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Tiger Conservation Partnership to Help Stem Devastating Effects of Poaching
The survival of wild tigers hinges on the ability of tiger-range countries and their partners in conservation to stop the biggest threat to tigers: poaching. The Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, as one of the founding members of the Global Tiger Initiative and with support from the World...
New Giant Pacific Octopus at Smithsonian's National Zoo Gets a Name
Although giant Pacific octopuses are masters of disguise, the new octopus at the National Zoo revealed its true identity Saturday when a keeper helped it select its name: Pandora. The octopus had a chance to pick one of four names submitted by the finalists in the Washington Post's KidsPost naming...
Smithsonian's National Zoo Receives $4.5 Million to Fund Giant Panda Program
David M. Rubenstein donated $4.5 million to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo to fund the giant panda program for the next five years. In appreciation, the giant panda complex—home to giant pandas Tian Tian (male) and Mei Xiang (female)—will be named the David M. Rubenstein Family Giant Panda Habitat...
National Zoo to Announce Significant Gift and 2012 Giant Panda Breeding Plans
The Smithsonian’s National Zoological Park will announce a generous gift that funds the giant panda program for five years. Animal experts have also witnessed the first signs of breeding season: Tian Tian (male panda) is “power walking.” Speakers will discuss details of the new 2012 breeding plan...
Forget the Partridge in the Pear Tree, Smithsonian's National Zoo Hatches a Kiwi
A member of one of the world's most endangered species—the brown kiwi ( Apteryx mantelli)—hatched at the Smithsonian's National Zoo's Bird House Dec. 11 at 10:25 a.m. The egg was laid Oct. 1 and keepers began looking for signs of the chick hatching starting in early December. The sex of the chick is...
Winners of Gin-GRR-Bread Kids' Farm Habitat Contest Revealed During ZooLights at the Smithsonian's National Zoo
The spotlight of ZooLights fell on the Kids' Farm, sponsored by State Farm®, Sunday at the Smithsonian's National Zoo. Three winners were chosen from 23 entries for the Gin-GRR-bread Kids' Farm Habitat contest, sponsored by Starbucks in a ceremony hosted by Scott Thuman of ABC7/WJLA-TV and Debbi...
Smithsonian Scientists Help Successfully Build First Frozen Repository for the Great Barrier Reef
Springtime in Australia means balmier weather, but the Great Barrier Reef's future may depend on subzero temperatures. Researchers from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology and other partnering organizations spent two weeks at the end of November...
International Elephant Foundation Announces Grant to Help End Elephant Endotheliotropic Herpesvirus (EEHV)
The International Elephant Foundation (IEF) is thrilled to announce another major grant to help fund the National Elephant Herpesvirus Laboratory (NEHL) at the Smithsonian's National Zoo. Major donors of 2011's $52,000 grant include Alex Rines and Vinnie Christiano – fifth graders and best friends...
Smithsonian Scientists Discover That Urban Songbirds Adjust Their Melodies to Adapt to Various Elements of City Life
Cities tend to be noisy places.
Photo Release: Picasso or Panda? Budding Animal Artists Emerge at the Smithsonian's National Zoo
Sans berets, smocks or palettes, the animals at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo are getting their paws dirty with non-toxic, water-based paint and creating one-of-a-kind works of art. Painting is one among many activities that fall under Animal Enrichment—a program that provides physically and...
Smithsonian Scientists Survey Frogs in the Peruvian Andes
Imagine measuring the tail of a squirmy, inch-long tadpole. Now imagine doing that where the air is thin enough to make you dizzy, a hail storm is about to start and you just spent 45 minutes up to your elbows in a freezing cold stream. Last December, a research scientist with SCBI and a biologist...
New Giant Pacific Octopus at Smithsonian's National Zoo Needs a Name
The newest member of the charismatic cephalopod community at the Smithsonian's National Zoo may only be the size of a grapefruit now, but he (or she) has some long arms to grow. On Nov. 4, the Zoo's beloved giant Pacific octopus, Octavius, died at the old age of about 4 years and a feisty new young...
