Researchers have found a troubling link between tourism and the survival of Earth's largest lizard, according to Tempo.
A new study warns that Australia’s Mountain Dragon lizards are running out of room to survive. Fossil and genetic evidence ...
Reptiles can’t actively regulate their body temperatures. This makes them less able to adjust to changing temperatures.
ST. LOUIS — The Saint Louis Zoo has welcomed a new resident this fall — a six-year-old male Komodo dragon named Charlie. He will be the first of his species to live at the Zoo in more than 12 years ...
Climate change is driving many of Australia's native reptiles toward extinction, and the answers to their future survival may lie in the fossil record.
Six premises were raided and 16 wildlife specimens were seized. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
It's not often that you lose a species for over 60 years, but that's what happened to this little lizard that has been coming ...
The mountain dragon, indigenous to Australia's highlands, serves as a key indicator of climate change impacts on biodiversity ...
Read on for some chilling curiosities from the creatures of the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute ...
GH picks the best kids books of 2025, including board books, picture books, graphic novels, and more nominated by librarians and tested with children.
From Thailand’s elephant plains to the Philippines’ coral sanctuaries, these destinations share one belief: that tourism must ...