The Christmas Island shrew, a species of cone snail (Conus lugubris), the slender-billed curlew, and three Australian mammals ...
Mongabay News on MSN
Declared extinct in 2025: A look back at some of the species we lost
By Shreya Dasgupta Some species officially bid us farewell this year. They may have long been gone, but following more recent ...
In 2025, animal and plant life continue to be threatened by a number of factors, including hunting, habitat loss or ...
IFLScience on MSN
Officially Gone: After 40 Years MIA, Australia’s Only Shrew Has Been Declared "Extinct"
The Christmas Island shrew is thought to be at least the third mammal species to go extinct on the island as a direct result ...
To save it, they undertook one of the largest captive snail breeding and reintroduction efforts in Australian, and perhaps ...
AZ Animals on MSN
The Hidden Process Behind Species Extinction
The tragic news of the loss of the world's last remaining northern white rhino begs the question: Can it be brought back?
Over a million species of animals and plants are now hanging by a thread, more than ever before in human history, says the International Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services ...
In this Special Report, an Unidentified speaker details the claims by US-based Colossal Biosciences to have 'successfully ...
An elusive wild cat long feared extinct in Thailand has been rediscovered three decades after the last recorded sighting, ...
Woolly mammoths haven't been seen for 4,000 years, but if scientists are successful, they could be walking around Alaska in just five years. Colossal Biosciences researchers in Texas who study ancient ...
Jurassic Park may have first put the idea of bringing dinosaurs back from the dead into people's heads, but the question of whether we can bring back more recently extinct species is still very much ...
Mongabay News on MSN
From ‘extinct’ to growing, a rare snail returns to the wild in Australia
Rarely do species presumed extinct reappear with renewed hope for a better future. But researchers in Australia not only ...
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