I would die a thousand deaths of one of those varmits ever landed on me! :eek:
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I would die a thousand deaths of one of those varmits ever landed on me! :eek:
This Is One of the Tiniest Ancient Birds, and It Lived Alongside Giant Dinosaurs
" About 127 million years ago, tiny birds the size of grasshoppers lived alongside some of the biggest animals to walk the Earth, including the long-necked sauropods, a new study finds.
When it was alive, this less-than-2-inch-long (5 centimeters) chick would have weighed just 0.3 ounces (8.5 grams) — about the weight of one-fifth of a golf ball. That makes it one of the smallest birds from the dinosaur age on record, the researchers said."
https://www.livescience.com/61931-an...rd-fossil.html
It seems they evoluted separately, Yes/No. But I never heard of that small bird before.
Here are some more weird animals that are endangered:
Saiga antelope
Pied tamarin
Sea angel
Golden snub-nosed monkey
Olm/Proteus
Did a lesson plan once about weird animals, these are the ones I remember
Danger Islands with an enormous colony of Adelia penguins:
http://www.online-literature.com/for...=1#post1349385
Yes, it´s very sad:
World's last male northern white rhino on the mend after infection threatened the species
The world's last male northern white rhino is recovering from an infected leg that raised fears over the past week he might have to be put down, a veterinarian at a conservancy in Kenya says.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-0...e-mend/9526632
Deepest marine fish to date... https://weloveanimals.me/meet-worlds...ptured-camera/
They are beautiful!
A cute story:
Two Golden Retrievers Greet One Another – But Their Owners Spotted Something Else
"A woman named Pam Corwin was out shopping one afternoon when something queer has caught her attention.
She spotted two identical dogs rushing towards each other and happily greeting one another...."
Read more on: https://weloveanimals.me/two-golden-...omething-else/
Meet the yellow palm warbler
http://www.rrbo.org/in-the-field/not...-palm-warbler/
Easter chocolate warning for pet owners
Vets issue a warning to pet owners after six in 10 saw chocolate poisoning last Easter.
http://www.bbc.com/news/av/uk-northe...-reporting-map
Why don't people just familiarize themselves BEFORE getting a pet about the things that are so dangerous/harmful to pets?! This really baffles me, as an animal nut that I am.
I see idiots smoking in cars, with their pet dog in there with them???!?!?! Love to take a hose to those types...
Anyhow, I digress...
Thank you, Danik, for posting this important information.
There still are people that treat animals as living toys.
An interesting study:
How Would the 'Mona Lisa' Look to an Eagle, a Cat and a Butterfly?
"Most animals see the world in a lot less detail than we do.
"We are not the pinnacle of essentially any sensory system, except acuity," said Eleanor Caves, a postdoctoral researcher in biology at Duke University and the lead author of the new review. Regarding how detailed we see the world, 'we're really close to the top.'
Caves and her colleagues gathered hundreds of academic papers to get a comprehensive look at how sharp hundreds of species of animals, fish and insects see the world. Researchers typically define visual acuity with what's called "cycles per degree"— or how many black-and-white parallel stripes an animal can see in 1 degree of their visual world."
https://www.livescience.com/62709-an...led-world.html
The vanishing Vaquita... https://psmag.com/magazine/watching-...m_medium=email
Google: https://www.google.com/search?client...UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
Looking for something in these threads and thought to post as well:
A link to new found species on Science Daily: https://www.sciencedaily.com/news/pl...s/new_species/
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor STATELY
Thanks for reviving this forgotten thread, Tailor :). I read about some amazing facts, fishes with placenta,flying squirrels and gigantic birds.
It's a miracle': hundreds of thousands of bees survive Notre Dame fire"
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/04/19/e...cli/index.html
It´s old news but I wanted to post it here.
Very fortunate for the bees... I see so few anymore and I am even leaving dandelions uncut where I can so they might have food in this hot weather (high summer here)... we leave the majority of our acreage wild. Having a good crop of plums from maybe a dozen trees total just now, but the bees were sparse all the same. No, no pesticides are ever used...
• https://grownatives.cnps.org/2010/03...dly-gardening/
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor STATELY
True story about a sparrow.
So I was waiting for a city bus near a busy intersection about a week or so ago when I heard some squeaking cries from behind a bush near the stop. I went to check it out and it was a baby sparrow about 2/3 the size of a full grown adult. I caught her and went to the stop to show the other bus riders. I put the sparrow in another bush and got on my bus.
That same day around 10pm I returned to see if that bird was there and it was. Crying and crying and crying, I couldn't get the sparrow to shut up and it appeared too weak to fly. So I kept the sparrow and put her in a cage with feeding dishes but she wouldn't eat anything that first day.
Second day I finally got her to eat out of my hand. I had to actually shove bread down her throat and fill a bottle cap with water and almost shove that down her throat too. I could not get her to feed herself.
Day 3 and she finally quit crying all the time. I guess she was so starved that all she could do was cry. So then I tried to get her to fly and she could fly some but not enough to get high into a tree or fly more than twenty meters or so. Her tail feathers were missing so that had something to do with it, I'm sure.
Two more days of hand feeding the sparrow and trying to get her to fly and she was getting really friendly with me and not getting so scared each time I would pick her up. In fact, right there on the day I got her to fly sufficiently she wouldn't leave if I gave her the chance and started crawling all over me and more politely asking for food and water without the loud squealing.
