NANAIMO — Island Health and the BC Centre for Disease Control are warning anyone who's eaten herring eggs recently to stay hydrated and safely dispose of any remaining eggs.
More than 658,000 reindeer are up for vaccination in order to prevent another outbreak of the deadly bacteria infection.
After admitting a sick ringed seal from Unalaska, veterinarians at the Alaska SeaLife Center are cautiously optimistic about his chances for recovery.
The Air Force is trying to better understand the erosion bearing down on its valuable radar sites.
Researchers from the Universities of Bremen and Innsbruck have shown in a recent study that the further melting of glaciers cannot be prevented in the current century—even if all emissions were curtailed. However, due to the slow reaction of glaciers to climate change, human activity will have a massive impact beyond the 21st century. In the long run, 500 meters by car with a mid-range vehicle will cost one kilogram of glacier ice. The study has now been published in Nature Climate Change.
A rare sighting of an elusive wetland species.
Sea ice around Helsinki becomes more precarious as spring draws near.
People in southern Labrador and along Newfoundland's Northern Peninsula are being cautioned to be on the lookout for the bears, who have already begun to move north.
Many residents of Ulan Bator, Mongolia, use coal-burning stoves during the winter months when staying warm is a matter of survival. But the pollution is hazardous to their health.
Warming temperatures have caused large stones to break off the cliff at Reynisfjara beach, South Iceland.
Considerable danger of avalanches in East Iceland has led to evacuations in the town of Seyðisfjörður.
The Kuskokwim River now has its longest ice road ever, despite having the warmest winter on record.
Rising ocean levels are causing waves to break on the statues and platforms built a thousand years ago. The island risks losing its cultural heritage. Again.
Above normal than average seal strandings in the Aleutians.
While the northeastern is recovering from the third major winter storm this month, the Arctic is experiencing one of the warmest winters on record.
Opalescents, also known as market squid, are showing up in waters previously considered too cold for them, and fishermen are paying attention.
Fishing businesses in Mat-Su warned that the rules could hurt the state's tourism economy.
Citizen science programs integral to supporting coastal research
Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River water levels are expected to stay above average into the spring, following record levels last year that led to extreme flooding in Central Canada.
Morris Animal Foundation-funded researchers uncovered several key factors contributing to a die-off of South American fur seal pups, including mites, pneumonia and sea surface temperature. The findings, published in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases, help scientists better understand the link between environmental factors and health.
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply