But Marc Brody, a National Geographic grantee who founded the ... but for an endangered species with fewer than 2,000 animals in the wild, every individual counts. Finally, with some coaxing ...
Scientists believe this rediscovery will be vital to protect the country's most degraded ecosystem, the southern Andes ...
Scientists have classified orcas as “data deficient” on conservation lists. These are the questions that keep them up at ...
You can take stunning images while birding, even with an entry-level camera. Here are our top picks, from basic workhorses to ...
which we’re featuring in this special issue on endangered wildlife. From National Geographic’s Photo Ark and Joel Sartore, Vanishing: The World’s Most Vulnerable Animals is available where ...
Read this story and more in the June 2018 issue of National Geographic magazine ... which lay bare the toll of plastic on wildlife, have become familiar: The dead albatross, its stomach bursting ...
Captive wild animal encounters are hugely popular ... This story appears in the June 2019 issue of National Geographic magazine. I’ve come back to check on a baby. Just after dusk I’m in ...
No trace of the wild South China tiger ... published by National Geographic Books. Joel Sartore has been photographing animals for his Photo Ark project for 13 years. In an ever growing number ...
Advances in technology are helping filmmakers fulfill their purpose: showing the world’s flora, fauna, and landscapes in more ...
You've heard "leave no trace" when hiking—here’s the science behind why it’s crucial to leave wild environments the way you found them.
After observing thousands of records over decades, researchers found that birds of a feather may actually stick together ...
This story appears in the October 2019 issue of National Geographic magazine ... scientists are taking extraordinary measures to save the animals they love. Playing the PartWhite-naped crane ...