Vue lecture

Florida Approves First Black Bear Hunt Since 2015

State wildlife officials say a regulated hunt is needed to manage the bear population. Opponents say the new rules will lead to trophy hunting.

© Luis Santana/The Tampa Bay Times, via Associated Press

Biologists weigh a black bear during a legal black bear hunt near Lake Mary, Fla., in 2015.
  •  

Florida Approves First Black Bear Hunt Since 2015

State wildlife officials say a regulated hunt is needed to manage the bear population. Opponents say the new rules will lead to trophy hunting.

© Luis Santana/The Tampa Bay Times, via Associated Press

Biologists weigh a black bear during a legal black bear hunt near Lake Mary, Fla., in 2015.
  •  

‘Alligator Alcatraz’ in the Florida Everglades Is Testing Environmental Law

Officials building a Florida detention center appear to be skipping environmental reviews made mandatory decades ago after a fight over an airport at the very same spot.

© National Archives

A planned airport in the Everglades would have been the world’s biggest, but only one runway was built and it was rarely used.
  •  

A New Border Wall in Arizona Would Block a Key Wildlife Corridor

The barrier, in a remote part of Arizona, would threaten one of the most important remaining animal migration routes on the state’s southern border, according to a new report.

© Sky Island Alliance

  •  

Tehran Is at Risk of Running Out of Water Within Weeks

After a five-year drought and decades of mismanagement, a water crisis is battering Iran.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

A billboard in Tehran encouraging water conservation.
  •  

New Global Atlas Highlights Surprising Hot Spots of Fungal Biodiversity

A new global atlas of underground fungi suggests that some surprising biodiversity hot spots lie hidden beneath our feet.

© Tomas Munita for The New York Times

Russula, a species of fungus, growing in the forest near Chile’s Alerce Costero National Park during a 2022 expedition surveying fungi by the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks.
  •  

North Carolina’s Bogs Have a Dirty Secret, and That’s a Good Thing

Peat bogs have huge potential to store planet-warming carbon. The ones in North Carolina just need some help to get healthy again.

Peat soil at Angola Bay Game Land in North Carolina.
  •