-
A juvenile bald eagle is being treated at a Bend wildlife hospital for severe lead poisoning.
-
An insider at Oregon's Department of Fish and Wildlife has been named the agency's next leader.
-
On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear two similar cases challenging the monument's expansion.
-
Scientists are studying odd, pickle-shaped sea creatures they found off the coasts of Oregon and Washington. They’re known as pyrosomes.
-
Spring Whale Watch week kicks off Saturday along the Oregon coast. While the weather won’t be ideal, there may be more gray whales migrating north to Alaska.
-
During the recent stretch of nice weather in the Willamette Valley, regional fire crews have been dispatched to several grass and brush fires. Now fire officials are urging everyone to practice fire safety.
-
On this edition of Oregon on the Record, you’ll hear from a scientist, Dylan Gomes, who authored a study while at Oregon State University which shows that due to heat waves the Pacific Ocean food web is being disrupted. Due to warmer temperatures, new organisms have moved in and crowded out key species at the bottom of the food web.
-
The Eugene Water and Electric Board drained the Walterville Canal east of Springfield late last month to look into why there was a spike in water seeping out of it. EWEB says the waterway is likely to remain empty into the summer.
-
Climate change and warmer rivers may have allowed the pathogen to thrive.
-
The Biden administration has announced new changes are on the table for protecting the unique bird that thrives in Eastern Oregon and other western states.
-
Despite the warm spell, Oregonians west of the Cascades should keep their rain jackets and sweaters handy as cooler weather moves in from the coast starting Wednesday.
-
The effects of the invasive quagga mussel, which only grows to the size of a thumbnail, extend beyond the natural ecology and into the built environment. Removing and keeping clusters of the mussels out of pipes could cost the state billions.