Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
In the early 1900s, a young ecologist shot a wolf and watched the life leave its eyes. That changed his position on conservation
One day in the early 20th century, in eastern Arizona, a forester—“full of trigger itch,” as he later wrote—leaned over a ...
International conflicts may last decades, but collateral damage across the animal kingdom far outlasts the final shot.
Golden jackals are spreading across Europe by using humans as a shield against wolves, a scientific study reveals.
Environmentalists and farmers have forged an unlikely alliance urging state leaders to increase funding for wildlife ...
Ancient humans and canines formed deep bonds long before the invention of farms or modern pet toys. Evidence from DNA and ...
The Road Safety Authority has noted that the number of deer related collisions in Ireland has risen in recent years.
Roads, cities and farms have reshaped much of the natural world. For decades, scientists believed those physical changes ...
For wolves in Yellowstone, it’s all about survival. Pack members sometimes put the smackdown on each other, just to maintain ...
Traditional security tools and services cannot match the scale, speed and complexity of current threats, Arctic Wolf advises.
In India, elephants, leopards, tigers and other large mammals are increasingly moving into agricultural and mixed landscapes.
These artworks were created for a lost exhibition. Fifty-one years on, they’re finally going on show
In the 1970s Arthur Boyd, the renowned Australian painter, commissioned a series of 20 tapestries that upon completion were ...
Many scientists point to cultural evolution, the process by which knowledge, customs and technology spread over time. But ...
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