The biofuel belt keeps creeping across the US – and it's wildlife that loses...
Conservationists warn of an impending disaster for habitats already severely marginalised by agricultural change Continue reading...
View ArticleAppetite for caviar could see paddlefish suffer sturgeon's fate | Emma Bryce
As beluga sturgeon become scarce, illicit traders are turning increasingly to the paddlefish as a substitute Continue reading...
View ArticleWildlife forced out of California 'salad bowl' by food safety regulations |...
Superfluous food standards imposed by corporate buyers on Salinas Valley 'are degrading habitat and displacing wildlife' Continue reading...
View ArticleUS gets a taste for lion burgers | Emma Bryce
Lion burgers sold in America are nothing more than a gimmick, but there's no telling how the fad might impact wild cats Continue reading...
View ArticleSmall and wild: how to feed fish to the world | Emma Bryce
A new book argues small, wild fish are the key to restoring the oceans and fighting world hunger - and warns of the perils of prawns too Continue reading...
View ArticleWhy bananas are giving caimans bad blood
New research finds pesticides in spectacled caiman blood, exposing the impact of heavily sprayed plantations Continue reading...
View ArticleCooking can't solve the threat of invasive species | Emma Bryce
Hunt, baste, and fry lionfish all you want, but we can’t eat every destructive species to deathContinue reading...
View ArticleIs it time to bring back bushmeat?
As Ebola slowly retreats from West Africa, some are calling for a revival of the bushmeat trade, which was blamed for triggering the deadly outbreak.Continue reading...
View ArticleIllegal eel: black market continues to taint Europe's eel fishery
In the first post of a short series, I take a look at the European eel fishery, which is beset by illegal trade as European eel becomes a prized commodity in AsiaContinue reading...
View ArticleAmazon’s pink river dolphins reveal the bizarre impacts of seafood fraud
In recent years numbers of South America’s freshwater dolpins have fallen. But they’re not being caught to eat, but as bait for a common catfish being fraudulently sold under a different nameContinue...
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