Active-duty military personnel could return to patrol Big Bend National Park for the first time in nearly three decades, following a surge of troops sent to the border by President Donald Trump in January, during his first week in office.
Hikers shared a video that showed a long line forming at Big Bend National Park following Trumps slash of the National Park Service.
A new plant species, dubbed the "wooly devil," has been discovered in Big Bend National Park by park staff and confirmed by the California Academy of Science.
A new plant species called the Wooly Devil has been discovered at Big Bend National Park in Texas, the National Park Service announced Monday.The Wooly Devil, or Ovicula biradiata, was first spotted by botany volunteer Deb Manley and a park ranger in March 2024,
For the first time in nearly 30 years, active-duty military personnel could patrol Big Bend National Park. Talks between park leaders and the Department of Defense’s Northern Command are stirring concerns with locals and some onlookers.
Meet the wooly devil, a newly discovered plant that was found in Big Bend National Park in Texas in 2024. But it's not just a new species of plant. It's an entirely new genus of daisy not previously documented.
A new plant species, Ovicula biradiata, also known as "Wooly Devil," was discovered in Big Bend National Park, marking a new genus in the Daisy family.
A new fuzzy plant species called the "Wooly Devil" has been discovered amongst the arid landscapes of Big Bend National Park in Texas.
A new plant species discovered at Big Bend National Park last year has a name. It's affectionately known as the "wooly devil."
Spanning 801,165 acres and featuring a mix of riparian ecosystems, desert bajadas, and sky island woodlands, Big Bend National Park is a biodiversity treasure. Other cool finds here recently include the fossil of a new duck-billed dinosaur species ( Malefica deckerti) and the rediscovery of an oak ( Quercus tardifolia) once thought extinct.
The small plant, officially named “Ovicula biradiata" and more affectionately called “wooly devil,” was first spotted in March 2024, sprinkled among
Two park employees in Big Bend National Park encountered a tiny plant that they did not recognize. After further examination, it was revealed that