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Showing posts with label lizard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lizard. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Winnipeg reptile expo draws rare and threatened animals

WINNIPEG – Reptiles were on the loose this weekend at the Manitoba Reptile Breeders Expo.

“It’s amazing, I love all the animals and the reptiles,” said one child visiting the expo.
lizard
Over 1,000 reptiles were on display and up for sale, from geckos, tarantulas, tortoises, and snakes.

Rare reptiles made an appearance like axolotl’s, which are believed to be extinct in the wild but are now thriving in captivity.

Not thriving are the Western Hognose snakes. They’re a threatened Manitoba species found in Spruce Woods Provincial Park.

“If we lose them then the balance of nature is unbalanced,” said Judy Robertson with Wildlife Haven, one of the vendors at the expo educating visitors about Manitoba reptiles.

But one thing organizers say all reptiles have in common is that they’re low maintenance, making them a great pet option.

“They’re really easy to take care of, you don’t have to walk them, you can play with them when you want or leave them alone,” said Steven Rempel, Prairie Exotics.

Tarantula owners agree. “They’re really easy to care for and very docile spiders so you can hold them and they’re great for looking at,” said Stephanie Kolodka, tarantula owner.

Close to 1,000 people walked through the expo on Saturday and Sunday stopping at the 23 vendors to learn about reptiles and touch them too.

But not all reptiles are legal as pets in Winnipeg after a bylaw was passed last year that doesn’t allow pet crocodylia or venomous reptiles.

Source: Here
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Thursday, October 2, 2014

6 Demonic Animals


They’re not really demonic in the sense that they’re possessed by the devil, but their looks and names are so diabolical, it’ll make you think twice about where these animals originated. From snakes to birds to insects, Mother Nature made a number of devilishly strange and creepy creatures. Below are a few of them.

Satanic Leaf-Tailed Gecko
Satanic Leaf-Tailed Gecko
With tiny horns, a set of piercing red eyes and a mouth that makes it look like it’s always sporting a sinister smile, this gecko is definitely not your average looking lizard. Commonly seen in the forest of Madagascar, these animals are part of the Uroplatus, also known as leaf-tailed family of gecko. They blend in and look like twigs as they cling on trees in the forest.

Anglerfish
Anglerfish
From the depths of the ocean, bumping into one of these scary looking fishes will definitely give you nightmares. There have been more than 200 different species of these fishes recorded, and some were just recently documented. Another bizarre feature about this fish, aside from their looks, is the way they mate. Male specimen would latch into females and fuse themselves into her body.

Thorny Devil
Thorny Devil
Also called the mountain devil, thorny dragon and the moloch, these lizards are native to the dry and hot deserts and scrubland that makes up most of Australia. It was named after moloch, an ancient god that is associated with sacrifice. However, these animals are pretty harmless. Their main source of food are ants.

Long-Horned Beetle
Long-Horned Beetle
This scary looking beetle isn’t only known for its long whisker-like horns, but they also come with beautiful patterns on their bodies, kind of like wood carvings and tribal art.  They’re native to South America and although there are a number of species, the IUCN has tagged these insects as “vulnerable” in the red list.

California Condor
California Condor
If a giant black bird swooping down on you sounds horrifying, you might not want to see a California condor in real life. One of the biggest flying birds ever recorded, it has a wing span that can reach 3 meters or 10 feet wide. The indigenous tribes who lives in California has long associated this majestic bird with the dead. Their scary looks may be intimidating, but these birds are actually very gentle and graceful.

Ogre-Faced Spider
Ogre-Faced Spider
One of the most unique spiders around, the ogre-faced spider gets its name from the mythological creature because of its fearful face. Also called net-casting spiders, they spin their webs in a different way. These spiders create a net-like pattern with their silk and then snare their pray from above with it.
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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Super Funny Animal's Compilation ( September 2013 ) HD

Have you seen a animal playing basketball? Watch this cute little guy play and more funny animal video

Video

Youtube | funfunnycomic
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Sunday, June 29, 2014

