News

They blend into their surroundings to avoid being hunted down, communicate, temperature control, and even mating displays.
High in northern Peru, three frogs no bigger than a thumbprint have stepped out of anonymity and into the scientific ...
Dodging fire-ants, snakes and millions of nighttime creepy-crawlies, a group of trekkers advances through the humid Bornean ...
The red-eyed tree frog, also known as the gaudy leaf frog or Agalychnis callidryas, is a tree-dwelling hylid frog native to ...
Kilimanjaro. A surprising splash of life startled a team of trekkers navigating the alpine heights of Mount Kilimanjaro.At an elevation of 3,960 metres above sea level—where icy winds lash and the ...
Kilimanjaro. A surprising splash of life startled a team of trekkers navigating the alpine heights of Mount Kilimanjaro.At an elevation of 3,960 metres above sea level—where icy winds lash and the ...
Niabi is one of 39 zoos across the country that's part of the Wildlife Confiscations Network, which houses animals taken at ...
Take a look at this extraordinary sea creature ambushing some prey - but is it a fish or a frog? Read on to find out.
The summer solstice on June 20 signifies the beginning of prime time for birds, butterflies and beautiful nights filled with stars not visible during winter months.
The rare alpine tree frog (Litoria verreauxii alpina) is fighting against the lethal chytrid fungus by breeding faster.
Infected male alpine tree frogs set about fathering far more offspring, helping avoid extinction in the wild – for now.
University of Melbourne research shows male alpine tree frogs are breeding more when infected with the deadly chytrid fungus in an attempt to keep the species alive.