Nile monitors are semi-aquatic, so Florida’s waterways suit them. They travel along water edges, slip into culverts, and use banks and rock piles for cover. In a place stitched together by canals, ...
California’s trailhead overlap is intense because suburb-to-canyon access is part of daily life. State wildlife officials say ...
Zinnias are famous for heat-loving blooms, but they fail quickly when light is short and air stays still. In partial shade, ...
Winter does not end with a single warm afternoon. It loosens in small, steady ways: the first returning calls, the first ...
Herbs started in February tend to settle in faster once spring finally softens. Dill, chives, cilantro, rosemary, sage, parsley, oregano, and thyme all benefit from extra indoor time to build roots, ...
Here’s the thing: science is supposed to feel like this occasionally. A good model explains most observations and makes ...
The first clue came from NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, TESS, launched in 2018 to watch large areas of sky for tiny, repeating dips in starlight. Each dip marks a transit and reveals an ...
Habitat loss rarely arrives with drama. As places shrink and split, the colors remain, but the safety net does not. That is the hard truth: beauty does not protect a bird from a bulldozer, smoke, or a ...
A car sized asteroid can sound like a cliffhanger, yet the real tension lives in the math. NASA’s trackers list 2026 CR2 for a close pass on Feb. 17, 2026, moving about 12,616 miles per hour, with an ...
State management material flags a familiar trend: as roads, homes, and recreation expand into habitat, opportunities for lion-human conflict rise. In Wyoming, risk growth is less about lion behavior ...
That is why a good poult year may still underdeliver in 2026 if brood cover, nesting security, and food structure are patchy. Where habitat work stays fragmented, recruitment gains can flatten before ...
Species once limited by hard freezes, short growing windows, or isolated transport routes are now finding longer seasons and easier pathways. Field crews still remove vines, trap fish, and map ...