extinction
-
Freshwater in Danger: Marine Giants Face Extinction Risks
In many freshwater biomes around the world, mammals, reptiles, and fish species are in danger of becoming endangered. The global populations of these freshwater animals have decreased by almost 90 percent over four decades since 1970, twice as much as the decline of vertebrate populations on land or in the oceans.
Latest Research Articles
-
Blue Whales of Antarctica Seen Again in South Georgia After Near Extinction
-
Carnian Pluvial Episode: The Mass Extinction That Brought Dinosaurs to Power
-
Nearly 50 Species of Birds and Mammals Are No Longer on the Brink of Extinction
-
Ocean Warming, Currents, Wind Patterns Threaten Survival of Shellfish and Other Invertebrates
-
Extinction Rates Seem to Be Faster Than Expected, Should We Ban Wildlife Trade?
-
Marine Megafauna Extinction: Huge Loss in Functional Diversity
-
Saving the Eastern Pacific Leatherback Turtles in 10 Years
-
Pierre the Platypus is in a Brink of Extinction
-
Bushfires Previously Drove Mass Extinctions on Earth. They Could Do It Again.
-
DO YOU KNOW: The last mammoths lived in a remote island in Arctic?
-
Fossilized Skeleton of Phoebodus Found in Morroco
-
Time is Running Out for the Beloved Emperor Penguin