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After re-learning natural history, an ecologist returns home -- and sees something new.
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After re-learning natural history, an ecologist returns home -- and sees something new.
These results don’t mean that insects are fine.
This article first appeared in the interdisciplinary journal Parks Stewardship Forum under the title “Coloring Outside the Lines | Connecting the Dots: Why does what and who came before us...
American kestrels, the smallest falcon in North America, are a familiar sight in the Bay Area.
With five to seven leaves resembling outstretched fingers on the palm of a hand, the blackberry Rubus armeniacus grows from curved, blood-red stalks resembling veins. Sonoma County horticulturalist Luther Burbank...
With big ships still moving regularly through the Northern California marine sanctuaries, whales are at risk.
After an absence of many decades, Chinook salmon swim up the Guadalupe River in San José most winters. The fish look for places to lay eggs and often find them....
Can California's offshore forests be recovered?
Should we worry about the Monterey pine going extinct?
They haven't always been here, but they are now.