The planet has seen a number of devastating fires in recent years. From California to Canada, Thailand, and Algeria, no part ...
Platypuses are weird looking. They look like someone stitched together a duck and a beaver—flat bill, webbed feet, and a ...
Despite its widespread biodiversity, Australia holds an unenviable record when it comes to wildlife: the highest mammalian ...
The Wild Benches of Hope, a public art series of three bronze benches highlighting endangered animals is now on display at ...
Researchers say the remarkable discovery was made using fossils, photos and a misidentified museum specimen ...
As we move through the world, we leave behind invisible traces of ourselves encased in the hair, skin, and other bodily ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
Rare animals sighted in first ever camera survey of Truwana
Wildlife cameras have captured rare shots of blonde echidnas, tiny marsupials, and threatened seabirds on a small island off Tasmania's north coast.
Conservationists saved the fuzzy creatures in Victoria, Australia. Now, the animals are showing remarkable signs of genetic recovery ...
When people think about deadly Australian animals, their minds usually race straight to venomous spiders, aggressive sharks, or those notoriously lethal snakes. The internet loves sharing terrifying ...
Almost $1 million in grants for groups caring for Western Australia's pets and wildlife33 State-wide recipients to receive funding to help look after ...
We discuss the 10 most venomous animals on Earth. Read all about them, from the rockfish to the most venomous of all, the Inland Taipan Snake.
The first camera survey ever conducted on Truwana/Cape Barren Island off Tasmania has recorded two rarely seen animals—white-footed dunnarts and blonde echidnas. A vulnerable shorebird—the Latham's ...
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