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Rambo the crafty fox who refuses to be caught, outsmarting wildlife managers in the Pilliga for four years

How These Hot-pink Slugs Outlasted the Australian Brush Fires

Proactive sluggishness, along with the ability to squeeze into tight spaces, keeps these slugs safe from predators like birds, toads and, well, fires.

Lucky escape after ute lost in floodwaters at Boggabri

Man injured after ute washed away

Five remarkable stories of flora and fauna in the aftermath of Australia s horror bushfire season

Will Cornwell, Casey Kirchhoff, Mark Ooi Community scientists have been photographing animals and plants in the months after the Black Summer fires. Each observation is a story of survival against the odds, or of tragedy. Regrowth after bushfires. Picture: hamiltonphillipa/iNaturalist Around one year ago, Australia’s Black Summer bushfire season ended, leaving more than 8 million hectares across south-east Australia a mix of charcoal, ash and smoke. An estimated three billion animals were killed or displaced, not including invertebrates. The impact of the fires on biodiversity was too vast for professional scientists alone to collect data. So in the face of this massive challenge, we set up a community (citizen) science project through the iNaturalist website to help paint a more complete picture of which species are bouncing back and which are not.

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