Black Oystercatcher / Photo by David Ledig, BLM |
- This was a good year for Piping Plovers and American Oystercatchers nesting at Holgate.
- A study of three national forests in Wisconsin and Minnesota found that breeding bird populations were holding steady.
- As embarrassing as birding might be for white birders, it can be even more uncomfortable or dangerous for black birders.
- Cuba's Blue-headed Quail-Dove is even more unlike other doves than its appearance suggests.
- It is possible to find birds by knowing which trees to look in.
- Video monitoring might help scientists figure out why birds and other animals are dying around Ivanpah's towers and ultimately lead to a solution.
- New research using geolocators and isotopic analysis is complicating the concept of migratory flyways.
- The elegant Snowy Egret was an early conservation success.
- Gulls are more likely to raid other gulls' nests when sea temperatures are high near a nesting colony.
- Contaminants that have accumulated in the bodies of marine mammals can harm condors' ability to reproduce if they eat marine mammal carcasses.
- An analysis of the evolution of birds' nests suggests that changing nesting habits may have contributed to their survival past the end of the Cretaceous.
- A man in South Carolina was caught killing hawks because they sometimes preyed on his quail.
- Extinction Countdown: Snails Are Going Extinct: Here's Why That Matters
- Bird Ecology Study Group: Life cycle of the Common Redeye butterfly
- The Meadowlands Nature Blog: Shorebirds of the Kearny Marsh
- The Rattling Crow: The beachcombing crows
- View from the Cape: Identifying shorebirds in flight - Stilt Sandpiper
- 10,000 Birds: North American Gnatcatchers
- According to a new report, over-hunting, over-fishing, and habitat destruction (primarily for agriculture) are still the primary drivers of biodiversity loss while climate change remains a lesser threat (for now at least).
- Aggressive hunting may have wiped out the East Fork wolf pack near Denali, which is one of the longest-studied groups of wolves.
- Climate.gov released its State of the Climate report for 2015, which looks at the effects on marine life.
- Changes in land management practices have made the western juniper into an invader of the sagebrush steppe, which threatens to eliminate habitat for wildlife and livestock.
- The poor reputation of coyotes is undeserved and leads to senseless killing.
- The Greenland shark may be the longest-lived vertebrate, with its average lifespan estimated at 400 years old.
- Burying beetles help to clean up refuse, in this case by burying carcasses for their larvae to eat.
- Wild blue mussels are disappearing along the coast of the Gulf of Maine.
- The public has had to fund a substantial portion of the Mount Polley mine cleanup, even though the offending company is still profitable.
- New Jersey is releasing a weevil to combat invasive mile-a-mile weed.