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Nature

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Nature

Increasing numbers of stork are staying put in European cities rather than heading south for the winter

Is this the end of migration?

Climate change is affecting bird behaviour at a staggering rate. Some 20 billion have already changed their flight plans

Inside Nature

Botanists seek help in tree count

Saturday, 17 April 2010

The first ever census of cherry trees in the UK is being undertaken to map where they grow and when they flower, the Natural History Museum said yesterday.

Animal rights activists lose battle to ban badger cull

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Court rules animals can be killed in Wales in bid to prevent spread of bovine TB

Judge upholds badger cull plan to tackle TB

Friday, 16 April 2010

Controversial plans to carry out a mass cull of badgers as part of efforts to control bovine TB in Wales were upheld today.

Couple's endangered species trade

Friday, 16 April 2010

A couple who ran a pet shop turned their hand to illegal trading in the skins and bones of some of the most endangered species in the world.

The Asian hornet, now present in France, massacres honeybees

Asian hornet on the way to prey on honeybees

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Invasion of predators across Channel threatens massacre of bee colonies

Volcanic ash 'could take 36 hours to cross UK'

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Volcanic ash from the eruption in Iceland could take between 24 and 36 hours to drift across the UK - if there is no more volcanic activity, weather forecasters said today.

Scientists believe that other tadpoles may produce sound

Tadpoles scream when threatened by cannibals

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Some might think it's up there with the flying pig and the killer rabbit, in the list of improbable animals – the screaming tadpole. But it's real.

In some areas of the Great Barrier Reef 'all marine life has been completely flattened'

Great Barrier Reef could take 20 years to recover from grounding

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

A coal carrier, which ran aground and leaked oil on the Great Barrier Reef, cut a two-mile-long scar into the shoal and may have smeared paint which will prevent marine life from growing back.

The 25-year-old bird has produced 56 eggs in her lifetime

Veteran osprey lays her first egg of 2010

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Britain's oldest breeding female osprey has produced her first egg of the season, wildlife experts confirmed yesterday.

Reef may take twenty years to recover from damage

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

A coal carrier which ran aground and leaked about three tons of oil on Australia's Great Barrier Reef completely pulverised parts of a shoal and caused damage so severe it could take marine life 20 years to recover, the reef's chief scientist said today.

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