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New Articles
Can an ant be employee of the month? 11/20/2008

New life beneath sea and ice 11/19/2008

Fish choose their leaders by consensus 11/18/2008

Mysterious microbe may play important role in ocean ecology 11/14/2008

Fiddler crabs reveal honesty is not always the best policy 11/13/2008

Study doubles species diversity of enigmatic 'flying lemurs' 11/12/2008

Limb loss in lizards - evidence for rapid evolution 11/11/2008

Scientists announce major progress towards historic Census of Marine Life in 2010 11/11/2008

Zoologists: Sea snakes seek out freshwater to slake thirst 11/10/2008

Turtles alter nesting dates due to temperature change says ISU researcher 11/9/2008

Coral reefs found growing in cold, deep ocean 11/8/2008

Extreme weather postpones the flowering time of plants 11/7/2008

Red-eyed treefrog embryos actively avoid asphyxiation inside their eggs 11/6/2008

Being unique has advantages: 'Rareness' key to some insects being favored by evolution 11/5/2008

Newly identified fungus implicated in white-nose syndrome in bats 11/4/2008

All Articles Tagged As: wolves


Wolves show scientists are barking up the wrong tree (9/25/2008)

Wolves show scientists are barking up the wrong treeWolves raised by people are at least as good as - and perhaps better than - dogs at following human signals. ...> Full Article


Are wolves the pronghorn's best friend? (3/4/2008)

Are wolves the pronghorn's best friend?As western states debate removing the gray wolf from protection under the Endangered Species Act, a new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society cautions that doing so may result in an unintended decline in another species: the pronghorn, a uniquely North American animal that resembles an African antelope. ...> Full Article


Captive carnivores not up to wild living (1/23/2008)

Captive carnivores not up to wild livingA study by the University of Exeter has highlighted the problems of reintroducing animals to the wild for conservation projects. Published online in the journal Biological Conservation, the research highlights the low survival rates of captive carnivores that are released into their natural habitats. On average only one in three captive-born carnivores survives in the wild, with most deaths related to human activities. ...> Full Article

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