News

Sitting in an old-growth spruce fir forest, Doug Smith says he can see first-hand the impact of reintroducing wolves on the larger ecosystem of Yellowstone National Park. Long before Yellowstone ...
Just when you thought you understood nature, this cat completely rewrites the rulebook! Instead of pouncing on the rat like a ...
As backyard chicken farming has increased in popularity across the Bay State, conflict with wildlife has also greatly ...
A 13-day survey conducted in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) found a large variety of marine life living in the region, ...
A groundbreaking study of 7,000-year-old exposed coral reef fossils reveals how human fishing has transformed Caribbean reef ...
Teeth can tell a life’s story, even when they’re 150 million years old. One of the new frontiers in paleontological research ...
The candid video starts with a tourist walking the calm tiger on a leash. A few seconds in, the trainer pokes the cat with a ...
This long-term focus on specific prey can have powerful ecological consequences. At Cape Shirreff, Antarctica, in the ...
In the wild, predators are at the top of the food chain, but not everything they attempt to eat is digestible or safe. In today's video, we explore the fascinating cases where predators learned the ...
The title, “Killer of Killers,” refers to the status the predators seek. They wish to become the tippy top of the food chain, the absolute apex.
A remarkable fossil discovery in northeastern China has revealed a twisted prehistoric food chain – a dinosaur species that devoured a mammal, which itself may have preyed on dinosaurs. The ...
A new study shows how the disappearance of an apex predator, the great white shark, from South Africa’s False Bay triggered changes throughout the food chain. With the loss of the top predator ...