Hosted on MSN
Amazon wildlife is learning to use our walkways
High above the forest floor, the Amazon’s newest thoroughfares are not branches or lianas but human-built walkways, and the region’s wildlife is quietly adapting. Elevated paths meant for tourists and ...
Read this story in Spanish here. The Amazon rainforest—home to one in 10 species on Earth—is on fire. As of last week, 9,000 wildfires were raging simultaneously across the vast rainforest of Brazil ...
In the dense expanse of the Amazon rainforest, wildlife often faces perilous challenges as they navigate fragmented habitats. However, a new study reveals a surprising twist: some species are using ...
At booths lining the walkways, sloth paws are stored in jars next to dried herbs, and yellow-footed turtle meat lies alongside chicken breasts. A leopard skin drapes above a stall, like a rug drying ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results