Once endangered, wood storks have rebounded and been delisted, but shrinking wetland protections could threaten their ...
This wildlife filmmaking journey follows the patient search for rare black storks nesting high in a remote mountain forest.
For the first time in roughly six centuries, London’s skies may again carry the long, steady wings of the white stork. These large birds once lived alongside people, nesting on rooftops and feeding ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is removing the wood stork from the federal list of endangered and threatened wildlife.
After 11 years of surveying eagle nests from a helicopter, Georgia DNR's Bob Sargent issues a warning about development and ...
Despite the gloomy weather, about 140 of the season’s first storks arrived over the weekend at the Hula Lake Park. Their arrival marks the opening signal of the major spring migration.
The federal government is removing wood storks from the endangered species list. The marsh-dwelling bird can be found in ...
The wood stork will soon no longer be on the federal endangered species list. Some environmentalists say that's a bad thing.
Forty years ago, wood stork populations in Florida were plummeting. But federal and private efforts have made a dramatic difference, officials say.
A colony of wild wood storks raises chicks in trees over the exhibits at the Jacksonville Zoo. Provided by the Jacksonville Zoo and Botanical Gardens ...
The wood stork was once on the brink of extinction and now can be found in 13 counties across Georgia's coast and southern ...
The wood stork, which live and breeds in parts of southeast Georgia as well as other southeastern states, was first listed in ...