“No doubt, we’re in hot water”
The current heatwave impacting large swaths of the country is also driving a spike in marine temperatures. As scientists around the world sound the alarm …
The current heatwave impacting large swaths of the country is also driving a spike in marine temperatures. As scientists around the world sound the alarm …
Fly hatches are becoming harder to predict because of climate change. What happens when there’s no more hatches to match? The decline of aquatic insects …
The chances of climate change causing significant disruption to saltwater fisheries are pretty high, according to a NOAA Fisheries climate vulnerability assessment that’s on its …
Glacial melting is shining a spotlight on the science of ecological succession, the name given to the patterns of the arrival of one species after …
Nature lovers tend to be categorized as either “appreciative” or “extractive.” The first group includes people like hikers and bird watchers, while the second includes …
Mark Kenyon on marrying nature-based climate solutions with climate mitigation. As a hunter or angler in the 2020s, it’s becoming increasingly hard to head afield …
A U.S.-French satellite that will map almost all of the world’s oceans, lakes, and rivers rocketed into orbit last Friday. Nicknamed SWOT — short for …
Maine has the world’s southernmost population of Arctic charr; a landlocked fish left stranded here when the glaciers retreated. But the rare fish once called …
Priest River once provided better coldwater trout habitat, but summer temperatures are now too warm to support strong trout populations.