projectkimberley.org
Wildlife in the Kimberley!
http://projectkimberley.org/wildlife
The wildlife in the kimberley is nothing short of amazing. Snaps from the Game Camera's! Donated funds are always appreciated, and you'd be surprised how far we make funding stretch. To volunteer to help with field work. Donate your social reach by letting your friends know about Project Kimberley. Join Our Social Networks.
projectkimberley.org
Landscape in the Kimberley!
http://projectkimberley.org/landscape
The landscape in the Kimberley is simply breathtaking! A refreshing place for a swim. Donated funds are always appreciated, and you'd be surprised how far we make funding stretch. To volunteer to help with field work. Donate your social reach by letting your friends know about Project Kimberley. Join Our Social Networks.
projectkimberley.org
Get Involved with Project Kimberley
http://projectkimberley.org/get-involved
This would be the first toggle. Donated funds are always appreciated, and you'd be surprised how far we make funding stretch. To volunteer to help with field work. Donate your social reach by letting your friends know about Project Kimberley. Join Our Social Networks.
projectkimberley.org
What has Project Kimberley found?
http://projectkimberley.org/findings
Background work by the Project Kimberley team (mainly based upon work on cane toad impact in the Northern Territory). Doody, J. S., B. Green, R. Sims, D. Rhind, P. West, and David Steer. "Indirect impacts of invasive cane toads (. On nest predation in pig-nosed turtles (. 33, no. 5 (2006): 349-354. Full Article. 12, no. 1 (2009): 46-53. Full Article. 15, no. 3 (2013): 559-568. Full Article. In the eastern Kimberley.". 34, no. 2 (2012): 260-262. Full Article. 8, no 4 (2013): e60760. Full Article. Soanes, ...
projectkimberley.org
The Lazarus Project
http://projectkimberley.org/news/lazarus-project
The gastric brooding frog was one of the most remarkable species known to zoology - as it's names suggests, it reproduced by turning its stomach into a uterus and brooding its clutch of eggs inside. The adult would not eat during this period, and would eventually give birth to the frogletsthrough its mouth. Two species were discovered in the 1980s A series of lucky accidents. Not Exactly Rocket Science - Phenomena, National Geographic, March 15 2013. To volunteer to help with field work.