EDGE Blogs
One of our focal EDGE amphibians – the purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis) – has been caught on camera for the first time by EDGE-affiliated resea...  Read
In February 2008, on the last day of the Chinese New Year festivities, we arrived in Wuhan in order to try to establish the fate of the possibly extinct Yang...  Read
Here is the latest updated from Kimitei, our EDGE Fellow monitoring Africa's most threatened antelope - the hirola: It has been a great rainy season in th...  Read
Here is the second blog from Thomas Doherty-Bone, who is carrying out research on little know amphibians in Cameroon, including a number of EDGE and highly E...  Read
Marwell Zoological Park is celebrating the birth of a pygmy hippopotamus, EDGE Mammal species number 21. Born three weeks ago, the hippo is part of a cons...  Read
Kimitei, our EDGE Fellow monitoring the Critically Endangered hirola population in Tsavo National Park, Kenya, has sent us this update: Rains are now droppi...  Read
The Yangtze River dolphin or baiji (Lipotes vexillifer), our top-ranked EDGE mammal species, has been the focus of a huge amount of international attention s...  Read
Yuan Lei, the EDGE Fellow we support to study the Critically Endangered Bactrian camel in China, has been carrying out his usual monitoring surveys in rece...  Read
Japanese scientists have created a cloned embryo from the dead body of a top ranking EDGE rabbit and are hoping for a birth. The Amami rabbit, or Pentalag...  Read
Kimitei, our Kenyan EDGE Fellow studying Africa's most endangered antelope - the hirola, has sent us the following update on his recent findings: Click h...  Read
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     Welcome to the EDGE of Existence
mDiscover the world's most extraordinary threatened
mspecies - frogs that give birth through their skin and
mmmammals that have ears bigger than their heads.
mnnmmThese species are "one of a kind" and if they
mnmmmdisappear there will be nothing like them left
mnnmmon the planet.
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mmmngrowing community of scientists,
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