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The North Texas Wildlife Center has taken in 2,500 animals so far this year — opossums, cottontail rabbits, birds and other ...
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Why these birds are causing trouble in a Texas neighborhoodA colony of federally protected birds has divided a North Texas neighborhood, sparking complaints, confusion, and even allegations of illegal shootings. "It is chaos. There is poop everywhere ...
A colony of federally protected birds has divided a North Texas neighborhood, sparking complaints, confusion, and even allegations of illegal shootings. "It is chaos. There is poop everywhere ...
North Texas has hundreds of bird species to identify. The Fort Worth Audubon Society has a seasonal checklist of common and rare bird species to spot, complete with data on which months the birds ...
North Texans fight mass extinction crisis in crowded urban landscape, saving native birds 04:35. CEDAR HILL — In the middle of Dallas County sits the Cedar Ridge Preserve, a green space larger ...
North Texans say they've been seeing more and more massive flocks of birds around DFW lately. It almost looks like a scene from the Alfred Hitchcock classic film, "The Birds," right?
Fort Worth, which has become another egret hotspot, recommends trimming trees before nesting season begins. It says thin tree canopies of 70% cover or less are less attractive nesting sites. In the ...
From baby opossums and skunks to turtles and birds, the home-based facility in East Plano has been a lifeline for wildlife.
The Central Texas area has not had a human case yet of the H5N1 virus. Nationally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified 66 cases of bird flu in people, including one death.
And though the mockingbird is a year-round species in Texas, it is on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife migratory bird species list. Instead, there are other ways to deter a screaming Northern Mockingbird.
About two billion birds fly through Texas in the spring – and lit-up buildings pose a deadly risk. A growing campaign seeks to save birds with darkness.
Sam Kieschnick, an urban wildlife biologist with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, said there are several reasons why birds do this, the first being that power lines offer a great vantage ...
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