Category Archives: Animals

Cute Dogs for Your Tuesday Blues…

Since Monday was a holiday in the United States yesterday, I decided, as is my custom, to hold off on the cute dogs until Tuesday, since this is now the beginning of the work week for many of you.  Enjoy!

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Dog Army Training to Fight Snail Invasion

You can’t make this stuff up…

Labrador retrievers help in fight against giant snail invasion in Florida

Published September 01, 2013

FoxNews.com
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    A Giant African land snail is seen in this handout picture from the Florida Department of Agriculture Division of Plant Industry. (Reuters)

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    Aug. 29, 2013: U.S. Department of Agriculture training specialist Jodi Daugherty walks with ‘Bear’, a dog trained to detect the Giant African Land Snail, at a news conference about successes in attempts to eradicate the pest in Miami. (Reuters)

Florida officials seeking to eradicate a species of giant snails that is invading the state are training Labrador retrievers to help in the fight.

Reuters reports state agriculture authorities are engulfed in an aggressive extermination campaign to snuff out an invasion of Giant African Land Snails, one of the world’s most destructive invasive species. Since the campaign started, authorities have collected 128,000 of the snails.

The species has no natural enemies and can grow as big as rats. They devour plants as well as stucco and plaster in a hunt for calcium they need to grow their big shells and can cause massive property damage, Reuters reports.

Now the dogs are being trained to aid in the fight. They will join a team of 45 people who regularly search Miami for the snail.

“They’re very good at detecting the Giant African Land Snail,” Richard Gaskalla, the head of plant industry at the Florida Agriculture Department told Reuters. “So we’re building four-legged technology into this program as quickly as we can.”

The snail fighters are also using bait, chemical treatments and experimental traps, and are helped by phone calls from local residents who report sightings.

Gaskalla says the program so far has been a success.

“The number of detections this time last year were in the thousands; now they are down to around 200 to 300 a week,” he told Reuters.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/09/01/labrador-retrievers-help-in-fight-against-giant-snail-invasion-in-florida/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2di4PsQAX

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Frog Swallows Christmas Light – Caught on Photo

Ribbit! Frog All Lit Up by Swallowed Christmas Light

 


Photo: James Snyder

The Daily Dozen feature on National Geographic, edited by photo editor Susan Welchman, is a treasure trove of neat “Your Shots” photos submitted by the magazine’s readers (a selection of which will actually appear on the magazine itself – talk about awesome!).

I particularly like this one, submitted by James Snyder who wrote:

This is a Cuban tree frog on a tree in my backyard in southern Florida. How and why he ate this light is a mystery. It should be noted that at the time I was taking this photo, I thought this frog was dead having cooked himself from the inside. I’m happy to say I was wrong. After a few shots he adjusted his position. So after I was finished shooting him, I pulled the light out of his mouth and he was fine. Actually, I might be crazy but I don’t think he was very happy when I took his light away.

Link to the Daily Dozen (this particular shot by James appeared on the April – Week 1 section)

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Cute Dogs for your Monday Blues

Cute dogs for to cheer you up on your Monday.

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Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Sorry for the late post, I am operating off my back-up system, which is not up to snuff.  My main computer is down with a fan issue.  My main 8 inch fan went kaput.  The tech is having problems getting it out to replace it…sigh.  Here you go for both our Monday blues.

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Badger unearths medieval grave

Dig this: Badger unearths medieval grave

By Marc Lallanilla

Published August 16, 2013

LiveScience
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    The grave of a medieval Slavic warlord, with a bronze bowl at his feet, was uncovered in Germany by a digging badger. (Felix Biermann, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)

  • Badger medieval grave.jpg

    The grave of a medieval Slavic warlord, with a bronze bowl at his feet, was uncovered in Germany by a digging badger. (Felix Biermann, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)

Some archaeologists pore over old maps and manuscripts to make historical discoveries. Others rely on pick axes, trowels and other tools.

But archaeologists in Germany simply turned to badgers, the digging mammals that are the bane of gardeners everywhere. A badger living in the countryside near the town of Stolpe recently uncovered a remarkable site: the 12th-century burial ground of eight people, two of whom were apparently Slavic warlords.

