News

For the first time in 80 years, a new generation of fully-fledged aspen trees has grown in Yellowstone’s northern range.
The presence of humans and human infrastructure in U.S. national parks has lasting effects on the behaviors of the large ...
The persistent presence of humans and their infrastructure in U.S. national parks has yielded dramatic changes in the ...
Many summer visitors to America's national parks hope for a glimpse of a moose or a bighorn sheep — or perhaps to spot a wolf ...
The presence of humans and human infrastructure in U.S. national parks has lasting effects on the behaviours of the large animals that call them home ...
Referencing back to the Wilderness Act of 1964, to paraphrase, the goals were to protect and preserve the ecosystems, strive to restrain human impact/manipulation, and limit commercial impacts. The ...
A group of 60 scientists from across North America and the United Kingdom analyzed GPS collar data from 10 species tracked in ...
Thirty years after wolves returned from near extinction in the Rocky Mountains, the state of Idaho is back in the ...
Aspen forest is reclaiming the skyline of Yellowstone National Park after decades of controversy over efforts to return ...
The apex predators, restored to the park in 1995, appear to be keeping the local population of plant-eating elk in check, ...
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (MFWP) has proposed the slaughter of over 500 wolves in the upcoming hunting and trapping season. This decision is not only aggressive but deeply misguided, risking ...
Aspen trees are thriving again in Yellowstone for the first time in 80 years, thanks to wolves reintroduced in the 1990s that helped control elk herds.