The Females
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Google books | books.google.com |
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Authors | Wolfgang Hilbig |
Genres | Literary Fiction |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2594897 |
About The Females
From award-winning author-and-translator combination Wolfgang Hilbig and Isabel Fargo Cole What can an irascible East German tell us about how society shapes relations between the sexes? A lot it turns out. . . .
Red Arrows: Predatory behaviour widespread and normalised - RAF
... It said: " All of The Females expressed their concern, without solicitation, that they were not showing moral courage by not speaking out and they could be enabling the situation to happen to other women, but they had to balance this against the reality that they felt likely to suffer a detriment on a day to day basis and they had worked hard to get where they were and they did not want to sacrifice their position...
The man rescuing Britain's 'magical' glow worms
... The males are fully-winged as adults and can fly, while The Females are wingless and have to glow frantically in the summer months to attract a passing mate...
Red Admiral butterflies: Climate change sees migratory species stay in UK, says charity
... It migrates north to the UK each spring and summer, and The Females lay eggs...
Orca mothers keep 5-tonne sons out of trouble
... One of the key questions biologists have been asking, is why The Females of this species stop reproducing part-way through their long lives...
First cheetah cubs born in India since extinction 70 years ago
... The four cubs were born in Kuno National Park wildlife sanctuary to one of The Females that came from Namibia last September...
David Carrick: Met Police officer raped by ex-policeman will be at his sentencing
... " That s what they did to a lot of The Females as they joined...
Elephants: Covid and ethics reshape Thailand's tourism industry
... In the tourist camps The Females are kept apart from the bulls, but here we have all been hanging out together, and the elephants have been having sex...
Australia: Scientists find clitorises on female snakes
...By Frances MaoBBC NewsScientists have discovered that snakes do have clitorises, shattering a long-held assumption that The Females didn t have a sexual organ...
First cheetah cubs born in India since extinction 70 years ago
By Francesca GillettBBC News
India has welcomed The Birth of four cheetah cubs - More Than 70 years after The Animals were declared officially extinct there.
India's environment minister announced The Good News , calling it a " momentous event".
The country has been trying to reintroduce The Big Cats for decades, and Last Year brought eight Cheetahs over from Namibia as part of The Plan .
Another 12 Cheetahs were brought to India from South Africa last month.
The Four cubs were born in Kuno National Park wildlife sanctuary to one of The Females that came from Namibia last September .
Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav said he was " delighted".
" I congratulate The entire team of Project Cheetah for their relentless efforts in bringing back Cheetahs to India and for their efforts in correcting an ecological wrong done in The Past , " He Said .
Prime Minister Narendra Modi also welcomed The " wonderful news".
The cubs were believed to have been born Five Days ago, but they were spotted by officials on Wednesday, The Press Trust of India reported.
A park official told The News agency that The mother Siyaya and The cubs were fine and healthy.
But The Announcement of The new cubs comes just Two Days after one of The Other eight Namibian Cheetahs died at The Kuno National Park due to kidney failure.
When they were transported to India Last Year , it was The First Time a large carnivore had been moved from one continent to another and reintroduced in The Wild .
Cheetahs - The World 's fastest land animal - became officially extinct in India in 1952, after years of dwindling numbers because of hunting, a loss of habitat and not having enough prey to eat.
The vast majority of The 7,000 Cheetahs in The World are now found in Africa - in South Africa , Namibia and Botswana.
The Asiatic Cheetah is critically endangered and Now Only found in Iran, where there are thought to be about 50 left.
The Cheetah is listed globally as " vulnerable" on The International Union for The Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species.
It can race across grasslands at speeds touching 70 mph (112km/h) to capture prey.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com