These 'Crazy' Invasive Florida Pests Attack Mammals, Birds and Create Giant Supercolonies According to Texas A&M University's Urban and Structural Entomology Program, after experiencing the tawny crazy ant, most residents prefer the fire ant.
Newsletter Restoring Biodiversity - 7/8/2025 Scientists Put Motion Cameras Along the US-Mexico Border To Spy on Wildlife. The screwworm could be back as soon as this summer. A wonderful video from the Mule Deer Foundation. And more….
Resources Scientists Put Motion Cameras Along the US-Mexico Border To Spy on Wildlife. The Footage is Spectacular — And Telling. Videos reveal the hidden lives of animals in the borderlands and how the wall affects them.
Resources This National Park Is One of the Least Visited in the U.S.—but It's Home to the Tallest Mountain in Texas Guadalupe Mountains National Parks may be one of the most remote in the U.S., but it's also one of the most unique.
Resources The Little Brown Bird Once down to only 80 in the wild, the Florida Grasshopper Sparrow is at risk of extinction.
Resources Screwworm Eradication Program and History Bottom line, the screwworm eradication program has been nothing short of a huge success story which for all practical purposes enabled the ranching community to eventually push the screwworm from their mind.
Resources Mandatory Screwworm Reporting Now that the screwworm is real threat again, Texas A&M is working with other state partners to launch some trainings around the state.
Resources Wyoming Rancher Hopes Fence Will Prevent Another ‘Absolute Carnage’ Of Antelope It's hoped that upgraded fencing on a family ranch in Sweetwater County will save countless antelope, deer and elk. Old woven-wire fence was choking off wildlife migration routes, which contributed to “absolute carnage” during winter 2022-23.
Resources RFK Jr.'s Next Target Herbicide glyphosate is expected to feature prominently in a report due out this week from President Trump's Make America Healthy Again Commission,
News '1 out of every 100,000:' See The Rare Female Elk Recently Spotted in Colorado A female elk with a unique genetic trait is turning heads in Colorado and beyond
News These Stunning Photos Show How Nature Came Back After the World’s Largest Dam Removal Four dams and three large reservoirs were removed from the Klamath River in a project that finished last year—and acres of native wildflowers are now in bloom along the river’s edge.
Buffalo The Return of the Buffalo: Restoring the Great American Prairie Project “Buffalo Commons” is a venture unlike any other.
Newsletter Restoring Biodiversity - 5/6/2025 The many challenges migrating big game animals encounter. The internet votes on their favorite fat bear from Katmai National Park. And more...
Newsletter Restoring Biodiversity - 4/29/2025 A miracle that proves we must take care of our amazing planet. Texas’ first wildlife movie. Deciphering whale communication. And more...
Resources Fake Meat in Decline Beyond Meat was off to a sizzling start when it went public in 2019. Yet, something has changed over the last few years.