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A newly published study by a multinational group of wildlife scientists took advantage of the unique opportunity offered by the 2020 COVID-19 shutdowns to better understand why such glimpses can be so ...
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The Cool Down on MSNResearchers find unexpected creatures making themselves at home in major city: 'They're not just passing through'
They've been known to get trapped in yards, knocking down fences and walls. Researchers find unexpected creatures making ...
T he Darwin Tree of Life (DToL) project aims to sequence the genomes of all animals, fungi and plants found in Great Britain ...
Anchorage is home to about 290,000 people, or about 40% of the state’s population, and all kinds of wildlife, including an ...
For the ninth year, community scientists helped identify moose populations in the mountains outside of Laramie for Summer ...
Of the 26 scat samples that yielded DNA, the method was able to correctly identify individual foxes with an accuracy of 94.5–99.5% when comparing multiple samples from the same animal. The technique ...
The presence of humans and human infrastructure in U.S. national parks has lasting effects on the behaviors of the large ...
The persistent presence of humans and their infrastructure in U.S. national parks has yielded dramatic changes in the behaviors of large animals who live there, a new study has found. Even during ...
Moose were first collared in 2017 for NPS research to track movement, health, population, and use of the habitat in RMNP.
Winter ticks are threatening Maine's moose population. Warmer winters brought on by climate change are increasing the threat ...
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