Introduced predators such as rats and stoats kill more than 25 million native birds and wildlife every year in New Zealand.
DNA analysis reveals the big, flightless moa birds ate — and pooped out — 13 kinds of fungi, including ones crucial for New Zealand’s forest ecosystem.
Study Reveals Ancient Flightless Birds Helped Spreading Colorful Native Fungi, Highlights Ecological Balance It is a finding ...
A small population of California quail that's been successfully living in the Bitterroot Valley should be listed as a game ...
As World Wetlands Day is being celebrated today, Fish & Game Chief Executive Corina Jordan is thanking all the catchment ...
Indigenous peoples have been largely excluded from the federal government’s planning for the arrival of H5N1. When will this ...
Farmers are teaming up the National Trust to create hundreds of acres of woodland to boost native songbirds, wildlife and ...
Along the long road from American icon to endangered species and back again, the bald eagle — the national bird of the United ...
Some penguins at the Birch Aquarium at University of San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography made their bets on which ...
A remarkable conservation milestone has been reached in Rodney, Auckland, where a male kiwi has successfully traversed 14 ...