Living about 4,000 miles east from the epicenter of the quake, the dwindling school of Devil’s Hole pupfish in Death Valley National Park were rattled once again after reaching a near all-time low ...
When endangered species reach low numbers, their survival can depend on whether or not they have new habitats to live in, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. On July 29, the Kamchatka Peninsula in eastern Russia experienced one of the 10 most powerful earthquakes since 1900. Buildings ...
Devils Hole pupfish are pictured. The rare and endangered fish live in a protected 500-foot limestone cavern in Death Valley National Park. Olin Feuerbacher National Park Service A Death Valley ...
Even with more than 4,000 miles of distance, a fickle Nevada fish population finds itself shook up after a powerful 8.8-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Russia. The relatively sequestered Devils ...
AMARGOSA VALLEY (KTNV) — The 8.8 magnitude earthquake in Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula on July 29 was felt nearly 4,000 miles away by tiny residents in Death Valley, according to the National Park ...
(via PBS Terra) With under 40 pupfish left in the wild, these are possibly the rarest fish on the planet. The Devils Hole pupfish have existed in isolation for thousands of years in an extreme ...
Death Valley's Devils Hole pupfish, an inch-long marvel, survives extreme heat and low oxygen in a tiny Nevada cavern. These fish, isolated for millennia, face constant threats from environmental ...