A Beautiful Web of Poison Extends A New Strand

I just got back yesterday from the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Evolution. It took place in a big hotel on the outskirts of Norman, Oklahoma, during a windy heat wave that felt like the Hair Dryer of the Gods. It had been a few years since I had last been to an SSE meeting, and I was struck by how genomic everything has gotten. No matter how obscure the species scientists are studying, they seem to have outrageous heaps of DNA sequence to analyze. A few years ago, they would have been content with a few scraps. Fortunately, SSE hasn’t turned its back on good old natural history. There were lots of fascinating discoveries on offer, about species that I had assumed had been studied to death. My favorite was a talk about the rough-skinned newt, the most ridiculously poisonous animal in America.
rough-skinned-newt
The scientific tale of the rough-skinned newt begins five decades ago, with a story about three dead hunters in Oregon. Reportedly, the bodies of the hunters were discovered around a camp fire. They showed no signs of injury, and nothing had been stolen. The only strange thing about the scene was the coffee pot. Curled up inside was a newt.

In the 1960s, a biologist named Butch Brodie got curious about the story. The newt in the coffee pot–known as the rough-skinned newt–has a dull brown back, but when it is disturbed, it bends its head backward like a contortionist to reveal an orange belly as bright as candy corn. Bright colors are common among poisonous animals. It’s a signal that says, in effect, “If you know what’s good for you, you’ll leave me alone.” Brodie wondered if the newts were toxic, too.

Toxic, it turns out, doesn’t do the newts justice. They are little death machines. The newts produce a chemical in their skin called tetrodotoxin, or TTX for short, that’s made by other poisonous animals like pufferfish. Locking onto sodium channels on the surface of neurons, TTX blocks signals in the nervous system, leading to a quick death. In fact, TTX is 10,000 times deadlier than cyanide. While we may never know for sure what killed those three Oregon hunters, we do know that a single rough-skinned newt could have easily produced enough TTX to kill them, and have plenty of poison left over to kill dozens more.

Now, if the whole idea of evolution makes you uneasy, you might react by saying, “That couldn’t possibly have evolved.” Experience has shown that this is not a wise thing to say. Brodie said something different: the most plausible explanation for a ridiculously poisonous animal is that it is locked in a coevolutionary arms race with a ridiculously well-defended predator. Another biologist mentioned to him that he’d seen garter snakes dining on rough-skinned newts, and so Brodie investigated. He discovered that garter snakes in rough-skinned newt territory have evolved peculiar shape to the receptors on their neurons that TTX would normally grab.

The coevolution of newts and snakes became a family business. Brodie’s son, Edmund, grew up catching newts, and today he’s a biologist at the University of Virginia. Father and son and colleagues have discovered that snakes have independently evolved the same mutations to their receptors in some populations, while evolving other mutations with the same effect in other populations. They’ve also found that both newts and snakes pay a cost for their weaponry. The newts put in a lot of energy into making TTX that could be directed to growing and making baby newts. The evolved receptors in garter snakes don’t just protect them from TTX; they also leave the snakes slower than vulnerable snakes. They’ve studied newts and snakes up and down the west coast of North America and found a huge range of TTX potency and resistance. That’s what you’d expect from a coevolutionary process in which local populations are adapting to each other in different environments, with different costs and benefits to escalating the fight.

This story is so irresistible that I’ve written about it twice: first, ten years ago in Evolution: The Triumph of an Idea,, and then in updated form last year in The Tangled Bank. I figured that the Brodies et al had pretty much discovered all there was to know about these creatures. But in Oklahoma, I discovered that they had missed what is arguably the coolest part of the whole story.

Think about it: you’re a female newt, you’ve fended off attackers with a staggering amounts of poison in your skin, and now you want to pass on your genes to your descendants. You lay a heap of eggs in a pond, and what happens? A bunch of pond creatures come rushing in and have a feast of amphibian caviar.

What could you possibly do to ensure at least some of your offspring survived? Well, you have an awful lot of TTX in your system. You have enough of the stuff to give your eggs a parting gift to help them out there in the cruel, predator-infested world. Make your eggs poisonous.

