A Mitchell man returned to the courtroom Tuesday morning to challenge evidence in two ongoing cases, now representing himself after previously being denied motions to suppress ...
For the first time in roughly six centuries, London’s skies may again carry the long, steady wings of the white stork. These large birds once lived alongside people, nesting on rooftops and feeding ...
Wood storks inhabit the Lowcountry of South Carolina. Their numbers have increased after being placed on the federal Endangered Species Act list some 40 years ago. Photo courtesy S.C. Department of ...
Our newsletters uncover the insights you need to understand the issues facing Coastal Georgia—delivered to your inbox five times a week. Federal officials are removing an iconic bird found in south ...
A pair of naturalists spent weeks in the wilds of South Florida in the 1930s, braving alligators and snakes to find and photograph wetland and wading birds like the gangly wood stork. Unlike many of ...
TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced on Monday that the wood stork is being removed from the federal registry of endangered and threatened wildlife. The wood stork is a ...
The Trump administration’s wildlife agency is removing the wood stork from the federal list of endangered and threatened species, according to a Monday final rule saying the wetlands-dependent bird ...
In a landmark victory for wildlife conservation, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officially announced today that the wood stork has been removed from the federal list of endangered and threatened ...
A black stork stands watch beside its nest while two fluffy chicks rest among the tangled sticks below. Hidden deep in the forest canopy, the parent stays alert, scanning the surroundings as the young ...
You can’t blame this one on the stork. After a brief baby bump early in the COVID-19 pandemic, birth rates in the US and other wealthy countries dropped as the public health emergency eased. That ...
Do you have a picture from paradise you’d like to share with Tropicalia readers? We’d love to print it. Email photos to [email protected]. Be sure to include your full name, where you took the ...