Scientists can use DNA left in the environment to survey biodiversity in ecosystems. It is a useful tool in remote areas, where it is hard to watch or capture species.
Scientists have used tiny, noninvasive tech to study the how red diamond rattlesnakes use their habitat, move, hunt, and eat. Find out more!
Scientists are using radio tags to track down and destroy the nests of invasive hornets.
3 March is World Wildlife Day! Find out how to celebrate this day and what you can do to take action for wild plants and animals.
Learn how cutting-edge tech is changing the way we protect species and their habitats.
A conservation photographer has created tech that can scan live animals in 3D.
Be inspired! Listen to the sounds of the Amazon
Sometimes species go missing … A “missing” animal still knows where it is, of course! But scientists and conservationists may not have seen it for a long time. Sometimes a species is not seen for so long that it is thought to be extinct. Hill’s horsehoe…
What is the forest canopy? The canopy is the ceiling of the forest, created by the inter-tangled branches and leaves of trees. Around the world, tropical forest canopies are largely unexplored because they are mostly inaccessible to scientists, being high in the trees where it…