
Hannah Hoag
Freelance Journalist at Freelance
Senior Producer, Health Science and Climate Unit at Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
Journalist climate, energy, enviro, Arctic + | ✍ Nature, bioGraphic Hakai, Globe & Mail + | Past @ConversationCA Arctic Deeply | @hannahhoag.bsky.social
Articles
-
Jan 15, 2025 |
everythingzoomer.com | Hannah Hoag
| January 15th, 2025As the planet warms up and natural disasters increase, here's how to protect your property — and your pocketbook — from climate-related devastation. Photo: Simone Wave/StocksyFlooding in Alberta. Wildfire smoke in Quebec. Record high temperatures in British Columbia. A catastrophic ice storm in Ontario and Quebec that left more than a million people without power.
-
Dec 5, 2024 |
geneticliteracyproject.org | Hannah Hoag
In early August 2023, a beekeeper near the port of Savannah, Georgia, noticed some odd activity around his hives. Something was hunting his honeybees. It was a flying insect bigger than a yellowjacket, mostly black with bright yellow legs. The creature would hover at the hive entrance, capture a honeybee in flight, and butcher it before darting off with the bee’s thorax, the meatiest bit.
-
Jul 24, 2024 |
bigthink.com | Hannah Hoag
In early August 2023, a beekeeper near the port of Savannah, Georgia, noticed some odd activity around his hives. Something was hunting his honeybees. It was a flying insect bigger than a yellowjacket, mostly black with bright yellow legs. The creature would hover at the hive entrance, capture a honeybee in flight and butcher it before darting off with the bee’s thorax, the meatiest bit.
-
May 25, 2024 |
arstechnica.com | Hannah Hoag
In early August 2023, a beekeeper near the port of Savannah, Georgia, noticed some odd activity around his hives. Something was hunting his honeybees. It was a flying insect bigger than a yellowjacket, mostly black with bright yellow legs. The creature would hover at the hive entrance, capture a honeybee in flight, and butcher it before darting off with the bee’s thorax, the meatiest bit.
-
May 22, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Hannah Hoag
This story was produced by Knowable Magazine. In August 2023, a beekeeper near the port of Savannah, Georgia, noticed that something odd was hunting his honeybees. Black with bright yellow legs, the flying insect would hover at the hive entrance, capture a flying honeybee and butcher it before darting off with the bee’s thorax, the meatiest bit.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →Coverage map
X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 3K
- Tweets
- 2K
- DMs Open
- No