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A bogong moth feasting on a blossom in a Canberra backyard in 2013. Credit: Alison Jones Ngunnawal people have told him how their ancestors would join with the Wiradjuri and the Walgaloo nations ...
Imagine traveling more than 600 miles from the only home you’ve ever known, to a mountain ridge you’ve never been to. It’s nighttime, completely dark, and you don’t have a map, GPS, compass, or ...
Polyphemus moths overwinter in their silken cocoons, the adult moths emerging in late spring and early summer. Adults don’t eat, they don’t have mouths (which is weird to think about).
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