by Brendan Borrell • The swamps and subdivisions of southern Florida are overrun with invasive reptiles, including Burmese pythons and Nile monitor lizards. The only way to eliminate every last one of them is to follow the DNA trail they leave behind.
The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Catching Crabs in a Suffocating Sea
Will Exporting Farmed Totoaba Fix the Big Mess Pushing the World’s Most Endangered Porpoise to Extinction?
Whales in the Cliff Face
As African Penguins Go Hungry, a Debate Rages in South Africa: Who Gets the Fish?
Bonus Episode: The Social Lives of Octopuses
Kelp Gets on the Carbon-Credit Bandwagon
Rebroadcast: Training the Polar Bear Patrol
Holy Mackerel, Where’d You Go?
Can We Really Be Friends with an Octopus?
Oil Rigs Are a Refuge in a Dying Sea
A Key Tool for Cleaning Up Oil Spills Is More Hazardous Than Helpful
Bonus Episode: Deep-Sea Mining Demystified
Alaska’s Absent Snowy Owls
My Family’s Pacific Island Home Is Grappling with Deep-Sea Mining
Checkpoints, Machine Guns, and Fences: This Pakistani Port Is Not for the People
Rebroadcast: When Mountains Fall into the Sea
What Whale Barnacles Know
Rebroadcast: The Local-Carb Diet
Are We on the Verge of Chatting with Whales?
Stitching Hope
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