Home Actor Leonardo DiCaprio HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers December 2023 Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram - #KillersOfTheFlowerMoon - In theaters now. @appletv @paramountpics @osagenews

Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram – #KillersOfTheFlowerMoon – In theaters now. @appletv @paramountpics @osagenews

Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram - #KillersOfTheFlowerMoon - In theaters now. @appletv @paramountpics @osagenews

Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram – #KillersOfTheFlowerMoon – In theaters now.

@appletv @paramountpics @osagenews | Posted on 11/Nov/2023 04:24:09

Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram – Attenborough’s Long-beaked Echidna, also known as ‘Payangko’ in the local Tepera language in Papua’s Cyclops Mountains, has been rediscovered. The egg-laying mammal was one of the world’s most wanted lost species and hadn’t had a documented sighting in 62 years, since it was first found. A biodiversity training expedition team led by Indonesian NGO Yayasan Pelayanan Papua Nenda and including students from Cenderwasih University, researchers from Oxford University, Mendel University in Brno, Royal Holloway University in London and Re:wild had searched for the echidna in the Cyclops Mountains for four weeks. On the last day of their ascent of the Cyclops, on the final SD card they collected, there were three images of the echidna waddling through the forest.

The support of the customary landowners within the Cyclops Mountains was critical to the success of the expedition, and was generously given by members of Yongsu Sapari, a community on the range’s northern side.

Attenborough’s Long-beaked Echidna is the 10th most wanted species to be rediscovered by @rewild’s Search for Lost Species.

Photo Credit: Long-beaked Echidna/D. Parer & E. Parer-Cook/Auscape/Minden Pictures

In collaboration with: @universitas_cenderawasih, @brin_indonesia, Yayasan Pelayanan Papua Nenda, @oxford_uni, @yappenda_papua #SearchforLostSpecies #LostSpecies
Leonardo DiCaprio Instagram – There are more than 2,000 species that are lost to science, but my organization @rewild and our partners around the world are working to find them.

The Search for Lost Species is the largest global quest to find plants, animals and fungi that have not been seen in at least 10 years. Since Re:wild launched the Search for Lost Species in 2017, nine of the world’s 25 most wanted lost species have been found, in addition to dozens of others outside of this list, by Re:wild and partners.

For the month of October, Re:wild is partnering with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Species Survival Commission, the global authority on the status of species, for the first-ever Lost Species Month. With help of conservationists, researchers, citizen scientists, local communities, and eternal optimists from around the world, the Search for #LostSpecies is on.

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