The Leibniz-IZW regular publishes press releases on key findings and insights from its research and on events, awards or personalia. The press releases are distributed directly to journalists on our press release distribution mailing list. Press releases are also disseminated through the distribution services Informationsdienst Wissenschaft, AlphaGalileo and EurekAlert. Are you interested in receiving our press releases directly via e-mail? In this case please send us an email to presse@izw-berlin.de.

Current press releases

Eurasian lynx. Photo: Johanna Painer/IZW
Eurasian lynx. Photo: Johanna Painer/IZW

The Eurasian lynx as a key to the conservation and future viability of the endangered Iberian lynx

Understanding the mechanisms which control reproduction in lynx is essential for their continued viability and effective conservation.

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Orang-utan with infant. Photo: Andrew Hearn & Joanna Ross
Orang-utan with infant. Photo: Andrew Hearn & Joanna Ross

Orang-utans on the ground

An international team of scientists studied how Bornean orang-utans cope with habitat modifications caused by logging in rainforests

 

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Polar bear Knut as dermoplastic in the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, Germany. | Steven Seet/IZW
Polar bear Knut as dermoplastic in the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, Germany. | Steven Seet/IZW

Knut the polar bear’s medical legacy

Knut, the polar bear of the Berlin Zoological Garden, drowned in 2011 after suffering seizures and falling into the enclosure pond. Necropsy and histology at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research suggested the cause was encephalitis most likely due to viral infection. After one of the most intensive investigations in veterinary history for a single animal, utilising state-of-the-art pathological techniques and high-throughput next-generation molecular sequencing methods, the conclusions of the investigations are presented.

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Gemsbok (Oryx gazella gazella) in the Kunene region in Namibia. Photo: David Lehmann (IZW).

Eating poisonous plants saves life of gemsbok in Namibian desert

In drought periods browsing springbok (Antidorcas marsupialis) feed on all plant material they can find, while grazing gemsbok (Oryx gazella gazella), in contrast, switch their diet to a high proportion of poisonous plants – and they survive. These findings were just published in the scientific online journal PLOS ONE.

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Rhinoceros unicornis | Foto: LeitnerR - fotolia.com .

Imaging techniques can improve management and husbandry of rhinoceroses

High-resolution computed tomography and digital radiography in captive rhinos reveal that bone pathologies in the feet of these pachyderms are highly prevalent and diverse.

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Eisbär in menschlicher Obhut. Foto: Zoo Wuppertal.

Forscher entdecken neue Retroviren bei Eisbär Knut und Panda Bao Bao

Nach dem Tod des Eisbären Knut ergaben Untersuchungen am Leibniz-Institut für Zoo- und Wildtierforschung (IZW), dass Knut wohl an einer durch Viren verursachten Gehirnentzündung litt. Bei der Analyse seines Erbguts haben Forscher der Saar-Uni und des IZW nun neue Sequenzen endogener Retroviren entdeckt und charakterisiert. Auch bei dem Pandabären Bao Bao fanden sich diese Viren. Dass sich diese Viren bereits vor etwa 45 Millionen Jahren in das Genom eines Vorfahren der Bären eingebaut haben, zeigen die Forscher in einer aktuellen Studie in der Fachzeitschrift Virology. Darüber hinaus sind die neu entdeckten Viren denen im Erbgut von Fledermäusen, Rindern und sogar Menschen sehr ähnlich. Beim Menschen stehen einige von ihnen im Verdacht, Krankheiten mit auszulösen.

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Wildschweine im Berliner Forst. Photo: Milena Stillfried (IZW).

Wildtiererfassung neuen Stils:

In der Stadt lebende Wildtiere verschiedenster Arten stellen Bevölkerung und Behörden vor neue Herausforderungen. Das Leibniz-Institut für Zoo- und Wildtierforschung startet jetzt zwei beispielhafte Studien über Wildschweine und Igel in der Stadt. Alle Berliner sind aufgerufen, sich an der wissenschaftlichen Datenerhebung zu beteiligen und möglichst viele Wildtierbeobachtungen zu melden.

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Arctic foxes (Vulpes lagopus) with different coat condition. Photo: IZW.

You are what (and where) you eat – mercury pollution threatens Arctic foxes

New scientific results show that arctic foxes accumulate dangerous levels of mercury if they live in coastal habitats and feed on prey which lives in the ocean. Researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Moscow State University and the University of Iceland just published their discovery in the science online journal PLOS ONE.

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