Fog advisory ends for Toronto
A fog advisory has been lifted for Toronto.
Environment Canada issued the fog advisory for the city at 7:15 a.m. on Sunday.
The advisory was lifted just before 10 a.m.
A fog advisory has been lifted for Toronto.
Environment Canada issued the fog advisory for the city at 7:15 a.m. on Sunday.
The advisory was lifted just before 10 a.m.
The Cabo San Lucas anglers were fishing for marlin when they spotted a deep-sea oarfish at the surface, being circled by sharks.
The former president's denial of climate change hit a new low in an interview with Fox News.
Did cameras finally spot the ocean’s most elusive monster?
A company has missed its deadline to remove thousands of tons of illegally dumped waste from a farm near Cultus Lake in B.C.'s Columbia Valley.The waste on a property on Iverson Road near the lake, about 100 kilometres east of Vancouver, was originally dropped off at the site over the course of several months in 2022 without provincial approval, violating B.C.'s Environmental Management Act.The waste — which contains large amounts of plastics, wood and other foreign materials that made it unsuit
The 83-year-old woman from South Carolina was flown by helicopter from the Lake Medical Clinic to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center.
The risk for thunderstorms spans much of Ontario on Wednesday, as a cold front slices through the high heat and humidity. Damaging wind gusts and heavy downpours could impact some of the risk areas
"We've seen people hurt by it," says Paul Hotte of Hotte Marine in Windsor-Essex, Ont.He's referring to a hidden pile of rocks in Lake St. Clair near the shoreline in the Tecumseh area of Russell Woods.Hotte and other residents are concerned they present a hazard to boaters and people on watercraft — adding they've been dealing with it for decades."People have been hitting them and never, ever did anybody do anything but mark them as a real hazard."The hazard markers are floating buoys that have
In the cabin of his fishing boat near Saint Andrews, Greg Beckerton points to a radar screen to show the spots where he has lost traps and other fishing gear.After more than three decades on the water, he knows how easy it is to lose gear, and how important it is to remove what is known as "ghost gear" from the Bay of Fundy.Beckerton is a member of the Fundy North Fishermen's Association and has volunteered to help on many of the 137 ghost gear retrieval operations in the past year."I'm quite am
CAMP HILL, Pa. (AP) — A young black bear took a dive from a tree Tuesday, landing in a giant tarp held aloft by a group of wildlife, public safety and rescue officials who tranquilized it after it roamed into a suburban Pennsylvania neighborhood.
The Weather Network's meteorologist Nicole Karkic has the details on the windy and wet weather today.
Wearing a toy whale hat, whale tie and a whale motif shirt, Hideki Tokoro spends much of his days thinking about the world’s largest mammals. But he doesn’t want to protect them. He wants to hunt them.
Wednesday will be a windy, rainy day for a good portion of the Prairies, continuing the unsettled trend seen since the start of the week
These adorable little fellows are among the nine Mexican wolf pups born at Chicago’s Brookfield Zoo in April. Seven of the cute critters - who will grow up to be rather more fearsome - were successfully placed into wild dens in New Mexico in May as part of the Mexican Wolf Recovery Programme aimed at bolstering the subspecies' population in the southwestern United States and Mexico. At just 10 days old, the pups - six males and one female - were carefully transported to New Mexico. During their journey, two animal care specialists and a veterinary technician from Brookfield Zoo ensured the pups were well-fed and kept warm. Upon arrival in New Mexico, members of the Mexican Wolf Interagency Field Team covered the pups with the scent of similarly aged wild pups to integrate them seamlessly into their new dens. Each pup was swabbed for DNA and given a studbook number before being placed back in the den. Biologists monitored the radio-collared mothers to ensure they accepted the zoo-born pups. This fostering process, which improves the genetic diversity of the wild population, marked a milestone this year with the 100th pup placed in the wild since fostering began in 2014. Two additional female pups from the same litter remain at Brookfield Zoo. The Mexican wolf, the rarest and most genetically distinct subspecies of grey wolf in North America, once numbered around 4,000 across central and northern Mexico and the southwestern U.S.
Rainfall totals continue to add up across the Prairies, as an unsettled pattern takes hold for this first week of June. The risk of thunderstorms persists into Tuesday, as well
The council says it is working to explore ways to tackle the litter in the area.
It's not all black and white between the five zebras that have called Forestry Farm Park and Zoo in Saskatoon their home for the past year.Zebra turf wars have led to two of them embarking on what the zoo calls "a new adventure" — which involves a move across the country.After being paired separately from the rest of the herd since last fall due to a medical issue, the two zebras — Koffee and LeeLoo, a gelding and a female — became a bonded pair, and they weren't horsing around.The zoo decided n
When extreme heat arrives, people can seek safety in air-conditioned buildings. Are wild animals doomed?
Truck load after truck load of waste is leaving a 1970s landfill site at Martin's Point in Gros Morne National Park this week. The remediation of the former dump is part of a federal project to clean up contaminated sites that are at risk to human health or the environment. "For Parks Canada, our idea is to provide a pristine environment for Canadians to come and visit and look at the sites. Its really important for us. That's was the main concern about this site," said Vincent Lussier, senior p
The rate Earth is warming hit an all-time high in 2023 with 92% of last year's surprising record-shattering heat caused by humans, top scientists calculated.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A black bear who had ventured into a Salt Lake City neighborhood from the nearby mountains took a 20-foot tumble from a tree Wednesday morning after it was tranquilized by wildlife officials, who were unable to provide it a soft landing.