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Saw this cool pic online. Praying mantises. Just had to post it here:
DennisN said:Two cool birds:
Blanket Octopuses are incredibly elusive and sensitive creatures.
Very few videos exist of these octopuses, and they also exhibit the most extreme degree of sexual size-dimorphism (females being larger than males) known in any non-microscopic animal.
“Imagine a female the size of a person and the male a size of a walnut,” said Tom Tregenza, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Leeds in England. The female blanket octopus also has behaviours particular to her moods – when she feels insecure, she unfurls her fleshy colour-shifting cape (video below).
I marked your post as informative but, after reading a little more about them on Wikipedia, it will probably give me nightmares - especially the bit about how the gigantic female rips off the tiny male's mating "arm" and keeps it. (Now think about a human analogy... Lorena Bobbitt,... or worse,...)BillTre said:Blanket Octopus [...]
strangerep said:especially the bit about how the gigantic female rips off the tiny male's mating "arm" and keeps it.
DennisN said:After a while it got comfortable and got very close to me, which made be back off a bit...
After all, they are big birds!
Yes, I know.BillTre said:Sounds better if you call them dinosaurs (which they are!)
This view makes us rats, and puts surfers in danger from the megalodon.BillTre said:Sounds better if you call them dinosaurs (which they are!):
"After all, they arebig birdsdinosaurs!"
It's a good think there was only 1 (male?) swan, else you'd have to choose very different music. -- I once spent a few weeks in an airbnb place beside a large pond frequented by multiple black swans (and a pelican). But it wasn't very peaceful when the swans were around. The dominant male would always be chasing the other males, biting their tails as they fled, or chasing the females, also biting their tails if they fled, trying to avoid being raped.DennisN said:I had the honor of seeing and filming this beautiful swan performing lots of "swan stuff" today in a pond in the rain.
[...]
(Music: "Swan Lake" by Tchaikovsky)
It was probably just hoping you'd toss some bits of bread. That happened often at the airbnb place: whenever a resident would emerge onto a balcony the swans would gather in the water close by, hoping for some bread. The pelican used to sit patiently on a rock in the middle of the lake, also waiting. When someone emerged, it would fly over and paddle nearby, waiting for a handout.After a while it got comfortable and got very close to me, which made be back off a bit...
Wow. Beautiful. My avatar is hot for herastrodummy said:Here is my dog, Freya. She's a 2yo Shetland Sheepdog.
Well, nuts !astrodummy said:She's been spayed so there will be none of THAT going on!
Is she fervent?astrodummy said:Here is my dog, Freya. [...]
Your avatar might be well advised to cool the fervent admiration just a bit. . . .phinds said:My avatar is hot for her.
Become. . . unwell nuts ! .phinds said:Well, nuts !
The movements of snakes have long been classified into four types: concertina locomotion, lateral undulation, rectilinear locomotion, and sidewinding. Tree-dwelling snakes use the concertina mode to climb: They wrap around a vertical surface with two separate parts of their body while sliding between them. To succeed, snakes must be nearly as long as the circumference of the cylinder they’re ascending, Jayne says, because they must wrap their bodies into two gripping regions and extend or pull as they crawl.
But in the new mode, the nocturnal brown tree snake (Boiga irregularis) hugs its body around the cylinder in one big grip and crosses over itself to make the namesake lasso, Jayne and colleagues report today in Current Biology. It then uses its many vertebrae to make exquisitely fine-tuned propulsions upward, wriggling its way up the pole (see video, above).
Oh, this just begs for some creative video editing to show the 3rd person perched on top of the wings playing that elegant music on an 88-key synthesizer with huge speakers.DennisN said:Amazing flights with birds on board of a microlight
[...]
https://www.techeblog.com/bald-eagle-symmetrical-reflection/BillTre said:bald eagle
Awesome link, thanks!Keith_McClary said:
This is Bruce:berkeman said:(But who names a bald eagle "Bruce"?)
Never spent time with crows but lived among the smaller corvus grackles that colonized my backyard. I learned to mimic many of their calls and responses, and associate certain sounds with activities. The dark males loved roosting in the tops of palm trees warning of cats, snakes and other predators while the dusky females foraged on the ground.BigDon said:I even learned to speak crow! (Or at least understand it.)
BigDon said:Do you know what the limiting factor for the colonization of crustaceans to a particular area is?
The bioavailability of molybdenum!
Without it they can't produce the hormone that allows them to molt properly. Hence the reason for "bad molts" in pet crustacea. (Most modern prepared fish foods contain it now. If uncertain they usually list it on the ingredients list) Bad molts can be ghastly by the way. Especially in a creature you've come to like.
I envy you.BigDon said:...I was labeled a Master Fish Breeder by the good folks at Steinhardt* Aquarium back in the early '90's ...
Other than the financial issues, it was the best time of my life.