Spring brought a plethora of Indigo Buntings, Baltimore Orioles and Rufus Towhees.
"We’re way, well below what we expect to be at this point,” said Jeremy Botz, a biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. He says so far the entire commercial fleet has harvested around 6,000 sockeye, which is way below what the department anticipated
A small tornado that touched down on Vancouver Island Thursday afternoon was recorded on one resident’s front door camera.
Unusually warm spring temperatures are rapidly melting above average snowpack, leading to flooding.
It had to be one of the strangest cases of eagle death that Danielle D'Auria has ever seen.
High water in the Koyukuk River is causing erosion near Huslia as warm spring temperatures rapidly melt above-average snowpack.
Unusually active marine mammals seen near Unalaska may actually be Pacific white-sided dolphins.
Non-native chukar, used to train bird hunting dogs, spotted in Anchorage.
With the coronavirus pandemic leaving Russia's cities quiet and deserted, its wild animals have decided to check things out.
Abnormally hot May weather resembles midsummer with air temperatures as high as +35C.
The number of wolves in Gävleborg county has gone up and the pressure to introduce licensed hunting is increasing in the region.
In Alaska, pasque flowers are known to bloom in May, but increasingly warm temperatures may create conditions that lead to earlier bloom times.
Ichneumon wasp is a new sight to King Cove observer.
After a cold winter and spring, high temperatures around the Interior prompted birch tree buds to burst, sending record-setting levels of pollen into the air.
Some residents of a Burnaby retirement home were about to start a meditation class on Wednesday when a humpback whale sighting stole their focus.
The mayor of Sayward says there are at least seven grizzly bears in and around the north Vancouver Island village, and he’s warning shutterbugs to stay away to protect themselves and the big bruins. . .
After 100 highs, Utqiagvik marks record low temperature
The relatively warm weather, arriving a month earlier than normal, is projected to stick around for the next 10 days, potentially accelerating sea ice loss.
The stormy wind at 30 metres per second rose in Chita in the afternoon on Wednesday 13 May.
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