Search our collection of background (non-event) articles from news media, science journals and other sources.
From African waters to China and back again, over half the fish on Nigerian tables is imported
The drought has had damaging economic and ecological impacts.
Two summers ago, federal scientists discovered something shocking: The Northern Bering Sea was teeming with cod and pollock. Those two commercially valuable species had never been found in such large huge numbers that far north.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch covers an area twice the size of Texas or three times the size of France.
In a paper published Wednesday, researchers theorize the die-off is at least partially attributable to the changing climate.
A melting Arctic may be confounding the jet stream and making trouble for everyone.
The Central Council of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska has a climate change adaptation plan. It wants the region to be included in the climate change discussion.
In the Eureka Sound Lowlands on Ellesmere and Axel Heiberg islands, the permafrost is more than half a kilometre deep, and the average air temperature is –19.7 C. But higher summer temperatures have caused the earth to collapse.
Researchers are trying to determine the cause of a gray whale die-off along the West Coast, including Alaska. And they're looking at whether recent warming trends in the Arctic, and reduced sea ice, has affected their prey.
Sargassum is infesting Mexico’s coastline. Researchers are scrambling to stop an ecological crisis, and maybe even make something good of it.
King salmon fishing in Alaska is political — but for those who can’t do it this summer, it’s also personal.
Officials in the Yukon's most northern community have declared a state of emergency, saying the traditional way of life in Old Crow is under threat.
Worms are wriggling into Earth’s northernmost forests, creating major unknowns for climate-change models.
A high of nearly 27 degrees Celsius in Ylivieska on the west coast was said to be unusual at this time of year.
The plan is a broad vision for what the municipality wants Anchorage to look like in 2050, with a focus on dramatically reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
A female adult Southern resident killer whale and her three-and-a-half-year-old calf are rapidly declining in health in what appears to be a troubling situation for the creatures.
Ocean scientists are concerned about dead gray whales that have washed up on the US West Coast this year at the highest rate in almost two decades.
The die off of Western Red Cedar trees on East Vancouver Island due to drought and severe weather has First Nations extremely worried. Cedar is a critical part of first nations culture and as Skye Ryan reports, there is growing concern the dying trees will have a ripple down effect.
'There's nothing good about them.' They carry disease and cause billions in damage
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply