A new global study reveals when wildlife fears us, when it relaxes, and why our everyday choices still shape animal survival.
For the second time in less than a year, Ecuador has recognized a wildlife connectivity corridor in the country. On March 4, ...
Purdue researchers created a contraceptive vaccine that sharply cuts fertility to help manage wildlife overpopulation ...
If I were to keep a rare pet, it’d definitely be a fox, particularly for their bushy tails and mesmerizing eyes. Some people ...
Wild animals do not read your intentions. They do not care that you were “only trying to help,” “only... The post The wild animals that turn deadly when you try to feed them appeared first on The Avid ...
A thin mist was hanging amongst trees as the sun slowly parted the sky over the expanse of the plantation forest in Riau. The morning air carried the ...
Swedish photographer Johan Siggesson captures animals in a way that feels both intimate and timeless, using striking ...
Biologists Leslie Leinwand of the University of Colorado Boulder and Jonathon Long of Stanford University have discovered a ...
Where Washington, Idaho and Oregon meet, elk are straying from public to private lands, causing conflict and concern. If the ...
Wildlife researchers have recorded hundreds of venomous species across oceans, forests, and rivers, yet many of the most ...
The owner's other cat knew exactly where to watch the bird through the window, clearly using more brain cells.
Each winter, a targeted initiative to reduce the number of feral swine unfolds in the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area (LBL) in Tennessee. It’s a collaborative effort that includes ...