In the slow-moving canals and shadowy marshes of the Florida Everglades live some of the most dangerous creatures. You ...
A slimy air-breathing eel that can live out of water for months at a time is slithering our way. Biologists fear the Asian swamp eel could wipe out countless small native Florida fish and ...
Sciencing on MSN
The big reason scientists are electrocuting America's lakes
Scientists have begun running electricity through lakes, doing so to save America's natural environments, and ending up with ...
In the canals, marshes, and swamps of the Florida Everglades, invasive fish are silently slipping into new waterways. Among them are the Asian swamp eel and the bullseye snakehead, two air-breathing ...
FLORIDA, USA — Multiple agencies are urging Floridians to report sightings of an invasive Asian swamp eel species. In a news release shared with First Coast News on Wednesday, the University of ...
Scientists with the University of Florida and the U.S. Geological Survey are asking for the public’s help in spotting invasive swamp eels. The slimy, air-breathing eels were first found in Florida in ...
WINTER PARK, Fla. — The invasive Asian swamp eel has been discovered in Central Florida, raising concerns about potential impacts on local ecosystems. These eels, which can grow up to three feet long ...
Taylor Slough, a deep marshy river that channels water through the Florida Everglades, once teemed with crayfish and small fish, and was ripe for the picking for nesting wading birds feeding their ...
Water in parts of the United States is being shocked on purpose. Not for spectacle, and not to remove rubbish, but to count ...
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