Share Animal Pictures: For Animal Lovers
- Thread starter micromass
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Discussion Overview
This thread invites participants to share their favorite animal pictures, fostering a light-hearted exchange centered around various images of animals, often accompanied by humorous captions or comments. The scope includes sharing links to images, expressing emotions related to the pictures, and engaging in playful commentary about the animals depicted.
Discussion Character
- Exploratory
- Conceptual clarification
- Meta-discussion
Main Points Raised
- Participants share links to various animal pictures, often with humorous captions.
- Some participants express affection for the animals, commenting on their cuteness or expressing sympathy for them.
- There are repeated inquiries about the identity of certain animals, indicating a playful curiosity.
- One participant shares a link to a live penguin cam, suggesting a shared interest in observing animals in real-time.
- Humorous interactions occur, with participants reacting to images and captions with laughter and emojis.
Areas of Agreement / Disagreement
The discussion remains largely light-hearted and informal, with no significant areas of disagreement or contention noted among participants. The focus is on enjoyment and sharing rather than resolving any disputes.
Contextual Notes
Participants do not delve into technical discussions about animal behavior or biology; the focus is primarily on the enjoyment of animal imagery and humor.
Who May Find This Useful
Animal lovers, those interested in humorous content, and participants looking for a light-hearted community interaction may find this thread enjoyable.
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Correction: The "Great Southern Brood" (Brood XIX) emerges every 13 years, not 17.jtbell said:Following up on my cicada a few posts back, here's a cicada nymph that has emerged from its 17 years underground and is apparently preparing to "hatch" into a mature cicada.
And the nymph in the picture that I posted had apparently already "hatched". A couple of days later, it looked the same but was definitely an empty husk.
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My daughter had a job for a while putting out camera traps looking at logs across streams to survey wildlife populations. However, never got one as cool as this.
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Yeah. The optical design software I trained with had a setting that would optimise for designs that were resistant to mis-alignment (it preferred wide peaks in the merit function when optimising, basically). The guy who taught the course described it as the "binoculars for squaddies" setting. I reckon "lion resistant cameras" might be a better phrase, though.berkeman said:
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These are involved in making things go behaviorally.
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We should definitely skip fish who are navigating and only east those who are at west.symbolipoint said:If that about the fish navigating is true, must we stop easting fish?
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These remarks I made about the goldfish learning to navigate are because they seem to be more intelligent than we may have given them credit for being, and that maybe such animals should not be eaten, because of ethics in how we should treat intelligent and sensitive animals.renormalize said:We should definitely skip fish who are navigating and only east those who are at west.
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What about salmon? They navigate.symbolipoint said:These remarks I made about the goldfish learning to navigate are because they seem to be more intelligent than we may have given them credit for being, and that maybe such animals should not be eaten, because of ethics in how we should treat intelligent and sensitive animals.
Navigation is a general animal ability. The goldfish is just doing it in an unlikely manner.
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Two species occur on everybody's dinner card whether they navigate or not: fish and mice. If you're a fish or a mouse then you've drawn the *** card as we say here. (Probably because football referees usually have the red card that sends players off the pitch in their back pockets.)BillTre said:What about salmon? They navigate.
Navigation is a general animal ability. The goldfish is just doing it in an unlikely manner.
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