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The “crazy worms” remaking forests aren’t your friendly neighborhood garden worms. Then again, those aren’t so great either.

Traveling the world to see microbes, plants, and animals in oceans, grasslands, forests, deserts, the icy poles—and wherever else they may be.
This work was commissioned, produced, and edited by The Atlantic's editorial staff. Support for this work was provided in part by the organizations listed here.
Life Up Close is a project of The Atlantic, supported by the HHMI Department of Science Education.

The “crazy worms” remaking forests aren’t your friendly neighborhood garden worms. Then again, those aren’t so great either.

Conservation has become a war, and park rangers and poachers are the soldiers.

Amber is helping scientists discover how the ancient world worked.

To change the fate of the kittiwake, scientists are trying to model its world.

To save Brazil’s giant anteaters, scientists are grappling with one of the planet’s most transformative forces: roads.

Scientists dreamed of genetically engineering a flower patterned in the Games’ blue-and-white checkerboard emblem.

In a warming ocean, Alexandrium algae are shredding marine food webs—and disrupting beloved Alaska traditions.

The opioid epidemic may be to blame for a rising incidence of illegal tree-felling.

Beneath the surface of one of Germany’s deepest lakes, researchers are studying the hidden effects of artificial light.

Fossils preserved in sap offer an astonishingly clear view of the distant past, but they come at a high price.