Millions of monarch butterflies travel to ancestral winter roosts in Mexico's shrinking mountain fir forests. They travel thousands of miles, taking directional cues from the sun.
Millions of monarch butterflies travel to ancestral winter roosts in Mexico's shrinking mountain fir forests. They travel thousands of miles, taking directional cues from the sun.
Trees don't precipitate out of air, do they? You may think not, but 95 percent of a tree is actually from carbon dioxide. What a beautiful notion, that from the dancing air comes these towering monarchs.
The relevancy of the monarchy is once again brought into question as the royal wedding looms. Reactions of Britons have ranged from unalloyed enthusiasm to slogans of abolition.
Trees don't precipitate out of air, do they? You may think not, but 95 percent of a tree is actually from carbon dioxide. What a beautiful notion, that from the dancing air comes these towering monarchs.
Incursions by loggers are eating into core butterfly roosting regions. Without an intact forest canopy the monarchs are left unpotected from freezing cold and excessive warmth.
The relevancy of the monarchy is once again brought into question as the royal wedding looms. Reactions of Britons have ranged from unalloyed enthusiasm to slogans of abolition.
The relevancy of the monarchy is once again brought into question as the royal wedding looms. Reactions of Britons have ranged from unalloyed enthusiasm to slogans of abolition.
The relevancy of the monarchy is once again brought into question as the royal wedding looms. Reactions of Britons have ranged from unalloyed enthusiasm to slogans of abolition.
The relevancy of the monarchy is once again brought into question as the royal wedding looms. Reactions of Britons have ranged from unalloyed enthusiasm to slogans of abolition.
The Queen has said she is willing to stand aside when she reaches 87, news which comes as a bombshell to monarchists who believed she would never abdicate, even though Charles is the longest-serving Prince of Wales ever.
Millions of monarch butterflies travel to ancestral winter roosts in Mexico's shrinking mountain fir forests. They travel thousands of miles, taking directional cues from the sun.