The Cost of Preventing Extinction of Australia's Priority Species Feb. 3, 2025 — A new study has estimated it would cost $15.6 billion per year for 30 years to prevent extinction for 99 of ...
New research has identified the extent to which human colonisation and hunting contributed to the extinction of New Zealand's giant flightless bird, the moa. Crested Moa. Pachyornis australis. From ...
Crocodiles, monkeys, tigers, zebras and dozens of other taxidermy animals will move to new homes after concerns about arsenic exposure forced the closure of the South Dakota museum where they had ...
Three other teeth would have once belonged to a mosasaurus, an extinct aquatic lizard with a long snout. The remaining five teeth were thought to belong to a dyrosaurus, an ancestor of the crocodile.
Are humans the only species to drive another to extinction? Tom Ruppel | Dixon, California Human activities are the most prominent cause of species extinction today, but not the only one.
White tailed eagles were a common sighting in the UK up until the 18th century, where they were overhunted to extinction. Wildlife Trusts are now working to restore their population, but seeing ...