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Non-Native Plants Are Expanding Their Range To Higher Latitudes Due to Climate Change
As climate change progresses, the chance of southern plant species spreading to northern regions increases. In Europe and America, many of the alien plant species come from their own continent. They usually originate in warmer regions closer to the equator—a phenomenon that could be exacerbated by climate change.
Latest Research Articles
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Bewick’s Swans Are Sensitive to Temperature and Food Conditions When Migrating To Wintering Areas
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Feather-Tailed Possums Migrated From New Guinea to Australia Millions of Years Ago
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Salmon Find New Spawning Grounds in Arctic Rivers as the Climate Warms Up, a Study Finds
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Unseasonably Record-High Temperatures to Unload in Western US This Weekend
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Typhoon Koinu: 1 Dead, Over 300 Injured As Koinu Pounds Taiwan With Heavy Rains
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Tropical Storm Philippe Updates: East Maine, Brunswick, Northern New England, US To Receive Heavy Rain this Weekend
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US Weather Forecast: Freezing Temperatures To Hit Colorado, Wyoming, Northern Plains This Late Week
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Pet 'Boa' TIE Fighter Makes Its Way to Neighbor's Basement, Drives Homeowner Away
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Alarming Florida Keys Coral Bleaching: Warm Waters, Rise of Temperatures Impact Corals
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3,000 Australian Crocodiles Went Into 'Sex Frenzy' Following Military Helicopter Sounds
Cannibalism 15,000 Years Ago Was Common Ritual at Funerals to Dispose of Deceased
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Bennu Asteroid: There is 1 in 2,700 Chance Space Rock Could Hit Earth by the Year 2182






