- Inventory and Monitoring Division (6)
- Natural Sounds and Night Skies Division (6)
- National Center for Preservation Technology and Training (3)
- Urban Ecology Research Learning Alliance (3)
- Climate Change Response Program (2)
- Office of International Affairs (2)
- Schoodic Education and Research Center (2)
- Upper Columbia Basin Inventory & Monitoring Network (2)
- Air Resources Division (1)
- Show More ...
Showing 221 results for ps v38 n2 ...
Jose Sarria
- Type: Person
![Jose Sarria thumbnail image](/common/uploads/cropped_image/D444650C-AFE6-CE88-CCCAB733B0FC64EF.jpeg)
Military history, LGBTQ+ culture, immigrant stories, and much more make up GGNRA's roots. For José Sarria, a LGBTQ+ activist in San Francisco, all the above apply. Born in the Bay Area to a single mother from Colombia, Sarria became the first openly gay, public figure. He ran for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1961.
Visitors to Grand Teton National Park Prefer Red LED Lights at Night
Applying Common Language to Create Seafloor Maps at Acadia
One Way to See the Future of Alaska’s Unparalleled Forests: Look at Their Past
Why Years of Bat Population Data Got a High-Tech Upgrade
- Type: Article
![Pollinators in peril? A multipark approach to evaluating bee communities in habitats vulnerable to effects from climate change thumbnail image](/common/uploads/articles/images/nri/20210621/articles/E83FF704-0673-64BE-A8871751F6118493/E83FF704-0673-64BE-A8871751F6118493.jpg?maxwidth=200&quality=90)
Can you name five bees in your park? Ten? Twenty? Will they all be there 50 years from now? We know that pollinators are key to maintaining healthy ecosystems—from managed almond orchards to wild mountain meadows. We have heard about dramatic population declines of the agricultural workhorse, the honey bee. Yet what do we really know about the remarkable diversity and resilience of native bees in our national parks?
The Great Video Reveal: Emerging Tech Tracks What Caribou Do
A New Way to Gauge Risk of Toxic Blooms in a National Park
Joseph Allyne
- Type: Person
Joseph Allyne support the abolitionist movement through his contributions to and participation in the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, the Boston Free Soil Club, and the Boston Vigilance Committee of 1850.