Share Animal Pictures: For Animal Lovers

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SUMMARY

The forum discussion centers around sharing favorite animal pictures, with numerous links to humorous and adorable images. Participants express their love for animals through shared links, including funny captions and cute animal photos from various sources like icanhascheezburger.com and chzjustcapshunz.files.wordpress.com. The conversation highlights the community's enthusiasm for animal-related content, showcasing a variety of species and humorous situations.

PREREQUISITES
  • Familiarity with online image sharing platforms
  • Understanding of internet meme culture
  • Basic navigation skills for browsing web links
  • Appreciation for animal humor and cute content
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore popular animal meme websites like icanhascheezburger.com
  • Research the impact of animal imagery on social media engagement
  • Learn about the psychology behind why people share cute animal content
  • Investigate the role of humor in online communities
USEFUL FOR

Animal lovers, social media managers, content creators, and anyone interested in the dynamics of online communities centered around humor and cute animals.

  • #2,701
Serious dedication, surprisingly deep knowledge of vibro-compaction and composite materials...:doh:
Ooops, cannot be embedded... Then, link

Also - cute :biggrin:
 
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  • #2,702
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.
Correction: The "Great Southern Brood" (Brood XIX) emerges every 13 years, not 17.

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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  • #2,703
Emperor penguin chicks jump off a 50-foot cliff in Antarctica NEVER-BEFORE-FILMED FOR TV | Nat Geo
 
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  • #2,704
1715119318802.png
 
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  • #2,705
 
  • #2,706
 
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  • #2,707
The rabbit gets pushy about 24 seconds in.
 
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  • #2,708
The big gulp:

 
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  • #2,709
Daad! Lemme go!

1715907214739.png
 
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  • #2,710
 
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  • #2,712
 
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  • #2,713
I would take that name and guess that what we commonly see may be called "Green Scarab Beetle"? They appear the same except for color. I am only guessing about the name. (BillTre 's #2712 post)
 
  • #2,714
Oops...

1716480718799.png
 
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  • #2,715


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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  • #2,716
berkeman said:
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.
 
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  • #2,717
The Toad Council has decided that they do not like me…
482092.jpeg
 
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  • #2,718
1716577445030.png
1716577445030.png
 
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  • #2,719
Screenshot 2024-05-24 at 8.47.37 AM.png
 
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  • #2,720
Here's a very detaled little internal piece of an animal, a large pyramidal cell from a cortical area:

Screenshot 2024-05-24 at 8.39.26 AM.png


These are involved in making things go behaviorally.
 
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  • #2,721
 
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  • #2,722
 
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  • #2,723
 
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  • #2,724
 
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  • #2,725
If that about the fish navigating is true, must we stop easting fish?
 
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  • #2,726
 
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  • #2,727
symbolipoint said:
If that about the fish navigating is true, must we stop easting fish?
We should definitely skip fish who are navigating and only east those who are at west.
 
  • #2,728
renormalize said:
We should definitely skip fish who are navigating and only east those who are at west.
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.
 
  • #2,729
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.
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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  • #2,730
BillTre said:
What about salmon? They navigate.
Navigation is a general animal ability. The goldfish is just doing it in an unlikely manner.
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.)
 

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