Wildlife releases are usually joyous events. Uplifting scenes of animals cautiously nosing the air as they take their first ...
A baby slow loris was rescued in Assam’s Bokakhat, raising concerns about habitat loss and wildlife displacement.
Releasing rescued slow lorises back into the wild may sound heroic, but most don’t survive. In one study, seven out of nine were killed—largely by other lorises defending their territory.
A new study has found that the wild can be a "death trap" for animals that are released from captivity after previously being rescued. The research, published in the journal Global Ecology and ...
As the Island Packet reports, 28 mammals were documented over the course of the two-year study, and 19 of those were new ...
A pygmy slow loris explores carefully, taking in the world at a deliberate pace.
Notable findings feature the Asian palm civet, greater coucal and red-throated flycatcher, as well as Red Data Book species ...
The investigative minds at How to Survive warn that creatures like the platypus and the slow loris carry hidden venom and ...