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Could Golf Courses Double As Wildlife Sanctuaries?
July 11, 2007 Golf courses are known as centers for human recreation, but if managed properly, they also could be important wildlife sanctuaries, researchers suggest. The researchers' recommendations included ... > full story -
Frog Molecule Could Provide Drug Treatment For Brain Tumors
June 26, 2007 A synthetic version of a molecule found in the egg cells of the Northern Leopard frog (Rana pipiens) could provide the world with the first drug treatment for brain tumors. Although it could ... > full story -
Breakdown Products Of Widely Used Pesticides Are Acutely Lethal To Amphibians, Study Finds
June 23, 2007 The breakdown products (oxons) of the three most commonly used organophosphorus pesticides in California's agricultural Central Valley -- chlorpyrifos, malathion and diazinon -- are 10 - 100 times ... > full story -
Are Rattlesnakes Entering Suburbia?
June 19, 2007 Researchers are tracking timber rattlesnakes in the St. Louis area to see how close to civilization the snakes are getting as humans developing subdivisions invade the snakes' ... > full story -
Rare Four-Eyed Turtle Hatches At The Tennessee Aquarium: Endangered Hatchling May Represent A First In North America
June 18, 2007 A rare Beal's four-eyed turtle recently hatched at the Tennessee Aquarium. According to aquarium herpetologist Enrico Walder this tiny turtle should be treated as big news. "This little turtle in ... > full story -
Lizard Moms Dress Their Children For Success
June 12, 2007 Mothers know best when it comes to dressing their children, at least among side-blotched lizards, a common species in the western United States. Researchers have found that female side-blotched ... > full story -
Caribbean Frogs Started With A Single, Ancient Voyage On A Raft From South America
June 6, 2007 Nearly all of the 162 land-breeding frog species on Caribbean islands originated from a single species that rafted on a sea voyage from South America about 30-to-50-million years ago, according to a ... > full story -
24 Species Believed New To Science Discovered In Suriname Rainforest
June 4, 2007 Scientists exploring the remote highlands of eastern Suriname discovered 24 species believed to be new to science, including a frog with florescent purple markings and other amphibians, fish and ... > full story -
Bacteria Show Promise In Fending Off Global Amphibian Killer
May 23, 2007 First in a petri dish and now on live salamanders, probiotic bacteria seem to repel a deadly fungus being blamed for worldwide amphibian deaths and even extinctions. Though the research is in its ... > full story -
Rare Soft-Shell Turtle, Nesting Ground Found In Cambodia
May 17, 2007 One of the world's largest and least studied freshwater turtles has been found in Cambodia's Mekong River, raising hopes that the threatened species can be saved from extinction. Scientists captured ... > full story
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