The sound of too much noiseThe Arctic narwhal is being threatened by a new enemy: the clamour of passing ships
Inside the murky, high-stakes investigation into New Brunswick’s mystery illnessAt least six people are dead. Dozens are sick. Are governments racing fast enough to find the answers needed to save lives?
John Streicker on rapid snowmelt and why he got into it up to his neckStreicker, climate scientist and the Yukon’s minister of energy, mines and resources, went neck-deep into freezing waters to show rising water levels.
Ts’eketi, the 100-year-old B.C. sturgeon that’s here to save her speciesDeep in British Columbia’s Nechako River, the eggs of one ancient mama fish might be among the last hope for these endangered sturgeon
Why I got the COVID vaccine during my pregnancySarah Boesveld: The alternative—gambling that you won’t catch COVID for those nine months—just seems much more terrifying to me
The wall lizard invasion of Vancouver IslandDecades ago, wall lizards from the Mediterranean got a toehold near Victoria. Now they’re island-hopping.
Harry Potter’s chocolate frog—but in real lifeMeet a recently identified tree frog with a Harry Potter spin
A look back at the never-ending nature of epidemicsThe more we learn about pathogens, the clearer it becomes that we’ll never escape them
‘Solarpunk’: The word of the monthThe term to add to your vocabulary this month is all about a utopian future
Bugs are people, tooCommon insects get the close-up treatment, revealing more depth than may be expected