ZME Science on MSN
This Tiny Brazilian Toad Became the First Amphibian Ever to Halt a Hydroelectric Dam. Now, It Faces a Climate Disaster
A rare toad changed the fate of a river by becoming the first amphibian to halt a hydroelectric dam. It's now in trouble.
During his sabbatical, Will McGugan, maker of Rich and Textual( frameworks for making Textual User Interfaces (TUI)), put his ...
Mongabay News on MSN
The first amphibian to halt a hydroelectric dam now takes on the climate crisis
The admirable little red-bellied toad is the size of a thumb, but it has achieved giant feats: In 2014, it prevented the ...
12don MSN
Ominous sight in Aussie waterway prompts urgent callout as invasive crisis grows: 'Need your help'
Conservationists are calling on the public to help in the effort to combat one of the country's nastiest invasive species, responsible for massive destruction of ecosystems and native wildlife. As ...
Scientists have found a new orange toad species in Brazil that is so small it fits on the tip of a pencil, highlighting the need for more conservation efforts in the country’s mountainous forest areas ...
Francisco Javier Arceo explored Feast, the open-source feature store designed to address common data challenges in the AI/ML lifecycle, such as feature redundancy, and low-latency serving at scale.
On Dec. 29, 1975, a terrorist bomb exploded at LaGuardia Airport in New York City, killing 11 people and injuring 75.
Sharks seem to be attacking fish on anglers’ lines more and more in. One scientist is out to figure out why, and how to stop ...
There has been one company liquidation notice in the Derby-West Kimberley Local Government Area today, bringing the total for December to three.
Good Good Good on MSN
9 incredible new species discovered in 2025, from the screaming pika to the 'curiously isolated' butterfly
From a butterfly shaped by 40,000 years of isolation to creatures 1,400 feet below the sea, scientists uncovered thousands of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Holiday moss may hide DNA from rare species
Holiday moss is turning out to be more than a rustic backdrop for candles and nativity scenes. By trapping fragments of genetic material from animals that pass by or drift overhead, those soft green ...
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