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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • No Evidence for Increased Egg Predation in the Arctic

    Climate and ecosystems are changing, but predation on shorebird nests has changed little across the globe over the past 60 years, finds an international team of 60 researchers.

  • Sea Turtle Fingerprints Help Unlock Population Secrets

    Just like forensic scientists use DNA fingerprinting to solve a crime, scientists can study sea turtle DNA to unlock important clues about their biology.

  • Sediment From Fishing Choking Out Sea Sponges

    Sediment stirred up from fishing activity has a detrimental effect on reef-building sea sponges in northern British Columbia, according to a new study by University of Alberta biologists.

  • ‘Nature Needs Space’: New USask Report Makes Recommendations To Protect Saskatoon’s Swales

    A collaborative approach involving various levels of government and regional experts is needed to better understand, and protect, Saskatoon’s Swale ecosystems.

  • The Benefits of Being Different

    Six different colour morphs of the elusive Asiatic golden cat have been discovered in Northeast India – with the findings being hailed as "an evolutionary puzzle" – as the world’s greatest number of different coloured wild cat species in one area are reported.

  • Monkeys Face Climate Change Extinction Threat

    Monkeys living in South America are highly vulnerable to climate change and face an “elevated risk of extinction”, according to a new University of Stirling-led study.

  • To Feed, Or Not To Feed: Are We Making Birds Lazy?

    To feed, or not to feed: that is the question.

  • Climate Change May Be Putting Beluga Whales Out Of Their Depths

    An international team of researchers has found that the physical condition of beluga whales affects their capacity to store oxygen in their blood and muscle tissues, likely impacting their ability to dive.

  • Pilots Help Turtles Take Flight

    Each fall in the Northeast, sea turtle conservation gains a unique partner: the general aviation community.

  • Scientists Discover How Climate Modulates Fertilization of North Pacific Ocean with Asian Dust

    The vast subtropical “gyres” – large systems of rotating currents in the middle of the oceans – cover 40 percent of the Earth’s surface and have long been considered biological deserts with stratified waters that contain very little nutrients to sustain life.

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