Single heat wave wiped out millions of Alaska's dominant seabird The common murre, a large black-and-white seabird native to northern waters, has become far less common in Alaska over the past decade ...
The new study suggested that 4 million seabirds died following unusually warm conditions in the northeastern Pacific Ocean ...
Conservation and tribal advocates have lobbied for a crackdown for years on the unintentional harvests of salmon and other ...
Environmental groups are asking the U.S. government to do more to protect grizzly bears in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho.
Fish are transferred ... rates” is flat-out wrong. The Alaska pollock fishery, for example, is recognized by the National ...
Preston Cook’s love of the iconic raptor has led to a collection of 40,000 objects and, now, a quest to finally bring the ...
Murres, a common seabird, look a little like flying penguins. These stout, tuxedo-styled birds dive and swim in the ocean to ...
In Colorado and New Mexico, scientists put in long days scouring the high country for signs of how well White-tailed ...
Researchers found a loss of four million common murres in Alaska during a heatwave period between 2014 and 2016. “Recent ...
Researchers say the common murre die-off was “the largest documented wildlife mortality event in the modern era.” ...
That recovery makes seeing the bald eagles soaring and shrieking overhead near the Skagit even more special. Howard Miller ...
Marine heat waves have halved Alaska’s common murre population. A study links these declines to food shortages.