Articles by Alex Taylor - Page 34

  • Warmer Winters Shorten Raptor Migrations

    Many birds living in colder climes head south for the winter to avoid harsh weather conditions. Yet climate change is making winters warmer and as a result, some raptors are not travelling as far south as they used to.

    By Alex Taylor on 5th March 2014
  • A Paved Paradise

    One new study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B has made the surprising discovery that not all is lost when paradise is paved with concrete.

    By Alex Taylor on 26th February 2014
  • Save the Tiger, Move the People

    If resources are preferentially allocated to those who live in the most critical tiger habitats, this will leave these areas completely free of human disturbances and allow tigers to thrive.

    By Alex Taylor on 19th February 2014
  • Penguins Freeze as Planet Warms

    Penguin parents are arriving at the breeding season later and later in the year because the fish they eat are arriving later. But the later the chicks hatch, the more likely it is that they will still be covered in down feathers when the storms hit.

    By Alex Taylor on 12th February 2014
  • Conservation in Zoos is “Too Random”

    Zoos are the substance of continuous and contentious debate but would you conclude they are ‘too random’? Recent research thinks so…

    By Alex Taylor on 5th February 2014
  • Seashells Lost from the Sea Shore

    Have you ever taken away a shell as a souvenir of your trip? This activity is perceived as harmless, yet multiply this by millions of tourists and we have a global environmental problem on our hands.

    By Alex Taylor on 29th January 2014
  • Leatherbacks and Longlines

    One of the greatest threats to the survival of leatherback turtles is industrial longline fishing.

    By Alex Taylor on 22nd January 2014
  • Sahara Shocks

    The Sahara Desert is a spectacular place. Sahara is Arabic for “The Great Desert” and it truly is. It is the third largest after Antarctica and the Arctic and is the world’s hottest. At 9.4 million square kilometres (3.6 million square miles) it makes up 10% of the African continent.

    By Alex Taylor on 15th January 2014
  • Pika eat Moss to Survive Climate Change

    The pikas ingest the low quality moss over and over again and, with the help of microbes in their gut, the moss is turned into high-quality food. The end product is 6 times more nutritious than the moss itself.

    By Alex Taylor on 8th January 2014
  • Don’t Feed the Iguanas!

    Male and female iguanas on the tourist islands had higher uric acid levels, as a result of feeding on animal protein such as ground beef, provided by the tourists. Males had raised cholesterol concentrations, also as a result of meat in their diet.

    By Alex Taylor on 19th December 2013