Environment News

Wild Atlantic salmon are in trouble, but they have some valuable friends in the New England schoolchildren who take part in the U.S. government's Adopt-a-Salmon Family program. By raising and releasing young salmon, students hope to promote the fish's recovery, while learning firsthand the importance of clean and healthy watersheds.

June 16, 2004

The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority has recently designated one-third of the park as a no-take zone, making it the largest fully protected stretch of ocean in the world. A related story airs Tuesday, June 15, on our U.S. cable television program National Geographic Channel Presents Nature's Nightmares: Coral Reefs.

June 15, 2004

He's bushwhacked 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) through the some of the last untouched forests of Africa and inspired the creation of at least 13 national parks. Now biologist and explorer Michael Fay has embarked on another ambitious expedition: a yearlong aerial survey of Africa's wildest places. Here he explains how he'll do it—and why it matters.

June 10, 2004

One-celled ocean plants known as phytoplankton produce half the world's oxygen. They also trap large amounts of carbon dioxide. Some scientists believe that enriching the world's oceans with iron would encourage phytoplankton blooms and help regulate global warming.

June 9, 2004

National Geographic Traveler and Conservation International announced the winners of the 2004 World Legacy Awards in sustainable tourism. Winners include a Dubai desert resort that has restored local native plant and animal species, including endangered oryx, and an Aboriginal operated tour company in the Australian outback.

Updated June 9, 2004

For millennia, it seems, almost nothing has been safe from these summer tempests—not World War II warships, not treasure-filled galleons, perhaps not even dinosaurs.

Updated September 23, 2004

Since the beginnings of exploration in Madagascar Ibity Massif has been a botanist's paradise because of its many unique species. When fire engulfed the mountain last October National Geographic funded a study of the inferno's impact—and how widespread burning has contributed to the destruction of the African island's vegetation.

June 4, 2004

In the past five years, the United States has imported more than 144,000 Burmese pythons. Some of those snakes are now wrestling alligators in the Florida Everglades—and breeding. The case spotlights the problem that thousands of invasive species—from African clawed frogs to Asian beetles—now pose as they wreak environmental havoc in the U.S.

June 3, 2004

With as many as four big cat sightings reported each day in the U.K., debate is growing over whether leopards, pumas, and other exotic felines are now living wild in the British countryside.

June 3, 2004

It may just be a high-octane summer blockbuster, but environmentalists hope The Day After Tomorrow will serve as a wake-up call about global climate change. National Geographic News recently spoke with Worldwatch Institute senior editor Tom Prugh to hear what he thought of the movie.

May 27, 2004

National Geographic Traveler and Conservation International this week named 12 outstanding tourism finalists in the 2004 World Legacy Awards, which recognize excellence in environmental, social, and cultural travel. Finalists include travel enterprises in natural travel, heritage tourism, hotels and resorts, and destination stewardship.

May 27, 2004

Along the shores of Lake Victoria in Uganda, killer crocs prey on villagers who venture along the water's edge. In an interview with National Geographic News, crocodile expert Brady Barr describes his battle to relocate these man-eaters and his hope that humans and crocs can coexist.

June 10, 2004

Over the past 20 years scientists have warmed up to the idea that the majority of life on our planet lives not on Earth's surface but beneath its crust. The theory has spurred new ideas about life's origins on Earth and where to search for life on other planets.

May 26, 2004

Dung beetles, as their name suggests, make a living off other animals' waste. But in gathering excrement they help disperse seeds that have endured the journey through others' digestive tracts—playing an essential role in ensuring biodiversity in the tropics.

May 26, 2004
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In parts of Europe, legend holds that white storks deliver babies and protect houses from fire. The birds are beloved by many Europeans who welcome the sight of the storks' massive nests—some of which are ten feet (three meters) deep and centuries old—on their rooftops, church spires, and neighborhood telephone poles.

May 25, 2004

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