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Keyword: zoology

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  • New Lemurs Found in Madagascar

    08/11/2005 2:53:55 AM PDT · by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island · 65 replies · 1,346+ views
    BBC ^ | 9 August 2005 | Staff
    Two new species of lemur have been found in Madagascar, bringing the number of known species to 49. German and Malagasy scientists made the discovery by analysing the genetic make-up of wild lemurs. Lemurs are considered the most endangered of all primates and live only on Madagascar which has evolved in isolation for 165 million years. As a result, the island is now home to mammals, birds and plants that exist nowhere else on our planet. The first new species is a giant mouse lemur known as Mirza zaza. It has a long bushy tail and is about the size...
  • Albatross chicks attacked by mice

    07/24/2005 8:43:43 PM PDT · by mwilli20 · 13 replies · 537+ views
    BBC News ^ | Sunday, 24 July, 2005 | Jonathan Amos
    "Supersize" mice are eating seabird chicks alive on Gough Island, one of the most important seabird colonies in the world, UK conservationists report. The rodents are taking out one million petrels, shearwaters and albatrosses each year on the UK Overseas Territory, in the South Atlantic. ...
  • Massachusetts Legislature Protests Endangered Species Review

    07/16/2005 1:28:33 PM PDT · by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island · 3 replies · 287+ views
    Provincetown Banner ^ | 14 July 2005 | Ann Wood
    WELLFLEET — If it’s determined that the decline of the eastern oyster on the Maryland and Virginia coastline represents a “significant portion” of the subspecies, the oyster could be added to the federal endangered species list, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service spokesperson Marta Nammack said Monday. A ban on oystering would significantly affect this town, where shellfish — oysters, in particular — are its biggest industry. Wellfleet oysters are a world-famous delicacy that accounted for more than $2.5 million of the town’s aquaculture, or shellfish farming, industry in 2002. About 100 families in town rely primarily on oysters...
  • Man-Eating Snow Leopard Shot

    07/11/2005 7:15:19 AM PDT · by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island · 16 replies · 458+ views
    BBC ^ | 11 July 2005 | Staff
    Snow leopards are protected Police in north Pakistan have shot dead a rare snow leopard, blamed for killing six women in the past two weeks. The ageing animal was caught in a trap, with a goat as bait, but was shot when it tried to escape, police in the town of Abbotabad told the BBC. Fear had spread through the area after the attacks. The last was on Friday. Abbotabad police chief Feroz Shah said he was sure it was the leopard that had killed the women, all of whom had been gathering firewood in forests. "It's a huge animal...
  • Washington to Determine if Oysters are an Endangered Species

    07/09/2005 12:49:55 PM PDT · by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island · 27 replies · 632+ views
    Cape Cod Times ^ | 9 July 2005 | Doug Fraser
    Red tide may be the least of Cape shellfishermen's worries this summer. In May, the National Marine Fisheries Service decided that the Eastern, or American, oyster is a candidate for endangered species status based on a petition they received in January. The agency has until Jan. 11, 2006, to decide. Fisheries service spokeswoman Teri Frady said yesterday her agency was in the process of putting together a panel of experts to study the issue. Eastern oysters are harvested in New England and on the Cape, accounting for more than $1.2 million in revenue for the Cape and islands aquaculture industry...
  • New Dolphin Species Identified

    07/05/2005 6:06:34 AM PDT · by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island · 18 replies · 690+ views
    BBC ^ | 5 July 2005 | Staff
    A team of scientists has identified a new dolphin species - the first for at least 30 years - off north Australia. The mammals - named snubfin dolphins - were initially thought to be members of the Irrawaddy species, also found in Australian waters. But one researcher found the snubfins were coloured differently and had different skull, fin and flipper measurements to the Irrawaddys. DNA tests confirmed that they were two distinct species. The researcher, Isabel Beasley of James Cook University in Townsville, Queensland, said that because they live in shallow waters, both types face the same threats to their...
  • "Gay" penguins spark protest (Gays object male/female pairing)

