With each passing year, species across the United States face an uncertain future. As habitats continue to be destroyed, climate change destabilizes weather patterns, and invasive species take over ...
Wood storks were listed as endangered in 1984, when its population had dropped by over 75 percent—from roughly 20,000 nesting pairs to about 5,000 nesting pairs—primarily due to wetland loss.
Federal officials are removing wood storks, an iconic bird found in south Georgia, from the endangered species list — but ...
Extinction is supposed to be final, yet the natural world keeps producing plot twists. Around the globe, animals written off ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is removing the wood stork from the federal list of endangered and threatened wildlife.
After being listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1984, wood stork numbers have rebounded significantly. Do the birds ...
Forty years ago, wood stork populations in Florida were plummeting. But federal and private efforts have made a dramatic difference, officials say.
The wood stork will soon no longer be on the federal endangered species list. Some environmentalists say that's a bad thing.
The Endangered Species Act, however, goes way beyond. The act also protects animals of growing rarity the average person never heard of, birds people know little about, and plants with names they ...
She is a hoofstock animal keeper at Marwell Zoo, near Winchester in Hampshire, and looks after "everything with hooves" - from giraffes to zebras - as well as white rhinos, tapir, red river hogs and ...
The 11 imperiled South Florida species face extinction-level threats from habitat-destroying development and sea-level rise, ...