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A mom and child narrowly escaped two cassowaries in Australia on May 9, leading Australian officials to warn people not to ...
This unique behaviour had never been observed before, it’s also some of the first evidence for paternal care in the species.” ...
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Egg-laying mammal — feared locally extinct after wildfire — rediscovered in Australia - MSN“For decades, no one had seen an echidna on Lungtalanana Island,” WWF Australia said in a March 19 Facebook post. After a “devastating” wildfire in 2014, echidnas were feared locally extinct.
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
“For decades, no one had seen an echidna on Lungtalanana Island,” WWF Australia said in a March 19 Facebook post. After a “devastating” wildfire in 2014, echidnas were feared locally extinct.
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
“For decades, no one had seen an echidna on Lungtalanana Island,” WWF Australia said in a March 19 Facebook post. After a “devastating” wildfire in 2014, echidnas were feared locally extinct.
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Study estimates the cost of preventing extinction of Australia's priority species - MSNDr. Romola Stewart, a co-author and WWF-Australia's Head of Evaluation and Science, said the paper highlighted the true cost of ineffective nature laws and inadequate species funding.
A video shows a greater glider, “one of Australia’s most mysterious animals,” using its tail to grasp leaves in a “world-first” behavior. Photo from Ana Gracanin via WWF-Australia In a ...
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