Two sculptors who live in the area had been watching a badger digging a large sett (den). Upon closer examination, they noticed a pelvic bone inside the sett. “We pushed a camera into the badger’s sett and took photos by remote control,” Hendrikje Ring, one of the sculptors, told Der Spiegel. “We found pieces of jewelry, retrieved them and contacted the authorities.”

‘He had been hit by lances and swords, and had also fallen from a horse.’

– Archaeologist Felix Biermann 

One warlord was buried with a two-edged sword and a large bronze bowl at his feet, The Local, an English-language news site, reports. “At the time, such bowls were used to wash the hands before eating,” archaeologist Felix Biermann of Georg-August University in Gttingen told The Local. “The bowls would be a sign that a man belonged to the upper classes.”

The same warrior also wore an elegant bronze belt buckle in the shape of an omega, with the head of a stylized snake at each end. “He was a well-equipped warrior,” said Biermann, who is leading the team excavating the site. “Scars and bone breaks show that he had been hit by lances and swords, and had also fallen from a horse.”

Another grave held the skeleton of a woman with a coin in her mouth. According to ancient religious beliefs, people were often buried with coins to pay a ferryman to transport them across the river that separated the living world from the realm of the dead.

This badger-assisted archaeological find isn’t the first time historical artifacts have been discovered in unusual ways. The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in 1947 by a Bedouin shepherd boy who was searching for a sheep that had strayed from his flock. He threw a rock into a cave and, instead of a bleating lamb, heard the sound of pottery breaking, leading to the scrolls’ discovery.

And earlier this month, the buried remains of the residents from Bedlam, Europe’s oldest insane asylum, were uncovered during the construction of the Crossrail subway line in London.

The archaeological finding in Germany is significant because it occurred at a place and time of conflict between heathen Slavic tribes and Christians, said Thomas Kersting, an archaeologist at the Brandenburg Department for Monument Protection.

One of the warriors’ graves appears to have been robbed of its sword, Kersting explained. “If someone went to this grave and opened it in full view of the local castle and took out the sword, that’s a sign that something’s not working anymore,” Kersting told Der Spiegel. “It highlights the time of upheaval when the rule of the Slavic tribes was coming to an end.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/08/16/dig-this-badger-unearths-medieval-treasure/?intcmp=features#ixzz2cAERDyqu

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New mammal species discovered

New mammal species discovered: a raccoon-sized critter with teddy bear looks

Published August 15, 2013

Associated Press
  • New Mammal Olinguinto 1.jpg

    Aug. 15, 2013: The Smithsonian announced that the olinguito, which they had previously mistaken for an olingo, is actually a distinct species. (AP Photo/Smithsonian Institution, Mark Gurney)

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    Aug. 15, 2013: The Smithsonian announced that the olinguito, which they had previously mistaken for an olingo, is actually a distinct species. (AP Photo/Smithsonian Institution, Mark Gurney)

WASHINGTON –  Imagine a raccoon with a teddy bear face that is so cute it’s hard to resist, let alone overlook. But somehow science did — until now.

Researchers announced Thursday a rare discovery of a new species of mammal called the olinguito. It belongs to a grouping of large creatures that include dogs, cats and bears.

The raccoon-sized critter leaps through the trees of mountainous forests of Ecuador and Colombia at night, according to a Smithsonian researcher who has spent the past decade tracking them.

SUMMARY

The olinguito lived in the National Zoo in Washington, mistaken for an olingo.

Olinguitos are smaller, have shorter tails, a rounder face, tinier ears and darker bushier fur.

Researchers guess there are thousands of olinguitos in the mountainous forest.

But the adorable olinguito (oh-lihn-GEE’-toe) shouldn’t have been too hard to find. One of them lived in the Smithsonian-run National Zoo in Washington for a year in a case of mistaken identity.

“It’s been kind of hiding in plain sight for a long time” despite its extraordinary beauty, said Kristofer Helgen, the Smithsonian’s curator of mammals.

