The World's Rarest Animals Recently Caught On Camera
The World's Rarest Animals Recently Caught On Camera
The Tiger Quoll, a carnivorous marsupial native to Australia, had not been seen by humans in more than a decade when someone caught the possum-looking creature outside their laundry room in May last year.
The Spotted Deer is one of the world's most endangered mammals and lives in the dense forests of an island in the Philippines. It was caught on film in the the wild for the first time in May 2012.
The Oncilla, a rare Bolivian cat, was captured on camera by the Wildlife Conservation Society in Bolivia's Madidi National Park. The photo won a BBC Wildlife camera-trap photo competition.
A dime-size eyeless spider, called the Braken Bat Cave Meshweaver Spider, had not been seen in 30 years until the insect was found in Texas last October.
The White Lion has not been seen in the wild since 1994. They are not albinos and are unique to the Timbavati region of Africa. Three white lion cubs were born in a Ukraine Zoo this past December.
A Liliger, the offspring of a female liger and an African lion, is one of the world's rarest animals. A liliger was born at a Siberian zoo in September 2012.