Following Firefaces in the night
It is 17:00 we get ready to start working in the field. GPS, datasheets, binoculars, antenna and receivers are essential to our work. Backpack…
Read MoreIt is 17:00 we get ready to start working in the field. GPS, datasheets, binoculars, antenna and receivers are essential to our work. Backpack…
Read MoreHi , I am Helmi as volunteer here. Today I would like to share my experience about taking pictures in the night. As a…
Read MoreHi everyone, I am Helene the research coordinator and I would like to speak about the camera traps we have here. The aim of…
Read MoreIn the largest study of its kind, our Little Fireface Project team out of Oxford Brookes University in the UK and Gadjah Madah University…
Read MoreAs the Field Station Coordinator, I spend a lot of time in the field observing slow lorises. Most nights, nothing too out of the…
Read MoreWe are excited to announce that Big Hug Brewing has joined up with LFP for an exciting beer label competition. In time for Slow…
Read MoreAssumptions Many people often assume that slow lorises are not very social. This assumption, though, is based off of many observational biases. Slow lorises…
Read MoreJoin our Little Fireface Project team of 3 postdoctoral researchers, 4 PhD students, 5 MSc students, 2 coordinators, 5 trackers, and other field staff,…
Read MoreOlder brothers and sisters, they play with you, and keep you safe even if you can drive them a little insane. Much like humans…
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