^
+ Follow BUBALUS Tag
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 381576
                    [Title] => Tamaraw flourishes anew in RP forests
                    [Summary] => 

A unique dwarf water buffalo driven to the edge of extinction by hunting and deforestation is flourishing again in a rare success for conservationists.


Big-game hunters using helicopters and automatic rifles, and deforestation by settlers, loggers and ranchers pushed the tamaraw, or Bubalus mindorensis, among the ranks of the world’s critically endangered list by 1970.
[DatePublished] => 2007-01-25 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 133272 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => [AuthorName] => [SectionName] => News Commentary [SectionUrl] => news-commentary [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 369635 [Title] => Ice Age carabao found in Cebu [Summary] => Unknown to science until now, a new species of carabao has been discovered — 100,000 years late.

During the Ice Age, Bubalus cebuensis stood 2.5 feet and weighed about 160 kilograms. It was a mini copy of today’s adult water buffaloes that stand six feet and weigh up to a ton.

The dwarf buffalo is to a typical carabao as a pony is to a horse. And it is about a fourth smaller than its living relative, the hundred or so tamaraws that remain in Mindoro Island and nowhere else.
[DatePublished] => 2006-11-19 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 133272 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1366738 [AuthorName] => J. Restituto [SectionName] => Agriculture [SectionUrl] => agriculture [URL] => ) ) )
BUBALUS
Array
(
    [results] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [ArticleID] => 381576
                    [Title] => Tamaraw flourishes anew in RP forests
                    [Summary] => 

A unique dwarf water buffalo driven to the edge of extinction by hunting and deforestation is flourishing again in a rare success for conservationists.


Big-game hunters using helicopters and automatic rifles, and deforestation by settlers, loggers and ranchers pushed the tamaraw, or Bubalus mindorensis, among the ranks of the world’s critically endangered list by 1970.
[DatePublished] => 2007-01-25 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 133272 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => [AuthorName] => [SectionName] => News Commentary [SectionUrl] => news-commentary [URL] => ) [1] => Array ( [ArticleID] => 369635 [Title] => Ice Age carabao found in Cebu [Summary] => Unknown to science until now, a new species of carabao has been discovered — 100,000 years late.

During the Ice Age, Bubalus cebuensis stood 2.5 feet and weighed about 160 kilograms. It was a mini copy of today’s adult water buffaloes that stand six feet and weigh up to a ton.

The dwarf buffalo is to a typical carabao as a pony is to a horse. And it is about a fourth smaller than its living relative, the hundred or so tamaraws that remain in Mindoro Island and nowhere else.
[DatePublished] => 2006-11-19 00:00:00 [ColumnID] => 133272 [Focus] => 0 [AuthorID] => 1366738 [AuthorName] => J. Restituto [SectionName] => Agriculture [SectionUrl] => agriculture [URL] => ) ) )
abtest
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