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Released: 23-Apr-1999 12:00 AM EDT
In logged forests, hunting of wildlife becomes deadly "second harvest"
Wildlife Conservation Society

It's not just trees being removed from the world's rainforests, but staggering numbers of wildlife, which are being killed and sold as "bushmeat," according to a report by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), published in the latest issue of Science.

Released: 26-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
World's Smallest Deer Species Discovered
Wildlife Conservation Society

An adult deer measuring just 20 inches at the shoulder and weighing no more than 25 pounds has been confirmed through DNA testing as a new species, making it the world's smallest deer, according to a recent study led by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

Released: 19-Aug-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Bizarre Striped Rabbit Discovered in Asia
Wildlife Conservation Society

What's black and brown and striped all over? A new species of rabbit hopping around the forests of Southeast Asia, according to biologists from the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society, reported in the Aug. 19th issue of the journal Nature.

Released: 16-Nov-2000 12:00 AM EST
DNA Research Reveals a New Whale Species
Wildlife Conservation Society

Genetic research by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society, American Museum of Natural History, and other organizations has revealed that right whales living in the North Pacific Ocean are actually a unique species. (Molecular Ecology)

9-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
Yellowstone Moose Have Lost Some Spring in Their Step
Wildlife Conservation Society

As people learn to live with grizzly bears and wolves that have recolonized areas around southern Yellowstone National Park after a 50-year absence, so too must moose, which apparently have forgotten to recognize predators, according to a study funded by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). (Science, 2-9-01)

Released: 27-Feb-2001 12:00 AM EST
Orangutans May Vanish from Wild in Ten Years
Wildlife Conservation Society

The orangutan - the only great ape found in Asia - may vanish from the wild within a decade, unless illegal logging of its habitat and poaching can be greatly reduced, according to research funded by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). (Oryx, 2-01)

Released: 14-Jun-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Bleaching Could be a Hidden Strength for Corals
Wildlife Conservation Society

The global phenomenon of bleaching, in which reef-building corals lose their colorful algae and become white during times of stress, may actually allow some corals to adapt to global warming and other environmental change.

Released: 1-Aug-2001 12:00 AM EDT
Eaten as Food, African Orchids Threatened by Illegal Trade
Wildlife Conservation Society

More than 2.2 million wild orchids are being strip-mined each year from a unique region of Africa, fueled by a growing demand to use the plants as food, according to a report by the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Released: 7-Dec-2001 12:00 AM EST
Homosexual Behavior Discovered Among Wild Orangutans
Wildlife Conservation Society

A researcher from the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society has observed homosexual behavior among orangutans in Sumatra, marking the first time scientists have witnessed this activity among wild populations of these critically endangered great apes.

Released: 26-Jan-2002 12:00 AM EST
Jaguars Persist, Despite Human Incursion
Wildlife Conservation Society

Though the jaguar -- the New World's only true big cat species -- still persists from Argentina to the southwestern United States, it has lost more than half of its range from a century ago. A new study says that an unprecedented conservation effort by the Wildlife Conservation Society may offer the best hope to conserve jaguars into the next century.


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