#in-on-the-kill-taker

[ follow ]
Pets
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

On the trail with the hunters who believe shooting big game can save Africa's wildlife

Trophy hunting in protected areas like Niassa reserve raises ethical concerns about wildlife conservation and the impact on animal populations.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

England wildlife watchdog has stopped designating special sites for protection'

While Natural England dithers and reviews processes, irreplaceable wildlife sites are being trashed, damaged, and even built over. That is not a technical failure, it's a dereliction of duty.
Environment
California
fromLos Angeles Times
22 hours ago

Uproar over mama bear killing could help launch a state wildlife coexistence program

Legislation is being considered in California to promote nonlethal solutions for human-wildlife conflicts following public outcry over a bear's death.
Roam Research
fromNature
1 day ago

'Bat feast' animal videos at African cave offer clues to how deadly viruses spread

Camera traps in Uganda revealed various species interacting with Egyptian fruit bats, highlighting potential pathways for Marburg virus transmission to humans.
#extinction
UX design
fromAwwwards
5 days ago

100 Lost Species

The project illustrates extinction's impact through an interactive digital experience, emphasizing time's role in species disappearance and human influence.
Environment
fromMail Online
2 weeks ago

Britain has just 20 years to save its wildlife, experts warn

Urgent action is needed to prevent the extinction of hundreds of British species within the next 20 years.
Books
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Why Rick McIntyre Is the Go-To Guy for All Things Wolves

Rick McIntyre's memoir offers insights into his life with wolves and valuable lessons about wildlife relationships.
Pets
fromTasting Table
2 days ago

If You Find A Bird Egg In Your Vegetable Garden, Here's What You Need To Do Next - Tasting Table

Bird nests and eggs are legally protected; do not relocate them to avoid fines and ensure bird safety.
Environment
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Great white sharks are overheating

Climate change threatens mesotherm apex predators, impacting ecosystems and their survival due to physiological limits and historical overfishing.
#wildlife-trade
Coronavirus
fromNature
1 week ago

Almost half of traded wildlife carry disease-causing pathogens

Nearly half of wild mammal species traded carry pathogens that can infect humans, linking wildlife trade to major disease outbreaks.
Coronavirus
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

How bad for humans is wildlife trade? A new study has answers

The wildlife trade significantly increases the risk of zoonotic diseases transferring from animals to humans.
Coronavirus
fromNature
1 week ago

Almost half of traded wildlife carry disease-causing pathogens

Nearly half of wild mammal species traded carry pathogens that can infect humans, linking wildlife trade to major disease outbreaks.
Coronavirus
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

How bad for humans is wildlife trade? A new study has answers

The wildlife trade significantly increases the risk of zoonotic diseases transferring from animals to humans.
fromMail Online
2 weeks ago

Killer seals have started eating dolphins in British waters

Experts warn that seal bites can lead to amputations, with many individuals who work with seals having lost parts of their fingers due to bites.
UK news
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

See these ziti-sized fish scale a 50-foot waterfall

During major floods, thousands of tiny fish convene at Luvilombo Falls in the upper Congo River Basin to undertake a peculiar vertical migration, described for the first time today in Scientific Reports.
OMG science
fromWIRED
2 weeks ago

Snake Bros Keep Getting Bitten by Their Lethal Pets. Only Zoos Can Save Them

Chris Gifford felt a fang sink into his skin and thought, 'I'm going to die.' He realized he needed to start a timer immediately.
Pets
Media industry
fromwww.independent.co.uk
3 weeks ago

Animal park euthanises entire wolf pack after vicious infighting

Wildwood animal park euthanised its entire pack of European grey wolves due to severe aggression and life-threatening injuries among the animals.
Agriculture
fromHigh Country News
4 weeks ago

Utah's new study aims to kill 'as many cougars as possible' - High Country News

Utah's aggressive mountain lion management involves paying hunters to kill them, raising concerns about its impact on local communities and wildlife.
Pets
fromLos Angeles Times
2 weeks ago

Baby mountain lion orphaned and left to starve in Southern California is rescued

A rescued baby mountain lion named Crimson requires intensive care and monitoring after losing toes and being orphaned in Southern California.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Shooting restricted for six British wild birds to halt population decline

