How much do you know about the secret lives of these elusive animals?
So, how much do you know about sea snakes? Or pangolins? Or bull sharks?
Test yourself – or learn a thing or two – about these, and other, intriguing creatures.
Stream the new season of Dr Ann's Secret Lives free on ABC iview or watch Tuesdays at 8:30pm on ABC TV.
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ABC News
39 minutes ago
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Another round of layoffs hit the games industry & an amibitous start for Creative Futures
After a fourth round of layoffs have hit Microsoft's games division, what does it mean for the industry at large? And with comments from competitors like "I don't think Game Pass can co-exist with other models, they'll either kill everyone else, or give up," is Game Pass a boon for consumers or a death knell for artists? Jody Macgregor, weekend editor at PC Gamer, gets us up to speed And with 7.8 million dollars, spread across 20 projects in its first round of funding, the Creative Futures Fund has a goal of supporting ambitious work. The fund's director Wendy Martin discusses the philosophies and practicalities behind the decisions. Our track of the week is Gone A Long Time by Billy Strings. Stories mentioned in the headlines: UNESCO approves world heritage listing for WA's Murujuga rock art KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack dominating music charts Gao Zhen pleads not guilty in trial

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Queensland research finds inhaled vaccine effective tuberculosis protection
A research team from north Queensland has found delivering the tuberculosis (TB) vaccine directly to the lungs could create stronger protection against the world's deadliest infectious disease. There is one available vaccine to protect against TB, developed in 1921, with little known about why the vaccine sometimes stops offering protection in adolescence. World Health Organisation data revealed 10.8 million new TB infections globally in 2023 and 1.3 million deaths. The team from James Cook University found that administering a stronger strain of the only existing Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccine, or BCG, generated an effective immune response in the lungs. "This link between how the body repairs the lung after minor injury and how that can lead to better protection against tuberculosis is really what this study is about," associate professor Andreas Kupz, who led the study, said. TB is primarily spread through the air when a person with active tuberculosis disease coughs, sneezes or speaks. Dr Kupz said high global rates of TB were in part due to the limited efficacy of the only licensed vaccine, developed to protect adults in 1921 via a shot to the arm. "Because it is delivered as an injection after birth, it often doesn't produce long-term protection against respiratory infections," he said. Dr Kupz said the team's research could hold several important implications for the development of a more effective TB vaccine, eventually saving lives. TB has largely been eradicated from Australia, but is more common in northern Australia, particularly in Cape York and Torres Strait Islands. The latest available Queensland Health data shows the state treated 189 people for TB infections in 2023. Dr Kupz said Cape York and the Torres Strait Islands were most susceptible because of their proximity to Papua New Guinea, which experiences high rates of infection. "Papua New Guinea is actually a hotspot for tuberculosis globally, not just in terms of the numbers of TB they have, but also drug-resistant strains," he said. Port Moresby-based health advocate Anne Clarke said the 45,000 TB cases recorded in Papua New Guinea in the past year were a significant strain on the health system and economy. "The exposure of the wider community to this infectious disease agent is about 100 per cent in this town," Dr Clarke said. "Everybody is affected." Dr Kupz said he hoped his team's research would eventually lead to more effective protection against infections. "Pending ethical approvals, we hope to see it go to human trial by the end of 2026 or early 2027," he said.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
How Australia's ‘reverse convict' Ryan Peake went from prison to the Open
Of all the ways Ryan Peake has gone from a tiny and crowded prison cell to golf's most historic tournament, who would have thought it would all rest on a British passport? Nearly a few hundred years on, Peake is the reverse convict: an Australian with a criminal record only being able to enter the United Kingdom for its treasured golfing heirloom because of citizenship he's held though his father, Mel. 'My dad was born in England,' Peake says. Whereabouts? 'England,' he laughs, clearly not having taken time to delve too much into the family history. 'I mean, that's the reason I'm here this week.' The Australian left-hander, who earlier this year opened up to News Corp about his journey from a former Rebels bikie who spent five years in prison for a serious assault to top golfer, is speaking in a plush suite on the grounds of Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland before his debut major. He's holding his own press conference away from official R&A briefings because there's been that much interest in his story. A collection of journalists from European publications have been fascinated by his tale, taking out their notebooks at any time to learn more about this interloper who's crashed golf's clean cut elite. But Peake walks through the crowds and there's barely a second glance from punters. Opinion is split in the ravenous Pommy press. Can we write about one of the most incredible sporting tales of the year? Will it glorify violence? Why is he so openly speaking about it when it would have just been easier to trot out the line it was in the past? 'I just like honesty,' Peake says. 'It's me. I guess I got out of the (Rebels) club from being honest as well. It's hard to kick someone that's honest, and it's just my view and it's my life. It's my story. I'm not essentially embarrassed about it. It's something that I've done. I've owned it.' How a Northern Irish crowd besotted with Rory McIlroy react to a heavily tattooed Australian with a dark past he's emerged from is anyone's guess. The R&A clearly have a sense of humour, pairing Peake with LIV Golf disrupter Phil Mickelson for the opening two rounds. If walking onto the first tee of your first major playing alongside Phil is daunting, how about being crammed into a cold and concrete confinement for your crimes? Plucking up the courage to ask the Rebels if you can leave their chapter when you get out because you want to play golf? Figuring out how to actually do shopping again? Pay bills? Trying to hit a little white ball for the first time? 'It was pretty shit,' Peake says of the latter. 'I mean it went forward, but a lot's come since then.' But the reaction from his peers has been far more emphatic this week. Peake, 31, credits Min Woo Lee coach's Ritchie Smith for saving his golfing career when he rang him while he was inside. Lee has spent the majority of the week with Peake learning the nuances of this brutal and beautiful links golf course. On Tuesday (BST), Peake also spent time with his former Australian junior teammate Cameron Smith and veteran Marc Leishman in a practice round. 'People think it's just normal and he's just playing golf, but there must be something that he deals with every day,' Lee says. 'I guess he has this amazing story about him, but he still wants to play good golf. He thinks the story doesn't matter if he doesn't play good golf.' Says Smith: 'It's awesome. He's a great guy. He got himself into strife, but it's good to see him out here playing golf for one, but turning his life around is the main thing.' Where he is allowed to golf is still up in the air. Peake has now hired a manager, Matt Cutler, after his New Zealand Open win earlier this year garnered worldwide attention and helped him earn status on the lucrative DP World and Asian Tour. Cutler has applied for three visas so far, three successes. But bigger logistical hurdles await, particularly in the United States, the epicentre of professional golf, and more sensitive parts of Asia. 'We will help him as much as we can,' Asian Tour boss Cho Minn Thant says. 'There are no issues from a management perspective and I think all the players treat him as a fellow competitor. He's easy to get along with.' Of all the shattering tales he's already told of how his life once unravelled, the most jarring might have been when his mum told him she was relieved the day he stepped foot in prison. It was because she finally knew where he was each night. Peake's fiancée Lee and his parents will arrive at Royal Portrush to watch The Open, safe again in the knowledge he's made it to a place his talent deemed he should be – with the help of a little British passport. 'If I wanted to pull out this week because I didn't feel right or thought, 'this isn't for me', that wouldn't bother (my family) one bit,' Peake says. 'They would just want whatever I want, and they'd be happy with that.'