Farewell From Mr. Green Bob Schildgen takes a bow after 15 years as the consummate green sleuth By Bob Schildgen October 29, 2019 In this story:
Is It Time for a Ms. Green? Yes! Meet Sierra's new green lifestyle columnist, Jessian Choy. By Jessian Choy October 29, 2019 In this story: Ms. Green
All in a Day’s Work: Nigeria’s Center for Girls' Education in Photos CGE helps educate impoverished girls, building resilience in their communities By Wendy Becktold October 28, 2019 In this story: education, climate change, women's rights
Etinosa Yvonne Captures the Emotional Scars of Nigeria’s Conflicts “It’s All in My Head” draws attention to PTSD in a country where few discuss it By Wendy Becktold October 28, 2019 In this story: gender, population, photography
Yes, Reversing the Climate Crisis Can Be Profitable Investor Ibrahim AlHusseini talks clean energy initiatives By Katie O'Reilly October 27, 2019 In this story: clean energy
Don’t Get Tricked Into Passing Out Industrial Palm Oil This Halloween! Here's a bevy of animal-friendly classic treats By Katie O'Reilly October 26, 2019 In this story: food and drink
ICYMI: Roadkill Is the New California Cuisine A weekly news round-up for busy people By Heather Smith October 24, 2019 In this story: science, politics, climate change
Meet "Team Fat Bat"—Scientists Try to Save Victims of White-Nose Syndrome Happy Bat Week 2019 By Katie O'Reilly October 24, 2019
Cave Diver Jill Heinerth Swims Where None Have Swum Before Her new memoir, Into the Planet, takes readers along with her By Wendy Becktold October 23, 2019 In this story: photography
Exxon and Tar Sands Go on Trial in New York Climate Fraud Case New York's attorney general says Exxon misled investors By Nicholas Kusnetz October 22, 2019 In this story: oil, climate change
Where Baby Animals, Sisterhood, and Conservation Collide Wildlife photography is dominated by men. Suzi Eszterhas wants to change that. By Austyn Gaffney October 21, 2019 In this story: photography, animals
The Destruction Caused by the Border Wall Is Worse Than You Think Border Patrol agents tear though the Arizona desert By Adam Federman October 21, 2019 In this story: borderlands
One-Third of Our Food Supply Relies on a Very Sick Species: Honeybees "The Pollinators" highlights problems for the managed honeybee By Austyn Gaffney October 19, 2019 In this story: film, bees
ICYMI: Selfie-Taking Fern & Tool-Using Pigs A weekly news roundup for busy people By Heather Smith October 17, 2019 In this story: politics, animals, technology, science, federal climate policy
Climate Change Threatens Two-Thirds of North American Birds Audubon report details how rising temperatures will impact every bird species By Jason Daley October 17, 2019 In this story: birds, climate change
Warming Lakes Worldwide Could Mean More Toxic Algal Blooms A first-ever global survey of lakes links climate change to increased blooms By Jonathan Hahn October 16, 2019 In this story: climate change, water
Foxes in the Henhouse: Industry Veterans Fill the EPA Ethics groups warn that appointees may put industry ahead of public interest By E.A. Crunden October 15, 2019 In this story: EPA
In Praise of Seeds and Hope Excerpted from "Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the United States" By Winona LaDuke October 14, 2019 In this story: indigenous communities, food and drink
A Letter From the Yankton Sioux Territory A Native community suffers massive flooding, far from the eye of the media By Jacqueline Keeler October 14, 2019 In this story: indigenous communities, environmental justice
Few Hikers Do the Pacific Northwest Trail. Should It Stay That Way? Conservationists worry about impacts on the Yaak Valley and its grizzlies By Margaret Hedderman October 13, 2019 In this story: hiking, wildlife, wilderness