Then I decided to try and find her flock and surprisingly they were across the intersection from where I found her, using a broken water spout as a bird bath. I took her out and walked towards their watering hole and the entire flock changed attitude from happy singing to angry chirping. As soon as they saw me carrying one of their babies they got loud with anger.
As I walked towards the watering hole the sparrow flock of about 25 birds or more flew up into the trees. She noticebly got slightly more perky as soon as she saw her flock and I walked across the parking lot and set her in the makeshift bird bath where she stood motionless. A few of them dive bombed me and got very close but didn't actually peck me.
When I finally got her to fly up into one of the trees with her flock they got silent and quit chirping angrily. I also noticed that she put more muscle into flying when she could see her flock. Must have been a morale booster. I chased her as high up into the tree as I could and left.
The next day (two days ago) I found her near where I let her go, getting fed by what was probably her mother bird, shoving twigs down her throat. I walked up to the sparrow baby to see if I could pick her up and she flew high up into the tree. I was satisfied that she could make it in the wild once again.
Ever since returning the sparrow baby to her flock I noticed birds at that intersection start chirpimg cheerily when they see me. And today, while boarding the same bus but a mile further along the same route I spotted part of the same flock of sparrows with the same baby bird, chirping and getting excited as I neared the trees they were in.
Interestingly, I learned from this experience that each bird has a unique voice just like people. When I heard that sparrow baby chirp today and I looked up to see her in the tree and saw that in fact it was the same baby bird with an adult companion (probably the same one I saw shoving twigs down her throat) I was quite surprised because I thought I would never see her again. I wonder, are they slowly following my bus routes to see where I go?
Many animals aren't empty drones and have their own personalities just like people.
Beautiful story Secret III.
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor STATELY
"Rare animal known as the ‘magic rabbit’ spotted for the first time in 20 years"...
http://awwanimal.com/rare-animal-kno...Sera7kIFo_UGA4
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor STATELY
Thanks for the interesting link, Tailor. I posted it in the german forum, bet they have never heard about the "magic rabbit".
An "angry-looking" tortoise has been rescued after it started a fire in a house.
The 45-year-old reptile was home alone when it knocked a heat lamp on to its bedding in a room at the house in Duton Hill, Great Dunmow, on Christmas Day.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-essex-50915895
Lucky tortoise... looks like an albino.
More grumpies (the Sphinx looks downright evil): https://www.sadanduseless.com/they-love-xmas-not/
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor
LOL! They must all be thinking: My Humans got nuts. Putting these darned red furs and caps on me!
The güiña:
https://www.livescience.com/guina-ti...PPryu340qJD5it
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor
Beautiful cat specimen. It looks like a small tame onça. The sound it makes is weird indeed.
The "Naja of Brasilia"
A curious case happened 4 days ago in our capital, Brasília, and I couldn´t find an English report on it.
A seldom specimen of a very venomous snake bit a veterinary student, age 22, who had time to call his parents by phone, before entering hospital, where he had to be coma induced. Luckily one or two doses of the antidote to the snake´s venom could be found in the Instituto Butantã from São Paulo, at a three and half hours distance by plane from Brasilia and the student could be safed. But questions arose, as the culprit Naja, which isn´t from a national species, was found at 14 km distance of the house of the student, who seemed to have kept her as a pet. That specially as the Operation Snake, initiated by the police of Brasilia, found 17 more rare hidden snakes, which are not native in Brazil. The police suspects an illegal commerce with wild animals quadrille and the student will have to explain the whole occurrence to the police, as soon as he is well enough to do it.
Meanwhile the initiator of all this was brought to the Zoo of Brasilia and it rose to a Brazilian celebrity as "Naja de Brasília", with Instagram account and approximately 1, 600 followers. It also gained a foto sequence which documented its beauty.
snake:
https://g1.globo.com/df/distrito-fed...brasilia.ghtml
Beautiful creature...Tragic that students are lured into illegalities... and the fines (R $ 2000.00) nowhere near what they should be... traffickers can recoup their losses several fold by selling one exotic snake:Quote:
Naja on the web
The pictures of the snake were released on Friday (10) by the Brasília Zoo and, in a few hours, fell in favor of the internet users. In a post on social media, a user calls the records a "boring essay". Until the last update of this report, the post on Twitter had 44.9 thousand likes and 10.9 thousand shares.
(sigh)Quote:
The police estimate that the animal is worth up to R $ 20,000 in illegal trade.
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor
Thanks for looking it up on Twitter, tailor! I only didn´t understand the "boring essay" part as they were news. Must be one of those social media metamorphosis.
Just one update: the student was released from hospital two days before it was intended (family maybe afraid of the mediatic dimension of the case) and every one concerned was heavily fined. The snakes, about ten of the seventeen were imported, were all donated to adequate institutions.
I think that in this particular case the traffic of wild animals was successfully interrupted, at least for the time being.
And in the Siberian Zoo of Novosibisk:
https://twitter.com/siberian_times/s...73663467986944
Mom is at a bit of a loss how to deal with it: "Don´t know, were all this people came from. It has suddenly become crowded in here."
(Video comes after the pics): https://f5.folha.uol.com.br/bichos/2...ino-raro.shtml
Beautiful cat... tried google translate on the 2nd page with no joy. Stunning blue eyes.
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor
Sorry, tailor. Didn´t mean to put you or any one on trouble. The Brazilian text is not important, but I wanted to post the cat video, posted together with the pictures, which wasn´t available anywhere else. Probably fished out of the FB of "The Siberian Press".