Galápagos had no native amphibians. Then it was invaded by hundreds of thousands of frogs
Scientists are only beginning to grasp the scale of the issue and understand what impact the tree frogs may have on the islands’ rare wildlife On the way to her office at the Charles Darwin research station, biologist Miriam San José crouches down near a shallow pond shrouded by vegetation and (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (Asia Pacific)
3069.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=e201a927d70fa8cd280dd7ec8bd1c664, 3069.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=8558f044ac9d556e1d960d1b76db0a69, 3069.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=70c3895b9d3de101982558005a579914
The Guardian (Asia Pacific)
MPs ask HMRC to explain child benefit error that froze payments to parents
4/11/2025
Aimard/Benjamin review – concentrated musical thought and pianistic imagination
4/11/2025
Wright of Derby : From the Shadows review – science, skeletons and a suffocated cockatoo
4/11/2025
China accuses Dutch of prolonging chip war that threatens to halt car factories
4/11/2025
EU could admit new members by 2030, says its foreign policy chief
4/11/2025
Predator : Badlands review – a pointless but unkillable franchise that has started to eat itself
4/11/2025