First Eld's Deer Born from In Vitro Fertilization with Help of Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute Scientists
Nearly 20 years after the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute became the first to produce an Eld's deer fawn through artificial insemination, SCBI scientists have now contributed to the birth of the first Eld's deer via in vitro fertilization. The researchers collected eggs, inseminated them...
Top Five Reasons to Visit the Smithsonian's National Zoo This Holiday Season
Instead of hibernating this holiday season, visitors can weather the winter at the Smithsonian's National Zoo. With so much to see indoors, a stroll through the Zoo will not feel like an arctic trek. Visitors can stop in any of the eight animal houses to warm up, enjoy animal demonstrations and chat...
ZooLights Starts Friday at the Smithsonian's National Zoo
WHAT: Washington Capitals Players, Marcus Johansson and Mathieu Perreault, skate with 50 contest winners on Dec. 11, at ZooLights, following the reveal of the Gin-GRR-bread Kids' Farm habitat contest winner. WHEN: ZooLights has been expanded this year with new activities and added dates. The event...
FREE and Brighter Than Ever, ZooLights Sparkles at the National Zoo; Ice Skating, Train Rides, Animal Exhibits and Expanded Hours Enhance This Year's Event
Sparkling brighter than ever in its fifth straight year at the Smithsonian's National Zoo, ZooLights-- powered by Pepco--remains the only free holiday light show in the Washington-Metro area. With added dates and expanded hours this year, ZooLights will run the weekends of Nov. 25–27, Dec. 2–4, and...
Photo Release: Voters Pick Rosebud for Name of Smithsonian Black-Footed Ferret Kit on Webcam
After voting polls closed at noon today, black-footed ferret keepers at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Va., revealed the ferret webcam star’s new name—on the webcam. More than 1,000 voters picked the winning name, Rosebud, on the Smithsonian magazine’s website. The...
Field Notes from Bhutan
Introduction Three Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute scientists left in late November 2011 for the remote and mountainous Kingdom of Bhutan nestled in the Himalayas between India and China. The Smithsonian team includes the National Zoo’s chief veterinarian Suzan Murray, National Zoo...
New Cornell-Smithsonian Joint Graduate Program Trains Future Wildlife Conservation Scientists
Human history has never seen a more pivotal time for wildlife. While extinction threatens nearly one-quarter of all known vertebrate species, scientists are creating interdisciplinary techniques and partnerships geared toward recovering endangered populations. To meet the global challenge of...
New Genetic Evidence Confirms Coyote Migration Route to Virginia and Hybridization with Wolves
Changes in North American ecosystems over the past 150 years have caused coyotes to move from their native habitats in the plains and southwestern deserts of North America to habitats throughout the United States. In a new study, published Oct. 17 in the Journal of Mammalogy, researchers from the...
Photo Release: Black-footed Ferret Kit at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute Seeks a Name
She is small, she is cute and she is a webcam star. But this little black-footed ferret, born April 15 at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Va., does not have a name. So SCBI has teamed up with Smithsonian magazine to find her just the right name, and they are asking for...
Scientists Determine Family Tree for Most-Endangered Bird Family in the World - Media Release
Using one of the largest DNA data sets for a group of birds and employing next-generation sequencing methods, Smithsonian scientists and collaborators have determined the evolutionary family tree for one of the most strikingly diverse and endangered bird families in the world, the Hawaiian...
Workshop Will Train Pathologists to Identify Animal Diseases Harmful to Humans
Veterinary and pathology experts from the Smithsonian Institution, University of Illinois and the Wildlife Conservation Society will conduct a five-day training workshop for pathologists in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia on how to identify and investigate unknown diseases.
Photo Release: Naked Mole-Rat 20th Anniversary at the Smithsonian's National Zoo
Twenty years ago today, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo welcomed naked mole-rats ( Heterocephalus glaber) into its collection. These rodents, which are more closely related to porcupines and guinea pigs than to their namesake, are one of only a handful of mammals that exhibit eusocial behavior. Like...
Call Issued to Save Wild Tigers from Extinction
HANOI, Vietnam – Project Predator, an initiative to protect and save the world's last surviving wild tigers was unveiled today at the 80th INTERPOL General Assembly, a gathering of global law enforcement officials from the organization's 190 member countries. Created by INTERPOL, Project Predator...