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This year in conservation science: Whales, birds, and killer roads
We asked conservation researchers around the world to send us their favorite papers of 2025. They address the planet’s most ...
Conservation philanthropy often favors urgency: campaigns, deadlines, the language of crisis. A smaller group of donors has ...
A study published in the journal Ornithological Applications shows how conservation organizations are using data from ...
A new study co-authored by BirdLife International scientists and published in the journal Science definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss.
When traditional conservation fails, science is using “assisted evolution” to give vulnerable wildlife a chance. Credit...Photo illustration by Lauren Peters-Collaer Supported by By Emily Anthes ...
The Adirondack Center for Loon Conservation announced Monday the appointment of Lizz Schuyler as senior director of science ...
The National Park System’s breathtaking landscapes and cultural and historic sites serve as living laboratories for science and discovery that help safeguard our nation’s legacy. Yet today, ...
Behind multiple success stories in conservation, there are leading women—empowered, courageous, resilient, and determined—with a fervent heart full of endless dreams who, day by day, build a better ...
A kaleidoscopic diversity of Earth’s plants and animals underpins human existence but is under major threat from the environmental degradation wrought by human activities from mining to agriculture. A ...
Jon Hoekstra is chief scientist for the World Wildlife Fund (WWF). This article first appearedon Hoekstra's WWF blog, Science Driven. He contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed ...
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