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  • Urban Refuge: How Cities Can Help Rebuild Declining Bee Populations

    The billowing stainless steel forms of Frank Gehry’s Pritzker bandshell seem to float up from behind the 3.5-acre Lurie Garden in Millennium Park, backed by Chicago’s celebrated skyline. Another landmark in a city long a laboratory for innovation in architecture and landscaping, the garden has been called a “model of responsible horticulture.” Masses of flowering perennials and grasses are a striking counterpoint to the surrounding walls of concrete and glass. Perhaps most unexpected, at a place that sits atop a 4,000-vehicle underground parking garage and railroad depot in the inner city, are the bees that flit from flower to flower.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Dozens of New Wildlife Corridors Identified for African Mammals

    Researchers at the University of California, Davis, have identified 52 potential wildlife corridors linking protected areas across Tanzania. Using a cost-effective combination of interviews with local residents and a land conversion dataset for East Africa, they found an additional 23 corridors over those previously identified by Tanzanian government reports.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Use of Glow Sticks in Traps Greatly Increases Amphibian Captures in Study

    With amphibian populations declining around the world and funds to find the causes scarce, a team of Penn State researchers has shown that an unorthodox tactic will make it easier and therefore less expensive to capture adult salamanders and frogs.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Crime-Scene Technique Used to Track Turtles

    Scientists have used satellite tracking and a crime-scene technique to discover an important feeding ground for green turtles in the Mediterranean.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Protecting the Wild: Baylor Professor Helps to Minimize Recreation Disturbance to Wildlife

    Nature and outdoor enthusiasts seek to enjoy recreational activities such as hiking, mountain biking, horseback riding and camping. However, sometimes appreciating nature’s beauty comes at a cost to wildlife.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Spooky Conservation: Saving Endangered Species Over Our Dead Bodies

    The secret to the survival of critically endangered wildlife could lie beyond the grave, according to a University of Queensland researcher.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Every day is Halloween for these eerie insects

    With Halloween upon us, it’s worth remembering that living things take part in similar costume parties all year long, adopting weird and wonderful forms.

    Though rather than a haul of candy, organisms might earn the chance to live, prosper and mate. It’s all part of evolution, the principle where the fittest individuals pass their genes onto the next generation.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Cover Crops Provide Bed and Breakfast Layover for Migrating Birds

    After harvesting a corn or soybean crop, farmers may plant a cover crop for a variety of reasons—to reduce soil erosion and nutrient runoff, increase organic matter in the soil, and improve water quality. Now there’s another reason. University of Illinois research shows that migratory birds prefer to rest and refuel in fields with cover crops.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Research Shows How Environment Plays Key Role in Changing Movement Behaviour of Animals

    University of Leicester mathematicians develop theory which helps to unravel long-standing mysteries of animal movement.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Tropical Forest Reserves Slow Down Global Warming

    National parks and nature reserves in South America, Africa and Asia, created to protect wildlife, heritage sites and the territory of indigenous people, are reducing carbon emissions from tropical deforestation by a third, and so are slowing the rate of global warming, a new study shows.

    >> Read the Full Article

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