As we walked the trail back to his car, he bent to touch a soft tuft of blue grama grass, a drought-resistant native. It’s ...
Colorado State University’s College of Liberal Arts hosted Anna L. Tsing, a professor of anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz Oct. 30. Tsing detailed her research on how people and ...
Continuous learning doesn't rebuild detections. It tunes existing logic based on verified outcomes. The foundation (trained models, correlation rules, policy frameworks) stays intact. Feedback ...
The study by Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS and Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia reveals that employees’ sense of responsibility and workplace spirituality, rather than formal policies, are the key ...
An invasive ant species native to East Asia has spread to every corner of North Carolina, and it can cause health and ...
Lidia Morawska, an internationally renowned expert in air quality and its impact on human health, has won Australia's most ...
Animals that disappeared from some rivers because of pollution, dams and overharvesting are getting a new lease on life that ...
Descendants of theme-park escapees, a population of rhesus macaques in a Florida state park may soon double in size—a recipe ...
Scott Crawford, Senior Permitting Manager at SEPA, explains what the changes are and what this means for waste management in Scotland.
New research reveals that early humans changed Europe’s landscapes long before farming began, using fire and hunting to alter ecosystems.
The unimpeded movement of species and natural processes supports life on Earth. That connectivity is vital for survival.