News

Horribly bleak study sees ’empty landscape’ as large herbivores vanish at startling rate. May 4, 2015. A rhino at a private game reserve in South Africa in 2013.
Wildlife decline may lead to 'empty landscape' Published. 2 May 2015. Share. close panel. Share page. Copy link. About sharing. Image source, Graham Kerley. Image caption, The threatened black rhino.
Global decline of large herbivores may lead to an 'empty landscape'. ScienceDaily . Retrieved June 2, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2015 / 05 / 150501151606.htm ...
One month and a week after LA's epic wildfires tore through the tranquility of Malibu's beach homes, the aftermath is stark. The cold, hyper-bright blue sun of winter in Los Angeles is like a ...
Join us to uncover the fascinating reasons why 97% of Namibia remains empty, and discover how its people, wildlife, and culture thrive in this vast, extraordinary land. Crazy Works ...
The planet is at risk of becoming an "empty landscape", with the world's biggest herbivore populations rapidly declining. Researchers looked at 74 species of the world's biggest herbivores ...
In settler colonies, landscape photography framed nature as beautiful, available and empty. In Victoria and Tasmania especially, landscape photography flourished.