Sloths, the world's slowest mammals, have evolved over 64 million years into a species that thrives throughout Central America and northern South America, but climate change and human sprawl could ...
medical experts agree that you don’t need to be too concerned about the so-called sloth virus just yet. “There are more cases ...
The naturalist observed how species can adapt to such change over long periods of time, Pizarro remarks, but now the climate ...
Different sloth groups can be easily identified by the number of ... Because if we lose the Amazon, we lose the fight against climate change. Sign up to be kept informed about our conservation work ...
The animals went extinct as recently as the 1930s, mainly due to climate change, bounty hunting ... These enormous animals were ground sloths, most closely related to the slumbering, modern ...
They all had Oropouche virus disease, also known as sloth fever. None have died, and there is no evidence that it's spreading ...
To date, there is no evidence that the oropouche virus can jump from human to human. The pathogen is thought to develop in ...
The sites fight climate change and can help with another global crisis: the collapse of nature. But so far, efforts to nurture wildlife habitat have been spotty. By Catrin Einhorn Without bats ...
A sloth in the rainforest ... These vast forests store carbon too, but they are threatened by deforestation and climate change. Scientists say that unless we manage this rainforest more carefully ...