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- | Pacific Indigenous leaders have a new plan to protect whales. Treat them as people | + | Newly discovered Amazon fish species is named after ‘The Lord of the Rings’ villain for its odd pattern |
- | For Māori conservationist Mere Takoko, “losing one whale is like losing an ancestor.” The animals “taught our people about navigation across the Pacific, particularly across the Milky Way… And this is information that was given to our ancestors.” | ||
- | The environmental activist from the small town of Rangitukia, on New Zealand’s east coast, is spearheading a movement | + | Thousands |
- | The document is part of a multi-pronged | + | While studying piranhas and pacus in an effort to better assess vital fish biodiversity in the 4,000-mile-long (6, |
- | While the declaration is non-binding | + | Besides its odd pearly whites, |
- | “Our mokopuna | + | “Me and the coauthors thought |
+ | |||
+ | The eye-catching fish is not the only animal named for Tolkien’s Dark Lord. A genus of butterflies was found in May 2023 with spots that looked like eyes on its wings, reminding researchers of the well-known symbol | ||