Marine Technology reported
CITES Cop20 Has Agreed New International Trade Protections For Sharks And Rays.Proposals Up For Consideration For Parties At Cop20…
Read on www.marinetechnologynews.com/news/sweeping-trade-protections-adopted-656089
Marine Technology reported
CITES Cop20 Has Agreed New International Trade Protections For Sharks And Rays.Proposals Up For Consideration For Parties At Cop20…
Read on www.marinetechnologynews.com/news/sweeping-trade-protections-adopted-656089
Posted in Animals | Tags: Rays, Sharks, Wildlife Protection
The Cool Down reported
It could be a sign of a larger problem. Researchers issue warning as unique creatures move into new US territory first appeared on The Cool Down.
Posted in Animals | Tags: Armadillos
Audubon unveils a framework that prioritizes biodiversity, natural climate solutions, and local community engagement in order to protect birds and people.
— Read on http://www.audubon.org/press-room/new-study-reveals-where-conservation-can-deliver-birds-communities-and-climate
Posted in Birds, Environment | Tags: Audubon
ScienceAlert reported
The Chernobyl exclusion zone may be off-limits to humans, but ever since the Unit Four reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded nearly 40 years ago, other forms of life have not only moved in but survived, adapted, and appeared to thrive.
Read more Chernobyl Fungus Appears to Have Evolved an Incredible Ability : ScienceAlert
Posted in Environment, Mushrooms | Tags: Chernobyl, Fungus
SF Gate reported
All five of Washington’s ice-capped mountains — including Mount Rainier — have lost height due to climate change.
Read on www.sfgate.com/national-parks/article/mt-rainier-of-tallest-national-park-peaks-shrinks-21201143.php
Posted in Environment, Park | Tags: Mt. Whitney
The Guardian reported
Interior department, which has defunded conservation organizations, claims fee hike is for conservation
Read on www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/25/national-park-fee-non-residents
Posted in Park | Tags: National Park Fees
Xerces Society reported
A new study published in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry found nearly ubiquitous pesticide contamination on butterfly host plants across two U.S. cities, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Sacramento, California. In 20% of the plants tested, pesticide residues were at levels known to kill or otherwise harm butterflies and moths.
From the Xerces publications library, this fact sheet shares tips and resources for protecting pollinators in urban spaces and developing an integrated pest management approach.
Posted in Butterflies, Environment | Tags: Pesticide Residue on Urban Butterfly Plants
Anthropocene Magazine reported
New research finds that wolves are afraid of the super predator in the woods (humans)—and that protecting them doesn’t make them less fearful of us.
While wolves’ reputation as fearsome predators makes them the stuff of old legends and modern polemics, at least one animal will prompt them to turn tail: humans.
That insight from new research runs counter to speculation that wolves protected by conservation laws might become emboldened and attack people unprovoked.
Read on www.anthropocenemagazine.org/2025/10/the-ecology-of-fear-in-the-anthropocene-has-a-new-plot-twist/
ScienceDaily reported
Dolphins washing up on Florida’s shores may be victims of the same kind of brain degeneration seen in humans with Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers discovered that cyanobacterial toxins—worsened by climate change and nutrient pollution—accumulate in marine food chains, damaging dolphin brains with misfolded proteins and Alzheimer’s-like pathology
Read on www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/10/251011105521.htm
CBS San Francisco reported
Above the main campus at the University of California, Berkeley, nestled in Strawberry Canyon at the Botanical Gardens, you’ll find a critically important bank. It doesn’t store hordes of cash or glittering gold bullion. This bank stores seeds.
“So, we have millions of seeds represented from hundreds of different species from rare and endangered plants and they are all meticulously curated,” explained curator and conservation officer Clare Loughran.
Read more UC Berkeley Botanical Garden houses crucial seed bank to preserve biodiversity – CBS San Francisco
Posted in Wildflowers and Other Plants | Tags: Seed Banks
The Good News Network reported
By turning the land over to the tribe, a substantial conservation corridor for animals including these Tule elk will be established.
Bay Nature reported
The soils beneath our feet teem with fungi. The mycelia-networks of rootlike hyphae that form the actual fungal organism-are interwoven and conjoined with tree roots underground. During the winter months, rain spurs the matrix of mycelia to develop fruiting bodies: mushrooms. These caps emerge from the duff in a great variety of shapes and colors.
Public parks are great places to spot varieties of mushrooms. But beware: most parks in California restrict or outright forbid mushroom collecting; in some parks, the fines can be considerable. Furthermore, those untrained in the proper identification of California’s approximately 300 species should take care, as more than a few are toxic if eaten. However, there are no penalties-and many rewards-for admiring these evanescent beauties in their natural settings. Here is, by county, a list of some sites recommended by local fungophiles for good mushroom viewing.
Posted in Mushrooms | Tags: Bay Area Mushroom Hunting
MSN reported
A firefighter with the National Park Service says a fire wiped out more than a thousand Joshua trees amid the government shutdown. Restoration could be limited by a depleted staff, they said.
Read on www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/hundreds-of-joshua-trees-were-scorched-during-the-shutdown/ar-AA1QSYaP
Posted in Park | Tags: Joshua Tree National Park
From National Audubon
The 126th Christmas Bird Count is around the corner!
We’re getting ready for the 126th Christmas Bird Count (CBC), with local counts running from December 14 to January 5. Want to learn more about the program? You’re invited to sign up for a CBC Participant Webinar! Register here to receive a pre-recorded orientation webinar on December 1.
Register Now
—
To register and learn more read on audubon.emailmachine.co/view-message/181
Posted in Birds | Tags: Christmas Bird Count
NY Times reported
Industrialization in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula has some residents pushing for protection of the region’s celestial splendor.
