We assessed patterns of landscape connectivity in 16 native amphibian species grouped in four communities in the most populated region in Spain (Community of Madrid). Leer más.






We assessed patterns of landscape connectivity in 16 native amphibian species grouped in four communities in the most populated region in Spain (Community of Madrid). Leer más.

This allowed us to quantify the effectiveness of thermoregulation in the wild and determine whether seasonal trade-offs in thermoregulatory behaviour shape thermal performance and influence survival in the Australian central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps). Leer más.

This discovery by a team of researchers led by James Napoli, from the Department of Anatomical Sciences in the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, counters previous research that concluded theropods did not have a bird-like carpal bone, or pisiform. Their finding, published in Nature, opens the possibility that the evolution of flight in dinosaurs was “all in the wrist.” Leer más.

A new study published in the International Journal of Wildland Fire, researchers investigated the maximum temperatures that lizards could experience during prescribed (controlled) fires in the Mount Lofty Ranges and compared them to their maximum survivable temperatures. Leer más.

Recent explorations in the humid montane forests of the upper Pastaza Valley have uncovered previously unknown species. Here, we describe a new Andean toad species from the central Ecuadorian Andes, identified through genetic analyses and distinctive morphological and cranial traits. Leer más.
