Officials say the deaths of 72 tigers at two tourist parks in northern Thailand are a result of canine distemper and not bird ...
Officials say the deaths of the animals in two tourist parks were caused by a virus not known to affect humans. But a vet is warning the origin of the infection remains unclear.
PETA called for Punch to be moved somewhere "he could live in a more natural environment”. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
15hon MSN
Mystery as 72 tigers suddenly die at Thai tourist park where visitors can touch the animals
The deaths occurred in less than two weeks across two facilities at Tiger Kingdom Chiang Mai this month.
A new paper provides the first statistically derived estimate of bee species richness around the world. But this is about more than bees.
By the time we realised they were sick, it was too late,’ said an official, as welfare groups decry a life of misery and confinement.
The ingredient — a staple of cuisines around the world — is increasingly showing up on restaurant menus and in cookbooks in the U.S.
Thai authorities try to find out source of virus that killed 72 tigers at popular tourist parks - Preliminary tests identify ...
Chiang Mai parks in just 10 days, with the cause of death remaining unclear as teams monitor those who may have come into contact ...
As the two parks were located just 30 km apart, the cause of infection could be the food the tigers were fed that came from ...
India Today on MSN
Punch the monkey's story isn't unusual in nature, then why does it feel so personal?
Punch, the baby monkey at Japan's Ichikawa Zoo, has tugged at many heartstrings, but his story also reveals something deeper ...
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