From kudzu to emerald ash borers, invasive species threaten local ecosystems. Here is how you can help stop them.
A species of moth that was first described in 1818 was believed to be a single species. However, it has since been discovered that it is actually a complex of species, eight of which are found in ...
North Carolina's blueberry farmers may have a beetle problem. A new study from North Carolina State University has identified ...
Washington state’s annual search for over 130 invasive insects, weeds and plant pathogens has begun. Employees with the state ...
Found in the Amazon, Pantanal, and Atlantic Forest, they were distinguished from what was previously known as a single ...
Texas is home to multiple species of rattlesnakes, all identifiable by the characteristic rattle on their tails. The western ...
Kolkata: In a significant breakthrough for Indian entomology, researchers at the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) have ...
Louisiana may have its own synchronous firefly — the kind people enter a Tennessee lottery to see. Nobody's confirmed it yet.
Seasonal WSDA staff are trekking across the state to set traps as part of the agency’s annual search for invasive species.
Caves have long been a refuge. But climate change could pose an existential threat to cave crickets and other cave dwellers.
Not all bats are risky. New research finds specific bat families and habitats are most linked to future epidemic outbreaks.