Plus, a big water cut for 40 million Americans
| PHOTOGRAPH BY ROBB KENDRICK, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
| | When the Tasmanian tiger went extinct in the 1930s, the southeastern Australian island lost an apex predator that kept its ecosystem in check. Today, scientists announced a new plan to combine the DNA of that species with that of living relatives—and make it “de-extinct.” The Australian marsupial, also known as the thylacine (a taxidermic version pictured above), was called the Tasmanian tiger for the distinctive stripes along its lower back. It looked like a slim dog with a stiff, thin tail. Advocates say developing its revival would help create genetic engineering tools and artificial wombs to help with other species. But can scientists re-create extinct species in a lab? If so, what are the effects of letting the lab-produced animals loose in nature?
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| VIDEO BY SHWETA GULATI | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY RJ SANGOSTI, MEDIANEWS GROUP/THE DENVER POST/GETTY IMAGES | | Slowing the spigot: Officials says they have been gambling for over a decade by diverting water from the dwindling Colorado River to 40 million people in the U.S. southwest. They were hoping for replenishment that never came. Now, seven states are expected to agree to cut a quarter of the water they draw from the 1,450-mile river, Alejandra Borunda reports. (Pictured above, a coyote heading to take a drink from a Colorado River-filled canal in Phoenix.)
Related: How the giant energy and climate bill will change America | | | |
| Growing again: Years after huge wildfires at Grand Teton National Park, lupine roots (pictured above) are growing again. Research assistant Robbie Heumann collects roots and other plant specimens to determine how forest ecosystems respond after wildfires. This image, posted on our Instagram page, was captured during an assignment on the future of forests for May’s issue of National Geographic.
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| Pay attention to problems on the fringe, and if you want to help, sometimes go there. | | | Clare Fieseler | Marine ecologist, photojournalist, Nat Geo Explorer | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY HELMUT CORNELI, ALAMY | | Protected: This island has more protected historical sites per square mile (both underwater and on land) than anywhere else in the Caribbean. And St. Eustatius (or Statia, to the 3,500 people who live here), is one of the best diving destinations in the region—and is taking pains to maintain the island’s natural beauty, Nat Geo reports. “Once people get a taste for nature, they always come back for more,” says Celford Gibbs, one of only three local guides on the island. (Pictured above, a scuba diver swims near a cannon on the seafloor off the island.)
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