    02/11/2005 10:24:21 AM PST · by KidGlock · 123 replies · 2,540+ views
    Yahoo ^ | 2/11/05
    "Gay" penguins spark protest 1 hour, 4 minutes ago BERLIN (Reuters) - A plan by a German zoo to test the sexual appetites of a group of suspected homosexual penguins has sparked outrage among gay and lesbian groups, who fear zookeepers might force them to turn straight. "All sorts of gay and lesbian associations have been e-mailing and calling in to protest," said a spokesman for the zoo in the northwestern city of Bremerhaven on Friday. He said the zoo concluded the penguins might be gay after seeing male penguins trying to mate with other males and trying to hatch...
  • Fossil shows baby dinosaur in mammal's belly

    01/16/2005 7:22:34 PM PST · by IllumiNaughtyByNature · 50 replies · 1,309+ views
    DENVER, Colorado (AP) -- Villagers digging in China's rich fossil beds have uncovered the preserved remains of a tiny dinosaur in the belly of a mammal, a startling discovery for scientists who have long believed early mammals couldn't possibly attack and eat a dinosaur. Scientists say the animal's last meal probably is the first proof that mammals hunted small dinosaurs some 130 million years ago. It contradicts conventional evolutionary theory that early mammals were timid, chipmunk-sized creatures that scurried in the looming shadow of the giant reptiles. More at link...
  • Strange-Voiced Whale at Large in the Ocean

    12/08/2004 11:18:53 AM PST · by mattdono · 84 replies · 2,975+ views
    Reuters (via YAHOO! News) ^ | December 8, 2004 | Reuters
    LONDON (Reuters) - A lone whale, with a voice unlike any other, has been wandering the Pacific for the past 12 years, American marine biologists said Wednesday. Using signals recorded by the US navy to track submarines, they traced the movement of whales in the Northern Pacific and found that a lone whale singing at a frequency of around 52 hertz has cruised the ocean since 1992. Its calls, despite being clearly those of a baleen, do not match those of any known species of whale, which usually call at frequencies of between 15 and 20 hertz. The mammal does...
  • Dingo's Origins Tracked By DNA

    08/02/2004 3:41:34 PM PDT · by blam · 6 replies · 1,799+ views
    BBC ^ | 8-2-2004
    Dingo's origins tracked by DNA The dingo may have been introduced on a single occasion to Australia A genetic analysis of the Australian dingo suggests the dogs tagged along on an epic expansion of people out of southern China around 6,000 years ago. An international team claims that dingoes descend from a small group that could have been introduced to Australia in a "single chance event" from Asia. Evidence from mitochondrial DNA suggests that the wild dogs arrived on the continent around 5,000 years ago. The work appears in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Peter Savolainen of the...
  • The Dixie Dingo

    11/30/2001 1:40:40 PM PST · by blam · 125 replies · 15,672+ views
    Carolinadog.org ^ | U of Carolina
    "The Dixie Dingo" "The Native American Dog" "The American Dingo" " Southern Aboriginal Dog" "The Indian's Dog" Still living Wild in the bottom land swamps and forests of the Southeastern United States. Genetic (mitochondrial DNA) testing being performed at the University of South Carolina, College of Science and Mathematics, indicates that these dogs, related to the earliest domesticated dogs, are the remnant descendants of the feral pariah canids who came across the Bering land mass 8,000 to 11,000 years ago as hunting companions to the ancestors of the Native Americans. However, their future in the wild looks bleak. Loss ...
  • Love That Dare Not Squeak Its Name

    02/07/2004 7:55:07 AM PST · by paltz · 89 replies · 323+ views
    nytimes.com ^ | February 7, 2004 | DINITIA SMITH
    Roy and Silo, two chinstrap penguins at the Central Park Zoo in Manhattan, are completely devoted to each other. For nearly six years now, they have been inseparable. They exhibit what in penguin parlance is called "ecstatic behavior": that is, they entwine their necks, they vocalize to each other, they have sex. Silo and Roy are, to anthropomorphize a bit, gay penguins. When offered female companionship, they have adamantly refused it. And the females aren't interested in them, either. At one time, the two seemed so desperate to incubate an egg together that they put a rock in their nest...
  • How Do Homing Pigeons Navigate? They Follow Roads

