AZ Animals US on MSN
Animals That Unintentionally Engineer Entire Landscapes
Beavers, earthworms, prairie dogs, elephants, and more don't just live in ecosystems, they reshape them to the benefit of ...
Abandoned spaces can quickly revert to habitats for a wide variety of species, showing how resilient nature is in recovering ...
It is a wonder-filled, sometimes puzzling, and even shocking world out there in the animal kingdom. One of those kickoff ...
For a small number of animals, reproduction marks a biological endpoint rather than a stage in an ongoing life cycle. Death ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Honey-making stingless bees in the Peruvian Amazon become the first insects to gain legal rights
Wild, stingless bees have been granted legal rights in some parts of Peru, the latest effort in the growing global movement to protect animals by giving them similar status as people and companies.
Pesticide safety is extremely important. If the directions on the label are followed, both the applicator and the environment ...
ZME Science on MSN
Peru grants legal rights to stingless bees for the first time in history
In the Peruvian Amazon, a tiny pollinator gains legal standing—and reshapes conservation.
Producers spot healthy soil through diverse ground cover, beneficial insects, earthworms and lab tests measuring microbial ...
Travis Audubon shares Central Texas’ January bird forecast highlighting one of our most vocal year-round birds, the Carolina ...
When the ground is too frozen for birds to find food and winter seedheads are in short supply, we can help them survive. The ...
The Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) says animal-based food products remain safe for consumption, despite surveillance ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results