Hundreds of native Connecticut species including birds, fish, and mammals are listed among those with the greatest conservation need, according to the newly released 2025 Connecticut Wildlife Action ...
With the state’s recent acquisition of 643 acres of wildlife management area in Killingly, officials said that Connecticut now has approximately 135,000 total acres of state-owned wildlife management ...
A quiet stream in northwest Connecticut, hidden beneath a forest canopy and shielded from development, holds more than scenic charm. In these protected waters—part of a watershed that ultimately ...
Raptor rehabilitators in Connecticut say some young birds are succumbing to the bitter cold, and Sunday's snowstorm brings ...
Our region acts as a stopover for many birds that travel along the Atlantic Flyway. A new documentary takes a closer look at that migratory path. Flyway of Life will premiere at the SHU Community ...
The state’s largest wildlife refuge is about to get a little bigger. The Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge is in the process of purchasing an additional 21.15 acre lot in Westbrook, ...
More than a quarter of Connecticut's plant and wildlife species need more conservation research due to declining populations, threats, cultural importance or lack of data. That's according to the ...
A compromise to limit the use of a controversial rat poison has environmentalists criticizing a new Connecticut law. Wildlife advocates say second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides, or SGAR, which ...