Share Animal Pictures: For Animal Lovers

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In summary: In summary, this conversation consisted of various links to funny and cute animal pictures and gifs. The conversation also touched on the dangers of raising wild animals, the importance of having a sense of humor in certain areas of the forum, and an amusing owl meme.
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Physics news on Phys.org
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Here is a National Geographic picture of an eel larvae.
Where eels came from was not well understood for a surprisingly long time.
The larvae look quite different from the adults and are laid in difficult to observe locations.

The white thread going back fromthe head is the spinal cord. It expands into the larger and more complex brain, just behind the shiny eye.

Screen Shot 2022-06-28 at 12.21.38 PM.png
 
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  • #2,208
BillTre said:
Where eels came from was not well understood for a surprisingly long time.
The understanding was eelusive?

(I'll get my coat...)
 
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  • #2,209
Such a big playground with lots of people to play with!

 
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It's hot here
 
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Rive said:
It's hot here

"Easy, pal. That's canine profiling, and I resent it." (Agent F)

Pug owners here say: A life without a pug is possible but senseless.
 
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Donatello's daily practice!

 
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  • #2,215
Largest known turtle:
Screen Shot 2022-07-13 at 11.07.12 AM.png


Weevil face:
Screen Shot 2022-07-13 at 11.29.48 AM.png


A Kingfisher:
Screen Shot 2022-07-13 at 11.06.29 AM.png
 
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  • #2,216
Some nice looking butterflies:

Screen Shot 2022-08-01 at 9.17.23 AM.png
 
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Screen Shot 2022-08-02 at 11.36.00 AM.png
 
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Screen Shot 2022-08-06 at 8.42.06 AM.png
 
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Screen Shot 2022-08-15 at 5.57.07 PM.png
 
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That probably came from a dog diving competition like one that I saw this weekend.
 
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Screen Shot 2022-08-18 at 9.31.36 AM.png
 
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  • #2,224
BillTre said:
[crow-on-eagle...]
So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?
 
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strangerep said:
So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?
I thought it was provisions for the way.
 
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  • #2,226
strangerep said:
So what's going on there? It looks like the eagle is carrying some kind of prey(?) and the crow is trying to induce the eagle to drop it?
I don't see the prey (the raptor's wings are in the down position covering any prey in the photo), but I do see the tether leather strap which means it's a raptor managed by a falconer. The raptor looks to be lining up on a branch that it will pass a couple mm below at high speed. Have a good day, crow!
 
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berkeman said:
I don't see the prey (the raptor's wings are in the down position covering any prey in the photo), but I do see the tether leather strap which means it's a raptor managed by a falconer.
Ah, that explains it. To me, it looked like the tail of a small wallaby, though I figured this photo is unlikely to originate in Australia. :oldsmile:
 
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I would guess that the smaller bird was trying to chase the raptor (by annoying it) out of its territory or away from the location of its nest.
 
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Two stick insects on a window screen in Florida:

Screen Shot 2022-08-25 at 8.07.19 AM.png
 
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Screen Shot 2022-09-16 at 4.48.54 PM.png
 
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DennisN said:
A marvellous photo! :kiss:
Agreed. After studying the beautiful photo more, do you all think that the photographer had the foresight to set up a fill flash tripod several feet to his/her left for this shot? The lighting on the bird is stunning, with the Sun backlight and the artistic front/left highlights. The fill flash highlights look too far off axis to the left to be from a flash mounted on the camera -- more likely mounted on a tripod a meter or two to the left, IMO.

And how did the photographer know to set up on this scene? Maybe the owl regularly hunts this area, so the setup had a good chance? Amazing all around.
 
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  • #2,237
berkeman said:
After studying the beautiful photo more, do you all think that the photographer had the foresight to set up a fill flash tripod several feet to his/her left for this shot? The lighting on the bird is stunning, with the Sun backlight and the artistic front/left highlights. The fill flash highlights look too far off axis to the left to be from a flash mounted on the camera -- more likely mounted on a tripod a meter or two to the left, IMO.
Interesting thought.
Its hard to tell without knowing more about the bird and location, however I'm inclinded to think that the bird's underside and bottom of the bird's right wing are highly illuminated by reflection of the sun'ss light from snow (very highly reflective). The top of the bird's other wing is not so well illuminated (facing away from the sun, not so much light would bounce back toward the sun in that dircetion. However, its not easy to tell if that is a good comparison without knowing what it looks like in comparison with the rest of the bird in even lighting.

berkeman said:
And how did the photographer know to set up on this scene? Maybe the owl regularly hunts this area, so the setup had a good chance? Amazing all around.
It could be luck without a set-up, just using the reflected light,
or the only reasonable way to decide to do such a set-up would be if the bird was expected to be there. Perhaps a regular hunting circuit, maybe with some bait. Even having bait would not guarantee the bird would approach from the right direction.
 
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TIL that the current estimate of the number of ants in the world is 20 quadrillion.

That's 12 megatons of biomass—more than the combined weight of all the wild birds and mammals.
 
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Camouflage can be effective in some situations:

Screen Shot 2022-09-22 at 8.05.03 AM.png


Or does the tree have eyes?
 
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  • #2,240
BillTre said:
Camouflage can be effective in some situations:

View attachment 314475

Or does the tree have eyes?
Is that a real image? No adjustments?
 

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