The sad case of the Norfolk Island morepork shows we need a way to control or eradicate invasive rodents without killing native species.
A study of purple-crowned fairy-wrens offers lessons for fire management along waterways in tropical savanna ecosystems.
When you buy seafood, you can’t be sure it is what it says it is – and Australian wholesalers are resistant to new traceability technologies.
A computer simulation program developed to test cane toad management in the virtual world could soon be rolled out in real life.
A long-term global assessment of reptiles has revealed 21% are threatened, but an upside is that others have benefited from the conservation efforts put into other animals such as birds and mammals.
A five-million-year-old fossil that sat in a Melbourne museum for more than a century has rewritten the history of turtles in prehistoric Australia’s tropical climate.
Giant bird-eating centipedes from Phillip Island, part of the South Pacific’s Norfolk Island group, can kill and eat up to 3700 seabird chicks each year.
There are too many little-understood species for scientists to study them all. A new approach helps decide which to tackle first.
Two seal fossil discoveries are rewriting our understanding of what ancient seal species were like, and where they evolved.
The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is failing to adequately conserve and protect threatened species, and its scope needs widening.
As the pandemic wreaks havoc on supply chains, are companies losing sight of their social responsibility?
Community-based ecological restoration can aid wellbeing and resilience, and could be used to inform future bushfire plans.
As bushfires ravaged Victoria’s northeast, a team flew in to rescue the endangered bird species.
Conservation sites are being compromised by commercial and population growth, putting pressure on ecosystems and threatened species.
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