It's almost May
and yesterday
Books, gardens, birds, the environment, politics, or whatever happens to be grabbing my attention today.
A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:
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Scientists have found a surprising trove of fossils in a Texas cave.
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In case you haven't already seen them, here are some of the amazing photos sent back by from the Artemis 2 mission.
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"Overnight successes" in conservation definitely do not happen overnight.
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Five missing bird species that had been thought to have been lost were rediscovered in 2025.
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More bad news for the Gulf of Mexico: The Trump administration will exempt oil and gas drilling from measures meant to protect endangered whales and other imperiled species.
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The International Union for Conservation of Nature announced this week that Emperor Penguins, the largest of the penguins, have been added to the endangered list.
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Underneath California's Salton Sea sits a treasure trove of lithium, making it the "Saudi Arabia of lithium."
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Cascade red foxes are very reclusive and difficult to photograph but one photographer managed to overcome those problems.
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What is a shark? New genetic analysis is giving us a better understanding of the answer to that question.
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And we are still learning more about the Neanderthals, including the fact that they did indeed hunt big game.
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More crops are grown for fuel and livestock feed than are grown for human food.
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Can we help control global warming by stashing carbon dioxide in the sea?
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In New England, fishermen are contributing to science as they ply their trade.
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In Australia, rock art gives clues that Tasmanian tigers may have survived on the mainland for longer than previously thought.
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A new study has found that sharks in the Bahamas test positive for drugs including cocaine and painkillers.
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The North American butternut tree is struggling to survive but new research is giving it a second chance.
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Octopus sex can be a very weird thing, indeed.
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In war-torn Ukraine recently, people gathered to watch the release of hundreds of rescued bats.
Cats have been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. Indeed my very earliest memories involve my interactions with members of the family Felis catus. My most recent memories do as well. Even as I sit at my desk, there are reminders.
We got Beau and his sister Bella some months after Nicky's death. I wasn't sure I was ready for another cat when our younger daughter and her friend found them, abandoned, on a country road. They needed a home so how could I say no?
Here they are, snuggled together on my bed. Yes, there are actually two cats there!