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At first, an encounter between a jaguar (Panthera onca) and a green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) seems improbable, even ridiculous, but the two species do come into fatal contact when a female turtle, every two to four years, crawls up a jungle beach to lay her eggs. A hungry jaguar will attack the nesting turtle, killing it with a bite to the neck, and dragging the massive animal—sometime all the way into the jungle—to eat the muscles around the neck and flippers. Leer más.

The Center for North American Herpetology (CNAH) has received a $25,000.00 grant from the Wallace Research Foundation to assist in re-building the book titles in the library of the Instituto Butantan in São Paulo, Brazil. On 15 May 2010, a fire at the institute destroyed its research library and collections. While CNAH cannot replace the invaluable intellectual work and irreplaceable specimens that were lost, we can help to replace the Butantan library so they can begin anew. Leer más.

El cambio climático ha pasado de ser una vaga amenaza – que los alarmados científicos supuestamente gustan difundir para llamar la atención sobre su capital dedicación- a ser un hecho indiscutible. A partir de ahí hemos intentado desdramatizar sus consecuencias, las alteraciones que el clima mudable supondría. No sería un cataclismo, el humano es un ser adaptable. Leer más.