-
Officials at Grand Canyon National Park say a bobcat was recently found dead in the South Rim Village from "rodenticide" poisoning.
-
Arizona wildlife officials are urging hunters to help combat the fatal chronic wasting disease that affects the nervous systems of deer and elk.
-
Federal wildlife managers are finalizing a plan to reintroduce gray wolves into the wild in Colorado.
-
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management has proposed a 10-year plan to manage wild burros in an area south of Kingman.
-
Conservationists are suing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service over habitat for two threatened snake species in Arizona and New Mexico.
-
Environmentalists are asking Mexico’s environmental ministry to increase protections for bobcats under the country’s list of species at risk.
-
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has determined that the pinyon jay may be eligible for protection under the Endangered Species Act. KNAU’s Melissa Sevigny reports, environmentalists say their decline is primarily due to the eradication of pinyon juniper forests and to climate change.
-
A federal judge has cleared the way for the U.S. government to continue capturing thousands of wild horses in Nevada despite the deaths of 31 mustangs during the weekslong roundup.
-
Forest officials in northern Arizona have proposed three wildlife crossings over local highways.
-
Wildlife openings will be installed in portions U.S.-Mexico border wall — including sections in Arizona — as part of the settlement in a lawsuit over how the Trump administration paid for new construction.