A new study tracked nine rescued slow lorises in Bangladesh and found that seven of them died within months of release.
When people talk about saving wildlife, they often focus on numbers. Conversations center on how many deer live in a forest, ...
Explore keystone species, extinction, and wildlife crime and learn how you can help preserve biodiversity through World ...
European Wildlife on MSN
Wildlife patterns revealed after two weeks
I left my camera trap in the forest for 14 days without checking it. During that time, different animals passed through this ...
Solar eclipses are among nature’s most unusual and dramatic events. The Moon casts a shadow on the Earth that changes the ...
Wildlife videos rack up views and praise online, but real-world conservation action lags—this study explains why and how to close the gap ...
Art typically seems like a human activity, tied to culture, symbols, and personal expression. Yet a small group of animals has created paintings and designs that sold for surprising sums. Their work ...
From tracking leopards in Nagarhole to chasing birds at Bharatpur, two acclaimed photographers reveal the patience, gear and ethics behind capturing the wild ...
Releasing rescued slow lorises back into the wild may sound heroic, but most don’t survive. In one study, seven out of nine were killed—largely by other lorises defending their territory.
Fast-moving animals process visual information at higher speeds, reshaping how they hunt, escape predators, and experience ...
Amravati: In an extraordinary and rare wildlife development, researchers at the Melghat Tiger Reserve have documented a ...
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