IUCN’s Gnusletter
The gnusletter is the Antelope Specialist Group’s newsletter from the IUCN and might be of interest to some, especially Charles Foley’s account of his Abbott’s Du
Mammal Photographs Needed from Southern California or nearby
Brad Blood is preparing a book on the terrestrial mammals of southern California and the eastern & southern Sierra Nevada. He is looking for photographs he can use of these spe
New Trip Report: Brazil
Here’s a new report from Andreas Jonsson who is just back from an interesting trip to Alta Floresta and Rio Grande Do Sul Alta Floresta and Rio Grande Do Sul, 2022: Andreas J
Costa Rica trip report
Hi all, I’ve just uploaded a report from a fun visit to Costa Rica in March with Alex Meyer: https://www.mammalwatching.com/wp-content/uploads/CR_TR_AMVS_Mar22-compressed.pdf
Research article : Terrestrial mammals’ cave use in Mexico
One of the few times something new and mammal-related crosses my work desk! Camera trap research indicates that non-flying mammals use caves far more than previously expected, incl
Advertising: Bolivian Cat Tour, October 14 – 23, 2022
Royle Safaris have had a late cancellation on their trip to Bolivia to Jaguarland and Kaa Iya National Park, where the focus is on jaguars, pumas, ocelots and jaguarundis, though
Join me in 2023: Trips to Bioko Island in Jan & Chad in March
I have finally decided that it might be safe to commit to some travel next year …. and so I’m looking for people to join us on small group trips to two very exciting ma
New Trip Report: Turkey
And here is another Turkey report, this time from Jan Ebr who saw some reallyt interesting stuff in May: proving beyond doubt that Turkey is a destination that deserves more mammal
New Trip Report: The Maldives
A short report from Martin Royle who proves you can still mammalwatch in the Maldives from a luxury resort (and while on honeymoon!) Maldives Honeymoon, 2022: Martin Royle, with 5
New Trip Report: Ecuador
Here’s a new report from Juan Luis Ortega Herranz. Ecuador, 2022: Juan Luis Ortega Herranz, 11 days & 29 species including Spectacled Bear, Pygmy Marmoset and Mountain Co