    02/04/2004 6:21:47 PM PST · by blam · 52 replies · 458+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 2-5-2004 | Caroline Davies
    How do homing pigeons navigate? They follow roads By Caroline Davies (Filed: 05/02/2004) Researchers have cracked the puzzle of how pigeons find their way home: they just follow the main roads. Zoologists now believe the phrase "as the crow flies" no longer means the shortest most direct route between two points. They say it is likely that crows and other diurnal birds also choose AA-suggested routes, even though it makes their journeys longer. Some pigeons stick so rigidly to the roads that they even fly round roundabouts before choosing the exit to lead them back to their lofts. Animal behaviouralists...
  • Lazy birds given car to migrate south

    09/04/2003 10:22:32 AM PDT · by Pikamax · 15 replies · 244+ views
    Ananova ^ | 09/04/03 | Ananova
    Lazy birds given car to migrate south Researchers have provided a flock of lazy and disorientated rare birds with a car and driver because they are incapable of migrating on their own. Ornithologists from the Konrad Lorenz research centre in Gruenau in Austria have spent more than two years breeding the Northern Bald Ibis species. They had to drive the birds to their winter quarters in the Maremma region in northern Italy by car after discovering they were unable to make the 500 mile trip on their own. Dr Kurt Kotrschal from the Zoology Department at Vienna University said the...
  • Scientist calls gay people 'pinnacle of evolution'

    08/20/2003 6:54:15 AM PDT · by Lazamataz · 203 replies · 730+ views
    Yahoo Stool Pushers News ^ | Fri Aug 15, 2003 | By Some Gay Author
    At a time when religious and conservative right-wing groups are attempting to dismiss homosexuality as "unnatural," a leading zoologist has said gay people could be seen as the "pinnacle of evolution." Speaking at the Edinburgh Book Festival, Clive Bromhall said that humankind's evolution has resulted in our present state of "infantilism," in which we break the primate mold by being playful, creative and childlike right into adulthood. "From men's obsession with swollen breasts to our constant search for a pseudoparental God, everything about the human species is infantile," Bromhall said in a lecture. "Like baby chimps, we have soft, downy...
  • Chilean 'Blob' May Be Giant Octopus, Whale Blubber

    07/03/2003 6:05:10 AM PDT · by Korth · 22 replies · 436+ views
    Yahoo ^ | July 2, 2003 | Louise Egan
    SANTIAGO, Chile (Reuters) - Scientists said on Wednesday a huge mass of slimy flesh that washed up on a Chilean beach last week may be a rare type of giant octopus or just discarded whale blubber. European zoologists contacted by the Chileans to help identify the 40-foot-long (12-meter) piece of gelatinous tissue said it closely resembled descriptions of a bizarre specimen found in Florida in 1896 that was named "octopus giganteus" and has confounded experts ever since. Other informal sightings of similar deep-sea creatures by fishermen and divers from the Bahamas to Tasmania are the stuff of folklore on the...
  • US troops kill Baghdad lions

    04/22/2003 2:42:43 PM PDT · by WaveThatFlag · 14 replies · 248+ views
    BBC News ^ | Tuesday, 22 April, 2003
    Four starving lions which dug their way out of a Baghdad zoo have been shot dead by American soldiers, the military says. Two of the big cats lunged for the US troops who then fired at them, one soldier said. The lions were among hundreds of animals abandoned at the zoo. Most of the others were stolen by looters or released in the aftermath of the US takeover of the Iraqi capital. But the thieves left seven lions and two tigers in their cages, unfed for 10 or more days. Sergeant Matthew Oliver said three lionesses and one male lion...