David Stein had spotted a few snakes in a pile of mulch in his backyard in suburban Sydney and called Reptile Relocation Sydney to take a look. By the time snake catcher Dylan Cooper had finished ...
For centuries, at least, the indigenous Bantu peoples of Central, East, and Southern Africa have traded tales of a lumbering creature living in the Congo River Basin. The alleged dinosaur-like ...
One hundred and two venomous snakes have been removed from a suburban back garden in Sydney. David Stein called experts after seeing six snakes moving around in a pile of mulch and discovered that ...
However, when the snake catcher dug into his mulch pile, he saw 102 snakes, including 97 newborns. The snakes are red-bellied black snakes. Pregnant females often congregate before giving birth.
Stein first observed around six snakes slithering into a pile of mulch in his yard, and realized some were newborns. In this photo provided by Cory Kerewaro, red-bellied black snakes are contained ...
Supported by It was one of the deadliest battles in decades in the Democratic Republic of Congo. After the city of Goma fell to a rebel group known as M23 last week, the International Red Cross ...
More than 100 venomous snakes have been captured in a backyard in Sydney's west in what snake catchers said was their biggest find ever. The home owners at Horsley Park noticed snakes disappearing ...
The Congo Basin—Earth’s second-largest rainforest and one of its most vital ecosystems—has lost 23 million hectares of forest since Abong’o’s so-called dinosaur encounter, an area ...
Australian reptile handlers say they have been stunned to rescue 102 venomous snakes from a backyard mulch pile in Sydney. Cory Kerewaro said his business was initially called to rescue "a bunch ...
The Rainforest Foundation US “Treasury for the Trees” initiative aims to raise 100 BTC for a strategic Bitcoin reserve. RFUS executive director Suzanne Pelletier explains why. Strategic ...