Drone captures shark lurking close to surfers
Drone vision of great white shark lurking near unsuspecting surfers emerges
Drone vision of great white shark lurking near unsuspecting surfers emerges
A former dog breeder from Sydney's north-west has been found guilty of animal cruelty after officers found five dead dogs in freezers on his property and others living in "grotesque" conditions.
Six ocean hot spots that teem with the biggest mix of species are also getting hit hardest by global warming and industrial fishing, a study has found.
When a goanna made a surprise appearance at the Mimosa Winery's restaurant one peaceful afternoon, a French waitress quickly took control of the situation.Â
Four newborn kittens have been dumped in a McDonald's bag inside one of its Tasmanian restaurants.
Boston: Woolly mammoths - or, at least, animals with very similar DNA - could be brought back from extinction within two years, say scientists behind a ground-breaking resurrection project.
The amount of oxygen in oceans around the world has declined, a long-predicted result of climate change, scientists have revealed.
Thousands of bats have dropped dead from the heat, falling from the trees as scorching conditions enveloped parts of NSW at the weekend.
Incessant barking, constant shedding, murderously quick on their feet... Maremma dogs aren't easy, but for chicken farming? They're worth it.
China has ordered an investigation after online images showed officials holding a lavish banquet of meat from the endangered pangolin, the most trafficked mammal on earth.
Newly discovered gecko looks like a fish until you grab it, and then it looks like a naked chicken breast.
Once thought to be aberrant behaviour, cannibalism is common in the natural world - and for many species, not necessarily a bad thing.
Sharks have hogged the spotlight this summer. But what about the smaller creatures that inhabit our waters. Fish that can go from being female to male or sea cucumbers that can reorganise the position of their vital organs before splitting in two. They all live in Australian waters: in our bays, harbours and deep oceans.
'Took a bit of practice' to get two shooters in sync, one with contraceptive and the other with marker dye.
A rodeo in New Zealand is to use men dressed as sheep because chasing real sheep is banned.
Meet Taronga Zoo's newest addition  - one of the world's tiniest and rarest primates, a mohawk-sporting baby cotton-top tamarin.
The world's first transgenic ants offer scientists the chance to explore the evolution of animal societies - and, perhaps, our own.
The number of mammals used in animal testing could be cut dramatically thanks to moth larvae, scientists say.
The man also used the animal's carcass to threaten passers-by in a bizarre act of animal cruelty.
An adorable baby red panda who suffered horrific neck injuries has a second lease on life thanks to a cuddly toy and a Sydney zookeeper.
An analysis of more than a decade of Australian bites and stings has found that the bee poses the biggest public health threat.
Questions about sharks in Victoria that you probably have wondered about at some point, but never found the answers to.
A woman in Switzerland has been refused citizenship, and therefore a passport, because her "annoying" vegan campaigning has rubbed her neighbours up the wrong way.
It was a tough call as to who had the more enviable job. The answer depended which end of a large and potentially dangerous predator you would rather be working on: the head (read canine teeth) or the tail (read anal gland).
Growing up in Pakistan, my favourite show was Flipper. Living in a city a thousand kilometres from the nearest ocean, it was the most I knew about our beautiful dolphin friends.
Tilikum, the killer whale featured in the documentary "Blackfish" that made the case against keeping orcas in captivity died on Friday, SeaWorld officials said.
He was quite the catch: young, good looking and fit. Spotted lounging in a tree not far from the edge of a road, this koala was a welcome addition to a study which hopes to shed light on why the Somers koala population is in decline.
Chickens are just as intelligent as many of their feathered friends and demonstrate thinking skills on par with mammals and primates, a US scientist has discovered.
To the uninitiated they don't look like much to get excited about. Perhaps the only intriguing thing is that their bulbous bodies are a milky-white, rather than dark brown or black. But these tadpoles are special.
First came the clouds of mosquitoes, then the swarms of flies and now insect experts are warning that teams of termites could be hard at work in homes across Melbourne.
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