Central Queensland – Northern Hairy Nosed Wombats Trip
Epping Forest National Park near Clermont is home to the world’s last few remaining Northern Hairy-nosed Wombats and can only be entered with a permit. In early September 201
Help wanted with Bat ID
Hi Sorry about the poor photo, but does anyone know what species this is? It was photographed flying out from under a bridge, in the Brazilian Pantanal. Cheers Steve
A Few North Queensland Mammals
I spent the last week of August in what Australians call Far North Queensland, though if you look at the map its more like noth-central Queensland. I was with my kids and wasn̵
Wolves May Aid Recovery of Canada Lynx
ScienceDaily (Aug. 30, 2011) — As wolf populations grow in parts of the West, most of the focus has been on their value in aiding broader ecosystem recovery — but a new stu
New Trip Report – India 2009
Another great report from Sjef Ollers covering 2 weeks in central India. 2 weeks and 28 species including Tigers and some nice bats. https://www.mammalwatching.com/Oriental/Otherre
Pioneer Mountain wolverines
One of my Idaho “grail animals” is the wolverine. My colleague Jeff Barney had an encounter in Idaho’s Pioneer Mountains this month. Check out his blog about it:
Central Queensland: Northern Hairy Nosed Wombats and other mammals
David Andrews just sent me this report of a recent trip to central Qld. He’s inspired me to head out there myself in a couple of weeks to look for the Wombats too, one of the
Plant lures bats with echoing leaf form
This is interesting http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/163487a8-bd81-11e0-89fb-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1URF3P3k0 Flowers use bright colours and striking patterns to attract pollinators that a
New Ader’s Duiker population discovered in Kenya
See here for more details http://blog.arkive.org/2011/07/rare-forest-antelope-captured-on-camera/ Jon
Micronesia RFI
I will be heading to Micronesia in a few weeks for work. I’ve read David Bishop’s excellent report on this site but would appreciate any specific spots to check for end