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The persistent presence of humans and their infrastructure in U.S. national parks has yielded dramatic changes in the behaviors of large animals who live there, a new study has found.
El Mundo on MSN17h
From the boldness of the black bear to the caution of the puma: how animal behavior changed due to the pandemic
A study that tracked the movements of wildlife in 14 national parks in the US before, during, and after the lockdown using ...
Yellowstone experts debunk viral claims of animals fleeing park due to a volcanic threat. The USGS and park rangers warn ...
Aspen trees are thriving again in Yellowstone for the first time in 80 years, thanks to wolves reintroduced in the 1990s that helped control elk herds.
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