The resilience of the elusive vaquita
Nature’s enduring mysteries buoy efforts to save the most endangered marine mammal on Earth.
Sam the Toucan, capybaras over coffee, Vellela vellela and a mechanical rhino
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
Controversial gas pipeline across Navajo Nation to begin
The pipeline would eventually cross 234 miles of tribal land. The hearing initiating the project caught community members off guard.
The plight of the pinecone cowboy
The future of Western forests depends on professional pinecone collectors. They’re slowly being starved out of existence.
The dark legacy of the atomic age is still playing out in New Mexico
‘We were a sacrifice zone.’
The Earth loves in species
With the Earth under attack, love will see us through.
Nukes and AI require 1.4 million gallons of water a day at New Mexico lab
In a state that’s already short on the resource, Los Alamos National Laboratory expects to double water use.
Wildfires are torching state budgets
Oregon allocated $10 million for the 2024 wildfire season. It cost more than $350 million.
As Roadless Rule rollback looms, grassroots hearings take root
In absence of federal meetings, nonprofits step up to hold public comment on Forest Service plan to lift protections from roadless areas.
Emergency plans for the Colorado River buy time, not solutions
The federal government ordered Flaming Gorge water released and cuts to Lake Powell releases, to prevent collapse.
The ramifications of record-shattering heat on the West’s ecosystems
‘It was the worst possible way to end the winter that was already worse than normal.’
‘Just noticing birds improves your health’
#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.
How New Mexico is ‘building a forest’ by solving a seedling shortage
A Q&A with the New Mexico Reforestation Center director about what it takes to replant a burn scar post-wildfire.
Wildfires transform soil, turning a nutrient into poisonous chromium-6
New research shows how severe blazes create a carcinogen and how long it might persist.
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In This Issue
May 2026: Pinecone Cowboys
This May, we meet pinecone cowboys, toxic newts and New Mexico’s Trinity Site downwinders. With giant sequoias threatened by drought, wildfires and climate change, professional tree-climbers make a precarious living harvesting cones for planting and reforestation. In New Mexico, local residents still deal with the…
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Water
The West’s snow drought meant record dryness — but also record flooding
A new era of industrial logging looms
Public lands need less extraction and more rewilding
Wildlife
Why mycorrhizal fungi networks need more protection
How I learned to stop worrying and love flies
The Trump administration sent Greater Yellowstone into chaos. What’s next?
Public Lands
Interior Department crafted talking points for public lands sell-off agenda
‘Energy dominance’ agenda sidelines tribes
Tribal leaders reflect on a year of uncertainty — and possibility
Indigenous Affairs
War, climate change and AI are at stake at the 2026 UN Indigenous forum
The public got one week to comment on Chaco Canyon drilling. It’s almost over
Bureau of Indian Affairs could face reorganization, deeper staff cuts
Communities
Border wall blasting hits a treasured New Mexico mountain
New nuclear safety rules reduce protections for workers, the public
Congress contemplates sweeping investigation of Native boarding schools
Books
What can we learn from salt lakes?
Badger signs: An essay from Terry Tempest Williams’ new book ‘The Glorians’
Three books explore deep time and help us look forward
In the News
Who owns the West?
Increasingly, land is shifting into the hands of billionaires.
