2.One Step at a Time: The First Elephant Prosthetics
3.Scouring The Serengeti For The Elusive Black Rhino
4.This Primeval Amphibian Has A Peppery Edge
5.The Real Life Jurassic Park, for Cats
6.Don’t Cuddle This Cute Porcupine
7.This Adorable Bunny Needs Our Help
8.Sprinting For Survival: The African Cheetah
9.This Tortoise Could Be Extinct in 20 Years
10.How These Giant Salamanders Could Save Amphibians Around the World
11.On The Hunt For Pythons In The Everglades
12.Overfishing May Prevent This Gal From Finding Her Soul Mate
13.Crawling The Canopy For Survival With The Red Panda
14.Hanging Out With the Trapeze Artists of the Animal Kingdom
15.Monogamous Swingers: Pileated Gibbons Hang Together
16.Rediscovering the Elusive Blue Butterfly
17.Meet the Team Protecting Costa Rica’s Sea Turtle Mecca
18.Half Horse, Half Rhino? The Malayan Tapir Fights For Its Future
19.A Hairy Situation: This Tarantula Is No Pet
20.These Playful Leopard Cubs Are a Rare Sight in the Wild
21.The Somali Wild Ass Perseveres in the Face of Extinction
22.A Gazelle as Rare as It Is Small
23.Full Body Armor Can't Protect This Armadillo from Humans
24.Meet the Biggest and Bluest Parrot in the World
25.The World’s Only Scaled Mammal Is ADORABLE
The eastern indigo is the longest native snake species in the United States. Typically ranging between five and seven feet long, this nonvenomous serpent has iridescent scales that appear blackish-purple in sunlight. This snake calls woody areas near bodies of water in the southeastern United States home. But habitat loss means that you probably won't spot these guys in the wild.
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