Squirrel Monkey and Spotted Puffbird

Can mammals thrive near urban areas in the Neotropics?

February 11, 2021

Characterizing the community of a reclaimed tropical forest Squirrel Monkey. Museum ornithologist, Brian O’Shea, and Head of the Biodiversity Research Lab, Roland Kays and colleagues, have published research on the impact of urbanization on mammals in the Neotropics in the journal Tropical Ecology. Read the Article here Museum Ornithologist Brian O’Shea shares some additional information… Read More >


Nature Now! Cranefly Orchid

February 10, 2021

By Jerry Reynolds, Head of Outreach Cranefly Orchids on the winter forest floor. Spring is right around the corner, but there are still plenty of days to enjoy the winter forest landscape.  Now is a great time for a walk in the woods illuminated with full sunlight coming through the mostly leafless forest canopy. Of… Read More >


Museum ornithologist assists with Guyana fire and wildlife study

February 9, 2021

For thousands of years, humans have used fire as a management technique to promote species diversity and improve habitat for plants and animals. In the Rupununi savannas of southern Guyana, indigenous Makushi and Wapichan people set fires during the dry season, but little is known about the impacts of these fires on the region’s abundant… Read More >


Karutia fortunata life reconstruction

One in a million: Kammerer’s lucky break leads to new species discovery

February 4, 2021

“Paleontological discoveries come from a combination of dedicated planning, expertise, and good old-fashioned luck,” explains Dr. Christian Kammerer, the Museum’s research curator of paleontology. This was particularly true during a recent expedition to Brazil, when a timely flat tire led to his discovery of a new genus and species (Karutia fortunata) that also happens to… Read More >


Standing groundhog

About Groundhogs

February 1, 2021

By Lisa J. Gatens, Collection Manager, Mammalogy There’s something squirrely about groundhogs. They are squirrels, and sometimes exhibit squirrely behavior.  Groundhogs are the largest members of the Sciuridae, or the squirrel family. You are likely familiar with at least some other members of this family in North Carolina: the northern flying squirrel, southern flying squirrel,… Read More >