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endangered species

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Jun 01

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New report suggests Earth on the brink of a great extinction

By PBS News Hour

According to new research published in the journal Science this week, plant and animal extinctions are happening at a rate one thousand times greater than before humans walked the Earth. Stuart Pimm of Duke University joins Hari Sreenivasan to discuss…

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May 18

Kruger Park reports first case of elephant poaching in 10 years

By News Desk

Officials at South Africa's Kruger National Park have reported the first case of elephant poaching in the park in over a decade. The male elephant's corpse, stripped of its tusks, was found near the border with Mozambique.

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May 18

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Can cross-border cooperation save the endangered rhino?

By PBS News Hour

Only about 29,000 rhinos remain in the wild today -- 73 percent of those wild rhinos are in South Africa -- and most of those live in South Africa's Kruger National Park. Authorities are desperately trying to combat a dramatic…

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May 17

International ad campaigns aim to reduce rhino horn demand

By Connie Kargbo

While park rangers are fighting the battle with poachers on the ground in South Africa, over the past few years ad campaigns by conservation groups have also been hitting airwaves and websites in consumer countries to discourage the consumption of…

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Apr 30

As Pacific acidifies, ‘sea butterflies’ are quickly losing their shells

By Elizabeth Shell

Scientists have known for some time that shells of the tiniest sea life have been dissolving due to an increasingly polluted ocean. Pteropods, ocean-dwelling snails roughly the size of a thumbnail, have been dubbed by some the "…

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Apr 22

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Potential to revive extinct animals raises ethical questions

By PBS News Hour

Researchers are working to bring back extinct animals like the woolly mammoth and passenger pigeon, operating under the belief that reviving such species could restore vanishing habitats. But many biologists suggest these efforts should focus on endangered, rather than extinct,…

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Jul 18

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No image
Swinomish Tribe Works to Adapt to Shrinking Salmon Supply

Washington salmon depend on the cold water from glacial lakes to survive. But as temperatures increase and glaciers shrink, salmon populations are declining, threatening the way of life for the Swinomish Indians, also known as the "salmon people." In collaboration…

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Mar 03

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Reversing Bush Rule, Obama Resumes Safeguards for Endangered Species

By Admin, PBS News Hour

President Barack Obama announced Tuesday that he wants federal agencies to resume full scientific reviews of projects that could harm endangered wildlife and plants.

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Dec 19

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Beetles, Disease Hurt Whitebark Pine’s Chances of Survival

By PBS News Hour

For the whitebark pine tree, red is the sign of death. As disease and beetles sap life from the knotty, sometimes misshapen tree that thrives in some of the most inhospitable landscapes of the northwest U.S. and Canada, it turns…

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Aug 12

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Bush Administration Proposes Changes to Endangered Species Act Rules

By PBS News Hour

The Bush administration on Monday proposed a regulatory change that would allow federal agencies to decide for themselves whether construction projects such as roads and dams have the potential to harm endangered animals and plants.

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