
Articles
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6 days ago |
thisiscanberra.com | Nicholas Ward
The ACT’s largest student art showcase is on at the M16 Artspace in Griffith until the end of the month (29 June). Step into the Limelight, now in its 19th year, showcases artworks from K-12 from public schools across the city. This year’s theme, Enter the Unknown, saw a huge variety of interpretations across the over 400 artworks on display from 29 schools. Teacher Emily Appleton helped organise the show and said it’s amazing to get to facilitate this creativity.
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1 week ago |
regionriverina.com.au | Nicholas Ward
The Southern Corroboree frog is almost extinct in its natural habitat of Kosciuszcko, due to the chytridiomycosis fungus, and the loss of rare alpine habitat, but new genome mapping of the amphibian could bring it back from the brink. It’s a project that has been in the works for a long time, according to Dr Tiffany Kosch, Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, who said it took 10 years to map the genome of the ‘functionally extinct’ frogs.
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1 week ago |
psnews.com.au | Nicholas Ward
The Southern Corroboree frog is almost extinct in its natural habitat of Kosciuszcko, due to the chytridiomycosis fungus, and the loss of rare alpine habitat, but new genome mapping of the amphibian could bring it back from the brink. It’s a project that has been in the works for a long time, according to Dr Tiffany Kosch, Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, who said it took 10 years to map the genome of the ‘functionally extinct’ frogs.
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1 week ago |
aboutregional.com.au | Nicholas Ward
The Southern Corroboree frog is almost extinct in its natural habitat of Kosciuszcko, due to the chytridiomycosis fungus, and the loss of rare alpine habitat, but new genome mapping of the amphibian could bring it back from the brink. It’s a project that has been in the works for a long time, according to Dr Tiffany Kosch, Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, who said it took 10 years to map the genome of the ‘functionally extinct’ frogs.
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2 weeks ago |
region.com.au | Nicholas Ward
12 June 2025Start the conversation“I just really love them so, they’re a really unique little frog, they’re bright, black and yellow, and kind of round, and they walk instead of jump,” Dr Tiffany Kosch said. Photo: Namadgi National Park. The Southern Corroboree frog is almost extinct in its natural habitat of Kosciuszcko, due to the chytridiomycosis fungus, and the loss of rare alpine habitat, but new genome mapping of the amphibian could bring it back from the brink.
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