A new study led by the University of Oxford has revealed that reptiles confined to islands are facing a double jeopardy.
Reptiles can’t actively regulate their body temperatures. This makes them less able to adjust to changing temperatures.
'My hopes are dashed': Illegal Indian migrants deported by US speak to BBC ...
In England, the “sword dragon” is discovered, a new species of Jurassic ichthyosaur that reveals clues about marine evolution ...
A new study led by the University of Oxford has revealed that reptiles confined to islands are facing a double jeopardy. Despite being more likely to ...
The driver was arrested after officers found 163 exotic creatures concealed in a truck trying to cross into Mexico, according ...
These "Pirates of the Caribbean (and other places)" can continue to plunder even after losing some or most of their hind or ...
Climate change is driving many of Australia's native reptiles toward extinction, and the answers to their future survival may lie in the fossil record.
Researchers have found a troubling link between tourism and the survival of Earth's largest lizard, according to Tempo.
Among the creepy crawlers the Mexican national was attempting to smuggle were pythons, bearded dragons, geckos and tarantulas ...
Fossil evidence confirms that a gigantic reptile, similar to the modern Komodo Dragon, lived four million years ago near ...