Sustainable yards begin with a water plan, not a nursery cart. EPA WaterSense reports that outdoor use is about 30% of household water nationally, and in dry regions it can run much higher, so early ...
Turkey brood surveys matter because they give managers a repeatable way to track reproduction across big landscapes. When agencies and observers report hens and poults through summer, biologists get ...
The discussion around animal minds improves when excitement and rigor move together. That balance protects both science and ...
Svalbard bears may look healthier for now, but scientists say shrinking sea ice still sets the limits, and the buffer will not last ...
Container vegetables consume nutrients quickly, and frequent watering accelerates nutrient loss. Waiting for visible yellowing means you are already behind. Fabric pots drain well, but that same ...
Then a sighting appears near a school trail, an alley, or a roadside pullout, and officials ask the same hard question: why ...
Current Kansas rules reflect restraint. For 2026 spring hunting, the summary states one bearded turkey and no additional game tags for a second bird for resident or nonresident hunters.
Field work in Southern California shows a consistent pattern: bobcats persist near development when connected habitat remains ...
Animal intelligence stories travel fast, and tidy myths travel fastest. An octopus unscrews a jar, a parrot says hello, a bee ...
Food alone does not hold birds if the setup feels risky. In late fall and winter, resident birds look for a stable circuit ...
Sightings of bears and mountain lions in unfamiliar neighborhoods can look sudden, but wildlife biologists describe a clear pattern underneath. These animals are not roaming at random; they track food ...
February is the quiet pivot between winter fatigue and spring momentum. Beds may still look sparse, but this month decides ...