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Officials with the Kaibab National Forest have proposed new projects designed to improve recreation and wildlife habitat.
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The Arizona Game and Fish Department is reminding the public not to approach or feed coyotes that may wander into neighborhoods. The warning comes after two separate coyote attacks in the north Scottsdale area.
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All over the country, cameras are snapping photos of wildlife in what’s become a fairly common practice. Researchers, wildlife managers, conservationists, community scientists, and property owners install cameras on trees, near water sources, or at places where animals may gather or pass through.
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U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is in New Mexico to roll out details of what federal officials are billing as the first-of-its-kind pilot program to prevent wildlife-vehicle collisions and improve habitat connectivity.
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A national conservation group says it plans to sue the federal government for failing to protect 15 plants and animals in the U.S.
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Women make up nearly half of the people working in the life sciences in the United States, including biology, conservation, and wildlife professions. Even so, they face discrimination and harassment. Now, a new book gathers dozens of stories from female wildlife biologists to highlight the challenges they face. KNAU’s Melissa Sevigny spoke with coeditor Carol Chambers of Northern Arizona University about the project.
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Bison are among the most emblematic animals of the American West. Many Indigenous peoples relied on them for survival. Some, such as the Zuni, have oral histories of hunting them and performing a Buffalo Dance ceremony. Bison are known primarily as Plains animals, but historically they did extend into the Southwest.
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The Grand Canyon is riddled with caves, and many of them hold secrets…. But none so strange as the Mystery of the Mummified Bats.
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Large wildfires in the West fueled by climate change are posing increased threats to fish species. The blazes are often followed by torrential rains that wash ashy muck into streams, killing fish and smothering their feeding and spawning areas.
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The Bureau of Reclamation says low levels and warming water in Lake Powell have led to depleted levels of dissolved oxygen in the water, posing a threat to trout living below Glen Canyon Dam.