the Lengthy-Nosed Chilean Shrew Opossum

Digicam traps in Chile’s Valdivian Coastal Reserve and adjoining Alerce Costero Nationwide Park just lately documented a big enhance in websites the place the long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum—a marsupial largely unchanged for thousands and thousands of years—is understood to be current. The Gist The long-nosed shrew opossum (Rhyncholestes raphanarus) is the one surviving member of … Read more

To Save Pacific Turtles, Give attention to Small-Scale Fisheries

Longline fisheries are a well-recognized risk to sea turtles. However a brand new research finds that native, small-scale fisheries trigger considerably larger mortality, harvesting as much as 97% of the ~12,000 turtles killed every year within the Solomon Islands. The Gist Researchers estimate the size of turtle catches in two Solomon Islands fisheries: an area, … Read more

Bringing Beavers Back to Britain

This story is part of a series designed to introduce the perspectives of alumni from the The Nature Conservancy and National Geographic Society’s global youth externship program. Each guest author is an emerging leader in conservation and storytelling. The morning air feels cold along the river’s edge as I watch the fish in front of … Read more

Tracking Down the American Woodcock

Nearly all migratory birds migrate first, then nest once they arrive where they’re going. To do otherwise would be counter-intuitive, a process requiring a tremendous amount of energy all at once. But the American woodcock—a migratory shorebird found in the eastern United States—may do just that. Known as itinerant breeding, it’s a behavior so rare … Read more

Meet the Mysterious Long-Nosed Chilean Shrew Opossum

Yes, you read that right. In the forests of Chile’s Valdivian Coastal Reserve, there is a small mammal known, in English, as the “long-nosed Chilean shrew opossum.” In Spanish, it’s comadrejita trompuda, and to scientists, it’s Rhyncholestes raphanarus. In all languages, this fascinating relict marsupial is the last of its kind—the only known living member … Read more