The new rules would restrict the shooting of species including the distinctive woodcock, and the striking pintail, goldeneye and pochard ducks, all of which are classed as under threat and have seen their populations fall sharply in recent years.
UK news
fromSFGATE
1 month ago

The race to save endangered mountain lions in the Calif. desert

Before state Route 62 was built, there was seamless 95-mile-long habitat connectivity between the San Bernardino and Little San Bernardino mountain ranges, extending from the I-10 south of Joshua Tree National Park to the I-15 near the Cajon Pass. Now, plans for two new wildlife crossings across the highway aim to bring back some of that connectivity, while potentially saving a local population on the brink of extinction in the process.
SF parents
#wolf-euthanasia
Pets
fromMail Online
2 weeks ago

Adopters say they weren't warned before pack of wolves was euthanised

Animal lovers were not informed before a pack of adopted wolves was euthanized due to severe aggression and injuries among them.
Pets
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

Scientists explain why entire pack of wolves needed to be euthanised

An entire pack of wolves was euthanised due to severe aggression and deteriorating quality of life, despite public outcry for alternatives.
Pets
fromMail Online
2 weeks ago

Adopters say they weren't warned before pack of wolves was euthanised

Animal lovers were not informed before a pack of adopted wolves was euthanized due to severe aggression and injuries among them.
Pets
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

Scientists explain why entire pack of wolves needed to be euthanised

An entire pack of wolves was euthanised due to severe aggression and deteriorating quality of life, despite public outcry for alternatives.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Don't Be Prey review invigorating tale of swimming banker aiming to avoid being shark food

Open-water swimming across the Oceans Seven challenges competitors to confront fears and inner vulnerabilities rather than external dangers like sharks.
Environment
fromHigh Country News
4 weeks ago

Public lands need less extraction and more rewilding - High Country News

Public-land management in the Western U.S. needs a complete reimagining to prevent further ecological degradation and biodiversity loss.
Roam Research
fromDefector
1 month ago

Even After Being Eaten, This Beetle Has Two Ways Out Alive | Defector

The Japanese water scavenger beetle Regimbartia attenuata survives passage through a frog's digestive system and exits alive within minutes to hours.
Pets
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Wily coyote? Urban canines take more risks compared with rural ones, study finds

Urban coyotes are less afraid of new stimuli and take more risks compared to rural coyotes, according to a study across multiple US sites.
#biodiversity
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago
Environment

How protecting nature could make the world safer

Biodiversity loss is increasingly recognized as a national security threat linked to political stability and global resource competition.
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago
Environment

How Can We Mend Our Living World?

Human, animal, and plant relationships are intertwined; biodiversity decline reshapes these connections and requires rethinking narratives and interdisciplinary approaches to repair the living world.
Environment
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

How protecting nature could make the world safer

Biodiversity loss is increasingly recognized as a national security threat linked to political stability and global resource competition.
Pets
fromNature
3 weeks ago

A Career in Wildlife Medicine Is Its Own Reward | Blog | Nature | PBS

Working as a Licensed Veterinary Technician at a zoo is rewarding, combining joy and challenges while contributing to wildlife conservation.
Independent films
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Hunting for elusive "ghost elephants"

Ornithologist Steve Boyes searches for a rumored new elephant species in the Angolan Highlands in Werner Herzog's documentary Ghost Elephants, premiering on National Geographic and Disney+.
Environment
fromKqed
1 month ago

California Condors Are Still Dying - Despite a Lead Ammo Ban | KQED

California's lead ammunition ban failed to reduce condor lead poisoning, with blood lead levels actually increasing after full implementation despite hunter compliance.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

The surprising scientific value of roadkill

Researchers use roadkill as a valuable scientific resource to study wildlife behavior, track species distribution, obtain specimens ethically, and discover new species across diverse research applications.
fromNature
1 month ago

Using mosquitoes to vaccinate bats could curb the spread of deadly diseases

In a study published in Science Advances, researchers in China fed Aedes aegypti mosquitoes blood that contained either a vaccine against Nipah virus or the rabies virus. The viruses, contained in the vaccines, replicated inside the insects and reached their salivary glands, allowing them to pass on the vaccine when feeding on bats or when the bats ate the insects.
Coronavirus
Germany politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Germany moves to legalise wolf hunting in response to livestock bloodlust'

