
International Convention on Children's right
CyberDodo and Ants (1-1)
CyberDodo and Bees (1-5)
Beaches (1-6)
The Convention (2-1)
Definition of the Child – Article 1 and 2 - (2-2)
The Mission of CyberDodo (2-40)
CyberDodo and the waste of energy (1-20)
CyberDodo and persons with disabilities (2-20)
The importance of the media – Article 17 - (2-15)
CyberDodo and the Dangers of Fire (1-7)
Rivers (1-8)
Understanding the best interests of the child (2-3)
CyberDodo and the Monkeys (1-13)
Camels (1-31)
CyberDodo and Water (1-32)
Medicinal plants (1-33)
CyberDodo and the Penguins (1-34)
CyberDodo and child soldiers (2-30)
CyberDodo and the Cheetah (1-23)
CyberDodo and the TseTse fly (1-47)
CyberDodo fights against the sexual exploitation of children (2-27)
CyberDodo and Coral (1-16)
CyberDodo and ground water tables (1-53)
The Right to a Nationality (2-37)
CyberDodo and the Forests (1-9)
CyberDodo takes on Obesity (2-34)
CyberDodo and the Eagles (1-21)
CyberDodo and the Implementation of the Agreement (2-4)
CyberDodo and Tortoises (1-24)
CyberDodo and the Freedom of Expression (2-13)
CyberDodo and the farmyard (1-25)
CyberDodo fights against Child Trafficking (2-28)
CyberDodo and Rhinos (1-28)
CyberDodo takes on the cigarette (2-35)
CyberDodo takes on child abuse (2-16)
CyberDodo fights against child labour (2-25)
CyberDodo and greenhouse gases (1-40)
CyberDodo fights against drug abuse (2-26)
CyberDodo and Street kids(1-38)
CyberDodo fights against child abduction (2-11)
CyberDodo and Clones (1-4)
CyberDodo and the Whales (1-10)
CyberDodo and the Right to Education (2-38)
CyberDodo and Dolphins (1-11)
3 minutes to discover CyberDodo!
CyberDodo defends the Right to Freedom of Expression in the Courts (2-12)
CyberDodo and solar energy (1-45)
CyberDodo and the Elephants (1-22)
CyberDodo fights against hunger (2-6)
CyberDodo and the Ozone Layer (1-35)
CyberDodo and Urban pollution (1-19)
CyberDodo and mother’s milk (2-7)
CyberDodo and Nutrition (1-55)
Raising awareness of the Convention (2-39)
CyberDodo and city maintenance (1-41)
CyberDodo and the Sea Lion (1-18)
CyberDodo and Dodos (1-2)
CyberDodo fights against sexual aggression (2-33)
Multimedia Press Release
CyberDodo and the Sharks (1-27)
CyberDodo and the Molluscs (1-26)
CyberDodo and illegal animal trafficking (1-30)
CyberDodo and the Right to Live with one’s own Parents (2-09)
CyberDodo and draught horses (1-36)
The Right to have a name
CyberDodo and the Dams (1-37)
CyberDodo commits to the right to respect of personal privacy (2-14)
CyberDodo and the Alligators (1-39)
CyberDodo and abandoned animals (1-43)
Let us fight against the sexual exploitation of children
Hall of Fame (Winners of CyberDodo's tournaments)In order to emphasise, from the start of this case file, the exceptional, tragic characteristics of Dodos, note that they were part of the bird family even though they could not fly, that the lack of predators enabled them to build their nests on the ground and that when man arrived on the island of Mauritius, it was barely even a challenge for him to track them down...
Curious, they followed their executioners and were caught and eaten, while dogs, cats, pigs, goats and other rats that the humans had transported with them destroyed their nests and broods.
In order to understand the depths of the tragedy that afflicted CyberDodo's ancestors, we only need to look at 2 figures: they were discovered at the end of the 16th century and had all been exterminated less than a century later.
Morphology:
Dodos are often depicted as resembling fat turkeys weighing more than 10 kgs (some authors even talk of 20 kgs), with more or less dark plumage and yellow on their legs, as well as a characteristic growth of the same colour on their beaks.
When we see our friend CyberDodo, we can easily imagine what his ancestors looked like, although unfortunately we can only see him virtually, as a result of the acts of man.

To which living animal are Dodos the most clearly related?
Physical resemblance with turkeys is genetically mistaken since, according to scientists, the Dodo's actual cousins would be pigeons and doves.
Where does the Dodo's name come from?
There are several answers to this question, ranging from Dodo's call - ‘Doo Doo' - which could have been given to him by man, which could have been via the Dutch or Portuguese etymology, the latter being the first to have visited the island of Mauritius.
It must be pointed out that scientists called it the ‘Dronte'.
Have Dodos disappeared forever?
The progress of science gives us hope that one day it will be possible to use bones and other parts of preserved Dodos from excavations to extract their DNA and bring this species to life, which inspired this terrible expression in English: ‘dead as a dodo'.
For now it is only a dream, we hope that it will become reality much quicker.
Numerous authors anticipated this return by integrating them in their work, such as Lewis Carroll in ‘Alice in Wonderland'.

Symbol:
The Dodo has become a symbol of extinction, as its recent disappearance (in the wake of history) due to human activities that are disrespectful of the Environment were indicative of the ecological disaster taking place.
This is why CyberDodo® came back to the earth, so that the tragedy his family went through could not afflict any other species, starting with young people. He is a universal Ambassador, breaking all barriers regarding race, sex, religion, politics and society.

To see the cartoon on Dodos, click here
To do the quiz, click here
For the game, click here
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