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Discover WildScience on MSN1d
From Bogs to Blossoms: Reclaiming Ireland’s Endemic Wetland PlantsImagine standing in the heart of an Irish bog, the ground springy beneath your feet, wrapped in a hush broken only by the ...
America’s wetlands were historically viewed as useless areas that stood in the way of development. More than half of the 221 ...
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The News-Messenger on MSNMaster Gardener: The BogsBrown’s Lake Bog, located near Shreve in Wayne County, is maintained by the Nature Conservancy. A seven-acre lake covered by a floating mat of sphagnum moss, it is the home of 20 rare plants including ...
Hundreds of species need wetlands to breed, forage and rest. When wetlands are destroyed, birds are usually the first to noticeably die off.
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel on MSN6d
A new era dawns for America’s disappearing wetlands as feds retreat from oversightThe Trump administration is proposing to take a big step back from how many wetlands it protects. Conservationists warn about the effects.
Researchers at Louisiana State University’s Coastal Systems Ecology Lab, led by wetland scientist and professor Robert ...
A RECENT water quality assessment found that Pond A, a 60-hectare wetland within the South Reclamation Project (SRP) in Cebu ...
It narrowly beat out the bush sunflower in a March Madness-style bracket competition — part of an effort to encourage ...
In this piece — part of a series from The Gazette and the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk — a look at a lawsuit that ...
The Canadian Press on MSN21h
DDT sprayed in New Brunswick forests persists in trout at ‘alarming’ levels: studyThe insecticide was used to control spruce budworm, which mainly feeds on balsam fir and white spruce, and is a natural pest ...
Siberian cranes are revered as "living fossils", with a globally rare population. In China, they are classified as ...
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