Germany's parliament passed legislation allowing wolf hunting to address growing populations and livestock attacks, with voting split along political lines.
Environment
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Crabs are cannibalizing one another with surprising rapacity in parts of the Chesapeake Bay

Blue crabs in Chesapeake Bay cannibalize each other at such high rates that they are their own primary predatory force, accounting for 97 percent of crab deaths and injuries over a 36-year study.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 month ago

The cost of casting animals as heroes and villains in conservation science

Hero-villain narratives in ecology oversimplify complex ecological stories and inappropriately impose human moral frameworks onto non-moral natural processes and species.
fromHigh Country News
1 month ago

Coyotes and cougars and rats, oh my! - High Country News

An unnamed tourist saw it and told Aidan Moore, who works for Alcatraz City Cruises. Moore told SFGATE that he was initially skeptical, but the guest's iPhone footage left little room for doubt. The video shows, not a sea lion or an otter, but an actual Canis latrans, doggedly dogpaddling, then clambering out of the water, noticeably shaky and struggling to settle tired paws on the craggy rocks.
California
Pets
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

What would happen if snakes disappeared like in Zootopia 2? An investigation

Zootopia 2 defends snakes as misunderstood creatures while highlighting their critical ecological importance as mesopredators that control rodent populations and sustain food chains.
#mountain-lion
fromsfist.com
2 months ago
San Francisco

Videos Show Capture of Mountain Lion Who Went Wandering Around Pacific Heights, and His Release to the Wild

fromsfist.com
2 months ago
San Francisco

Videos Show Capture of Mountain Lion Who Went Wandering Around Pacific Heights, and His Release to the Wild

Chicago Bears
fromCalifornia Post
1 month ago

Deadly apex predator being mulled for release in California after 100-year absence

California lawmakers are considering reintroducing grizzly bears through Senate Bill 1305, which would require a scientific assessment and consultation with Native American tribes about restoring the species extinct in the state for over a century.
Pets
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

I love vultures, mosquitoes and, yes, even wasps. This is why you should too | Jo Wimpenny

Humans hold irrational emotional biases toward animals; wasps deserve reconsideration as valuable pollinators and pest controllers despite negative perceptions.
Science
fromKqed
7 months ago

Tiger Beetles Bite First, Ask Questions Never | KQED

Tiger beetles run at extreme speeds but use rapid stops and forward antennae to sense obstacles and capture prey with sickle-shaped mandibles.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

The Shepherd and the Bear review two endangered species scrap for survival in the Pyrenees

Brown bears have been reintroduced to the Pyrenees, creating conflict between conservation efforts and shepherds whose traditional livestock-based livelihoods are endangered.
fromThe Conversation
2 months ago

Some companies claim they can 'resurrect' species. Does that make people more comfortable with extinction?

Less than a year ago, United States company Colossal Biosciences announced it had "resurrected" the dire wolf, a megafauna-hunting wolf species that had been extinct for 10,000 years. Within two days of Colossal's announcement, the Interior Secretary of the US, Doug Burgum, used the idea of resurrection to justify weakening environmental protection laws: "pick your favourite species and call up Colossal". His reasoning appeared to confirm critics' fears about de-extinction technology. If we can bring any species back, why protect them to begin with?
Philosophy
Chicago Bears
fromHigh Country News
1 month ago

Can Alaska save caribou by killing bears? - High Country News

Alaska's Mulchatna caribou herd has collapsed from 200,000 animals in the 1990s to 12,000 in 2022, devastating Indigenous subsistence hunting and prompting controversial wildlife management interventions including hunting bans and aerial predator culling.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

9 natural disaster warning signs animals display before humans notice anything wrong - Silicon Canals

Animals often detect imminent natural disasters through subtle environmental cues and flee before humans.
Environment
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

How protecting nature could make the world safer

Ecosystem collapse poses direct national security threats through food insecurity, resource scarcity, and geopolitical instability across continents.
Environment
fromNature
1 month ago

How these koalas bounced back from the brink of extinction

Victorian koala populations have recovered genetic diversity after near-extinction, demonstrating that species can regain lost genetic variation through effective conservation strategies.
#biodiversity-loss
Environment
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Rewilding Rejects the We're-So-Special Exceptionalism

