Wild animal species respond very differently to human development, and as a result, they use ecological corridors in agricultural and urban areas in distinct ways. This emerges from research in ...
For 1,400 days, a wildlife film crew lived and worked in Zambia’s Nsefu sector, documenting the lives of lions, leopards, ...
Game drives at dawn, elephants outside your tent and outdoor baths overlooking the plains – this is safari, wellness-style ...
While most of the world’s 300+ monkey species are harmless plant-eaters, a few larger and more aggressive species are capable of inflicting serious harm. From city-dwelling rhesus macaques to powerful ...
SCHOOL groups and tourists are visiting a cave with bats that carry Marburg virus, previously flagged as having pandemic ...
Image Credit: Shutterstock / Andy Crocker ...
Travelling from Cookhouse to Addo Elephant National Park offers a glimpse into the Eastern Cape’s shifting landscape of agriculture, renewable energy and conservation. Within the park, the scale of ...
Wild animals do not all react to human activity in the same way. A new study from Botswana shows that some species are much ...
Explore the best deserts in the world. These vast open landscapes offer an outdoor experience with plenty of opportunities to ...
Juvenile baboons frolick on a parked car in Da Gama Park. Opinions vary on how best to manage the growing population. Photograph: Tommy Trenchard/The Guardian Animal rights activists disagree with ...
A popular refrain in the local press and on social media is that residents and baboons could, and therefore should, coexist harmoniously on the Cape Peninsula. Justification for this approach is ...