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Chemistry World October 29, 2008 Lewis Brindley |
Popular Agrochemical Linked to Frog Disease A new study provides further evidence linking the herbicide Atrazine to a global decline in amphibian populations over the last three decades.  |
Reason November 2001 Sara Rimensnyder |
Cryptic Biodiversity By examining DNA, scientists have discovered new species of birds, reptiles, whales, and plants. Will this put more pressure on the Endangered Species Act?  |
Scientific American June 2008 Charles Q. Choi |
Can the "Amphibian Ark" Save Frogs from Pollution/Extinction? A repopulation plan for endangered amphibians.  |
Science News May 24, 2003 |
Amphibian Atlas A website that identifies the places where different types of amphibians dwell across the United States.  |
Science News March 8, 2008 |
One-Stop Shopping for Every Species The definitive place on the Internet to find information on every living species.  |
| AskMen.com |
Cat Food vs. Cane Toads Forget cricket bats, golf clubs and carbon dioxide. Australia has found a new weapon in its war on the dreaded cane toad: cat food.  |
Chemistry World January 30, 2007 Henry Nicholls |
Snakes Have a Soft Spot for Heart-Stopping Toad Toxins Most animals will steer well clear of poisonous toads belonging to the Bufonidae family. But not so a species of Asian snake, which happily eats them and recycles the toxins to ward off predators of its own.  |
Reason January 2009 Ronald Bailey |
Friendly Invasion End species discrimination -- newly introduced species may be able to get along with their native brethren better than previously believed.  |
Science News August 20, 2005 |
Wildlife Finder For a sofa safari, type in a location somewhere on the planet (by city, country, or even zip code) and see what kinds of natural habitat lie nearby.  |
Chemistry World January 29, 2013 Anthony King |
Pesticides can kill frogs in hours Frogs exposed to pesticides at the kind of levels routinely sprayed on farm fields can die in hours, a new study from German and Swiss scientists report.  |
Science News December 5, 2008 Edward O. Wilson |
Protect Biodiversity Hot Spots And The Rest Will Follow The tragedy unfolding in our ignorance, in our preoccupation with strictly physical environments, is that human action is destroying countless species and even ecosystems before we even know they existed.  |
Smithsonian January 2007 |
Wild Things: Life as We Know It Full Body Lotion... That's Deep... Observed... Conservation's Big Picture... Origin of Species (cont.)...  |