Read on www.nytimes.com/2025/11/24/science/astronomy-michigan-dark-sky.html
Posted in Astronomy | Tags: Dark Skies
This unique photographic approach captures entire flight patterns of birds in one image.
See amazing Photography by Xavi Bou and read more: Birds Captured in Remarkable Flight Path Photography by Xavi Bou | Moss and Fog
Posted in Birds, Photography | Tags: Amazing Bird Flight Patterns
Vox reported
Wolves were released in the mountains west of Denver. Many of them died, and now, Colorado Parks and Wildlife is struggling to find more wolves for reintroduction.
Read on www.vox.com/climate/470075/colorado-wolf-release-program-stumbles
Feral cats are already caught and killed in some areas but will now be subject to coordinated targeting, with large-scale eradication programsRead more Stone-cold killers’: New Zealand to eradicate feral cats by 2050 | New Zealand | The Guardian
Posted in Uncategorized
Smithsonian Magazine reported
With a lifespan of over 200 years, bowhead whales are remarkably resistant to age-related illnesses like cancer. Now, a new study has uncovered how these 80-ton mammals can survive for so long. The answer could help humans, too.
In a study published this week in the journal Nature, researchers found that the key to the whales’ lifespans is a cold-activated protein called CIRBP. This protein can repair damaged DNA, and bowhead whales have large amounts of it.
Read more Bowhead Whales Live Long Lives. Do They Hold the Key to Human Longevity?
Posted in Animals, Uncategorized | Tags: Bowhead whale
from the Revelatory
Lively cemeteries: Done right, many cemeteries can serve as more than a repository for our dead. As Karen Mockler reports, they can also provide vital habitat for plants and wildlife — even endangered species.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tags: Nature Benefits of Cemeteries
Theodore Payne Foundation inspires and educates Southern Californians about the beauty and ecological benefits of California native plant landscapes.We are located on 22 acres of canyon land in the northeast corner of the San Fernando Valley. Our full-service native plant nursery, seed room, book store, art gallery, demonstration gardens, and hiking trails are open to the public year round. We offer garden tours and classes for adults and families, as well as field trips to TPF and in-classroom programs for children. Friendly on-leash dogs are welcome and there is no admission charge!
See upcoming events at Theodore Payne Foundation Events – Upcoming Activities and Tickets | Eventbrite
Posted in Class/Workshop | Tags: Theodore Payne Foundation Upcoming Events
Photos from the UC Berkeley Botanical Garden taken on November 21, 2025/
Posted in Garden, Photos (Sandy's) | Tags: UC Berkeley Bontanical Garden
EarthSky reported
How could rocks – driven by some unseen force – slide across the ground, leaving behind a trail? That’s what happens at Racetrack Playa, a dry lake bed at Death Valley National Park in California. The definitive solution to this long-standing mystery finally came in 2014, from two cousins. Their work showed that the rocks are nudged into motion by melting panels of thin floating ice, driven by light winds, in winter.
Read on earthsky.org/earth/death-valley-sliding-slithering-sailing-stone-mystery-solved/
Posted in Park | Tags: Death Valley Moving Stones
A summary of what Earth.com found out about benefits of organic fertilizer
A study by Kansas State University examined soil from a Kansas cornfield that had not been tilled for 22 years. The study found that soil treated with organic amendments like manure or compost had higher carbon levels and more carbon stored in protected pores and on mineral surfaces compared to soil treated with synthetic fertilizer or no fertilizer. This suggests that organic amendments can increase soil carbon storage and improve soil health, but the effectiveness depends on local conditions and management practices.
Read article Soil treated only with organic fertilizer yields very exciting results – Earth.com
Posted in Environment | Tags: Organic Fertilizers
NBC News reported
The moss was attached to the International Space Station, fully exposed to the harsh environment of the cosmos. Not only did the spores endure, they could still reproduce after returning to Earth.
Read more Moss survived in space for nine months, study finds
Posted in Wildflowers and Other Plants | Tags: Moss survives in Space
See all Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy Upcoming Events at see all upcoming events
Posted in Park | Tags: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy Events
Phy.org reported
The long-standing mystery around why spider webs sometimes feature “extra touches” known as stabilimenta has been revisited in a new study which suggests that their wave-propagation effects could help spiders locate captured prey.
Posted in Animals | Tags: Spider Webs
SF Gate reported
D.L. Bliss State Park, one of Lake Tahoe’s most beloved stretches of shoreline, is finally set to fully reopen after years of closures, delays and mounting frustrationover a stalled infrastructure overhaul, California State Parks announced this week. The park, in the southwestern corner of the lake, just north of Emerald Bay, has been largely inaccessible since 2023, as crews attempted to replace aging, leaking water lines.
Read more Beloved California state park to reopen after yearslong closure
Posted in Uncategorized
Photographed in the East Bay Regional Parks Botanic Garden in Tilden Park in Berkeley, CA on November 19, 2025.
The Regional Parks Botanic Garden is a California native plant garden. It is located within Tilden Park in the hills above Berkeley, California, It is a 10-acre garden includes many of the state’s rare and endangered plants and a place for visitors to wander among trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses from plant communities throughout the state. There are free weekend and holiday tours. Admission and parking are free. For more information about the garden visit the Friends of the Regional Parks Botanic Garden.
The Independent reported
Experts say it is a huge milestone for the vulnerable birds
Puffins have been discovered nesting at a County Antrim nature reservefor the first time in a quarter of a century.
This marks a significant milestone in the recovery of the vulnerable seabirds in Northern Ireland.
The find was made by Ulster Wildlife on the Isle of Muck, located off Islandmagee.
The comeback is attributed to a dedicated seabird recovery project, initiated by the nature conservation charity in 2017.
Source: Puffins return to nature reserve for first time in 25 years