Rewilding requires rehabilitating human hearts, overcoming self-centeredness, and treating nature with compassion so ecosystems and nonhuman lives can flourish.
Environment
fromHigh Country News
2 months ago

Would you pay 1% more for wildlife? - High Country News

The 1% for Wildlife bill would raise lodging taxes to generate nearly $30 million annually for Oregon habitat conservation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Disbelief as crocodile captured in Newcastle creek thousands of kilometres from natural habitat

I get there, I look and here's this little crocodile swimming around in the water. The sighting occurred at Federal Park in Wallsend, close to a local pool and primary school. Kirsop said she was met with initial disbelief when she contacted the wildlife rescue group Wires, and the Australian Reptile Park.
Pets
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

How Many Wolves Is Enough?

The wolves arrived in May of last year, just days after Paul Roen had driven his cattle back up to their summer pasture in Northern California's Sierra Valley. He started finding the bleeding bodies of calves-some still alive, so badly paralyzed that they'd need to be shot. After weeks of this, Roen finally saw a kill himself. "One wolf grabbed a cow and spun her around, while another grabbed a calf," he told me. "He tore it into three pieces in 30 seconds."
Environment
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Stark warning': pesticide harm to wildlife rising globally, study finds

Global ecological harm from pesticides rose between 2013 and 2019, with insects experiencing the largest increase in applied toxicity (42.9%) and soil organisms up 30.8%.
Environment
fromNature
2 months ago

Defending endangered trees against climate change and hungry goats

Socotra's unique endemic trees face threats from climate-driven drought and free-ranging goats, requiring community-linked habitat restoration balancing conservation and local livelihoods.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Experience: a bear moved into my house

The next morning, I checked the critter-cams and saw the bear again, now captured by a camera I'd placed by a little mesh-covered opening near the small basement under my house. I watched as a massive shape emerged from the hole. My brain refused to believe it. The bear looked too large to fit in that tiny gap. I watched it again, shocked. My hands started to sweat.
Environment
Environment
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Catalina Island's deer will be killed to restore its ecosystem

Catalina Island's entire non-native mule deer population will be eradicated within five years to restore native plants and reduce wildfire risk.
Environment
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

The truth behind wildlife tourism

Wildlife tourism in Kenya and Tanzania threatens migration corridors and Maasai land rights, requiring integrated approaches to reconcile conservation, community livelihoods and economic benefits.
fromwww.dw.com
2 months ago

The business of saving nature

The world spends 30 times more money destroying nature than protecting it. That's according to a new report from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) that exposes a massive gulf between so-called "harmful investments" and financing that promotes nature preservation. The global environment agency's latest "State of Finance for Nature" (SNF) report is calling to phase out the US$7.3 trillion (6.2 trillion) in global investments that damage nature including into high-emissions energy infrastructure and manufacturing, for example.
Environment
fromFast Company
2 months ago

These digital tools are stepping up the global fight against wildlife trafficking

In late 2025, Interpol coordinated a global operation across 134 nations, seizing roughly 30,000 live animals, confiscating illegal plant and timber products, and identifying about 1,100 suspected wildlife traffickers for national police to investigate. Wildlife trafficking is one of the most lucrative illicit industries worldwide. It nets between US$7 billion and $23 billion per year, according to the Global Environment Facility, a group of nearly 200 nations as well as businesses and nonprofits that fund environmental improvement and protection projects.
Environment
Environment
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Grey squirrels could be given contraceptives to control numbers

Government supports research into a contraceptive 'pill' for invasive grey squirrels alongside pine-marten reintroduction, landowner grants and volunteer control to protect red squirrels and woodlands.
Environment
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Ominous warning for humanity as insects mysteriously 'fall silent'

Rapid global insect declines threaten pollination, food production, nutrient availability, and human health, signaling imminent ecological instability.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

California officials move forward with plans to exterminate mule deer from island

California authorized a five-year plan to eradicate about 1,800 nonnative mule deer on Catalina Island using lethal methods and capture-sterilization.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

We are hopeful': small signs of recovery for Scotland's rare capercaillie bird

Capercaillie numbers in parts of the Scottish Highlands show promising recovery due to targeted habitat management and conservation interventions.
[ Load more ]