The zoo’s little critter, named Ringerl, was mistaken for a sister species, the olingo. Ringerl was shipped from zoo to zoo from 1967 to 1976: Louisville, Ky., Tucson, Ariz., Salt Lake City, Washington and New York City to try to get it to breed with other olingos.

It wouldn’t.

“It turns out she wasn’t fussy,” Helgen said. “She wasn’t the right species.”

The discovery is described in a study in the journal ZooKey.

Helgen first figured olinguitos were different from olingos when he was looking at pelts and skeletons in a museum. He later led a team to South America in 2006.

“When we went to the field we found it in the very first night,” said study co-author Roland Kays of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. “It was almost like it was waiting for us.”

It’s hard to figure how olingos and onlinguitos were confused for each other.

“How is it different? In almost every way that you can look at it,” Helgen said.

‘It looks kind of like a fuzzball … a cross between a teddy bear and a house cat.’

– Kristofer Helgen, the Smithsonian’s curator of mammals 

Olinguitos are smaller, have shorter tails, a rounder face, tinier ears and darker bushier fur, he said.

“It looks kind of like a fuzzball … kind of like a cross between a teddy bear and a house cat,” Helgen said.

It eats fruit, weighs about 2 pounds and has one baby at a time. Helgen figures there are thousands of olinguitos in the mountainous forest, traveling through the trees at night so they are hard to see.

While new species are found regularly, usually they are tiny and not mammals, the warm-blooded advanced class of animals that have hair, live births and mammary glands in females.

Outside experts said this is not merely renaming something, but a genuine new species and a significant find, the type that hasn’t happened for about 35 years.

“Most people believe there are no new species to discover, particularly of relatively large charismatic animals,” said Case Western Reserve University anatomy professor Darin Croft. “This study demonstrates that this is clearly not the case.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/08/15/new-mammal-species-discovered-with-teddy-bear-looks/?intcmp=features#ixzz2c6OAAK8p

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Scariest Fish Story

Testicle-biting fish invading Denmark, authorities warn

Published August 12, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • pacu-teeth

    This red-bellied pacu recently caught in Denmark could be a sign that the fish is invading Scandinavian waters. (Henrik Carl)

Jaws may not be the only one salivating as you splash.

Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water, a cousin of the piranha reported to go after swimmer’s testicles has been found in coastal waters between Sweden and Denmark. And fish experts are warning locals to stay aware — in order to stay whole.

“Keep your swimwear on if you’re bathing in the Sound these days — maybe there are more out there!” Henrik Carl, a fish expert at the Natural History Museum of Denmark, told Swedish news site The Local.

‘Keep your swimwear on if you’re bathing in the Sound these days …’

– Henrik Carl, a fish expert at the Natural History Museum of Denmark 

“They bite because they’re hungry, and testicles sit nicely in their mouth,” Carl added.

Yikes!

The creature in question is a red-bellied pacu, and is native to the Amazon. Pictures of the freaky fish frequently make the rounds of inboxes because of its strangely human-looking teeth.

Local fisherman Einar Lindgreen caught the exotic species on Aug. 4 in the Oresund, the strait between Denmark and Sweden, according to LiveScience. The toothy chomper Lindgreen found was just 8 inches long, but the fish can grow to weigh as much as 55 pounds.

Though its teeth are used mainly to crush nuts and fruits, the pacu eats other fish and invertebrates and there have been some reports of human attacks. In Papua New Guinea, the invasive species has reportedly earned a reputation as the “ball-cutter” after castrating a couple of local fishermen, LiveScience said.

“It’s the first time this species has been caught in the wild in Scandinavia,” fish expert Peter Rask Mller of the University of Copenhagen said in a statement. “Discovering whether this fish is a lone wanderer or a new invasive species will be very exciting. And a bit scary.”

“It is not unlikely that someone has emptied their fish tank into a nearby stream just before a vacation and that the pacu then swam out into the brackish waters of Oresund,” Mller said.

Better tie those trunks extra tight, however — just in case.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/08/12/testicle-biting-fish-may-be-invading-denmark/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2bngMUhfv

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Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Your Monday dose of cuteness courtesy of our furry friends.  Enjoy!

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Cute Dogs For Your Monday Blues

Your Monday dose of cute dogs.  Enjoy!

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