Live Science spoke with Rob Dunn, an applied ecologist and author of the book "The Call of the Honeyguide," about "mutualism" — how different species team up for their mutual benefit — and how humans ...
It’s a pleasant spring morning, you’re lazing in bed, and then—clackety thunk-thunk clack! A bird is thrashing away at your window and raising quite a racket. It’s annoying and it’s interrupting your ...
Tired of a bare, messy patch beneath your bird feeder? Learn how tough, wildlife‑friendly yarrow can turn it into a bright, low‑care habitat.
As Congress advances the Farm Bill, strengthening voluntary conservation programs on farms, ranches, and forests is essential ...
Breeding pair numbers of Roseate, Common and Sandwich terns increased on Coquet Island in 2025, though Arctic tern numbers ...
Robins and sparrows are both garden favourites, but they won't return to your garden unless you leave out four key foods on ...
Red kites, great spotted woodpeckers and pink-footed geese — these are only a few of the success stories, writes Mark Cocker.
Christopher Terrell Nield, a chemist at Nottingham Trent University, has warned that gardens could soon be overrun with slugs ...
Tiny birds, but with a powerful voice, wrens are Britain’s commonest and most widespread breeding bird, they are often heard but only seen as a tiny brown blur skipping through the shrubbery.
A seabird wreck is a recognised natural phenomenon where large numbers of seabirds wash up dead or dying on beaches. Typically, this occurs after severe winter storms exhaust and starve birds that ...
Coquet Island is one of Europe’s most important seabird sites, protected by intensive wardening throughout the breeding season. Sarah leads a small island team of one warden, Rebekah Goodwill and two ...
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