News

Breakfast porridge, our daily bread and rice sustaining more than half of the world’s population are all bred from natural ...
Sea of Grass,” written by Dave Hage and former Star Tribune environmental reporter Josephine Marcotty, is due in bookstores ...
Fertilizer might be stronger than we thought. A new international study found that fertilizer can help plants survive short-term periods of extreme drought, findings which could have implications for ...
Fertilizer might be stronger than we thought. A new international study featuring faculty members at Binghamton University, ...
Researchers say bird populations are declining across every habitat, but the worst declines are in grassland birds and ...
Bird-friendly agriculture can assist in helping waterbirds with rest stops along their seasonal migration routes.
Grasslands and cows’ diets are shifting as the climate warms, but an agricultural experiment in France reveals the importance ...
Visitors to the northeast Calgary park will soon find the iconic Centre Street Bridge lion sculpture surrounded by everything from prairie smoke flowers and wolf willow shrubs to grasses like blue ...
The Center for Biological Diversity has called on U.S. Fish and Wildlife to protect the Bendire's thrasher amid report on ...
A new fossil and DNA analysis traces how dozens of sloth species responded to climate shifts and humans. Just two small tree-dwelling sloths remain today.
Scientists say drought and climate change are driving the severe dust storms pummeling the border region of Chihuahua, New ...
Fertilizer might be stronger than we thought. A new international study featuring faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York found ...