Wildlife along Bolivia's infamous "death road" has rebounded in the 15 years since it was effectively closed to heavy traffic. The road was once a main route through the Andes It claimed the lives of ...
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10 Years of Remembering Wildlife: the latest book in photo conservation series is on sale now
'10 Years of Remembering Wildlife' is on sale now, with an official launch event to follow on 8 October, at the Royal ...
The abandoned roadway began to attract wildlife, including vulnerable and endangered species. Olivia Rosane is a freelance writer who focuses on environmental issues. Her work has appeared in EcoWatch ...
“Lions hate circuses” has long been a bumper-sticker slogan of the animal-rights movement, and Bolivia has heard the message: the left-leaning government of the Andean country recently passed the ...
Travelers volunteer to care for world's most exotic and savage beasts. AMBUE ARI, Bolivia, June 11, 2009— -- They walk the jaguars, talk with the pumas and play with the monkeys. Deep in the ...
LA PAZ, Bolivia — Bolivia has enacted what animal-rights defenders are calling the world’s first law that prohibits the use of animals in circuses. A handful of other countries have banned the use of ...
A route in Bolivia known as "death road" has become a haven for wildlife, after an alternate route linking Bolivia's biggest city La Paz to the Amazon was opened in 2007- massively reducing most ...
A steep and narrow road north from La Paz once claimed an average of 300 lives per year. However, since the construction of a safer road in 2007, traffic has dropped 90% and wildlife has returned.
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