That is exactly what female newts do. In fact, they load their eggs with TTX. To figure out if this poison provided a defense against predators, the Brodies and their students traveled to a group of ponds in central Oregon that are home to thousands of rough-skinned newts apiece. They collected dragonflies and other aquatic predators from the ponds and put them in buckets filled with newt eggs, along with muck from the pond bottoms. The scientists found that almost none of the predators would touch the newt eggs. Since these predators eat plenty of eggs of other species, this result shows that TTX does indeed help the newt eggs survive.

But there was one exception. Caddisfly larvae turned out to relish the newt eggs. In fact, the caddisflies actually grew bigger if they were supplied with newt eggs and pond muck than with pond muck alone. And yet the Brodies and their students estimate that there’s enough TTX in one newt egg to kill somewhere between 500 and 3700 caddisflies.

You know where this is going. At the evolution meeting, one of their students, Brian Gall, described feeding newt skin to caddisflies both from the central Oregon ponds and from ponds elsewhere without newts. The newt-free caddisflies would happily munch on newt skin from which all the TTX was removed. But if there was more than a trace TTX in the skin, they refused to eat. The caddisflies that fed on newt eggs, on the other hand, would eat the most toxic skin Gall could provide.

It appears that the caddisflies have evolved much like the garter snakes. In ponds where rough-skinned newts lived, the caddisflies have evolved defenses against TTX. In fact, Gall reported, the caddisflies appear to put the snakes to shame. Evolved snakes are 34 times more resistant to TTX than vulnerable ones. The caddisflies have increased their resistance 175 times.

It’s not clear whether the caddisflies and the newts are truly co-evolving, however. The Brodies will have to find out whether adding extra TTX to eggs increases their survival in the presence of caddisflies. Another intriguing possibility arises from their discovery that the caddisflies actually harbor some of the TTX they eat in their tissues for weeks after eating the eggs. Perhaps the caddisflies are stealing the poison to protect themselves, as happens in monarch butterflies eating toxic milkweed.

In other words, this wonderfully deadly story isn’t over yet.

[For more information, see this new paper in Can. J. Zool., and Understanding Evolution, an educational web site. Ed Brodie tells much of the story pre-caddisfly in a chapter of the new book, In The Light of Evolution (full disclosure: I wrote a chapter in it, too, which you can read as a pdf here)]

Source: Here
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Friday, June 6, 2014

Meet the zebra lizard and 6 more of the newest species to be discovered

The World Wildlife Fund have discovered hundreds of new species and the pictures are sure to take your breath away.

Since 2012 the global charity has identified 367 new discoveries while researching in the Greater Mekong region in southeast Asia.

New-species-discoveries

New-species-discoveries

New-species-discoveries

New-species-discoveries

New-species-discoveries

New-species-discoveries
Included on the list are 290 plants, 24 fish, 21 amphibians, 28 reptiles, three mammals and one bird.

Amongst the most interesting ones that have been found include a zebra-striped lizard.

The reptile is only 11.5cm in length and has only one known habitat.

If creepy crawlies are more your thing, a blind huntsman spider also made the list.

With no eye sight the arachnid pursues its prey using its eight legs.

Dr Thomas Gray, manager of WWF-Greater Mekong's species programme, said: "The species discoveries affirm the Greater Mekong as one of the world's richest and most biodiverse regions.

"If we're to prevent these new species disappearing into extinction, and to keep alive the hope of finding other fascinating creatures in years to come, it's critical that governments invest in conservation and green growth strategies."

The WWF is an international organisation dedicated to the conservation of the environment.

They have been active since 1961.

Their latest announcement also included the discovery of a zorro-masked water snake and a rainbow lizard.

Source: Here
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Monday, February 24, 2014

Chilled spiky lizard helps Peruvian park nab a record

In Peru's Manú National Park, hundreds of types of snakes, frogs, caimans and turtles crawl along the forest floor.
spiky lizard
One of these is the lizard pictured, a reptile only recently recognised by scientists. This scaly member of the Potamites genus is about 6 or 7 centimetres long. Unlike many other lizards, it lives thousands of metres above sea level, where clouds hug the forest canopy, and braves the cold mountain streams.

Source: Here
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Sunday, January 12, 2014

Islands make animals tamer

When Charles Darwin visited the Galapagos Islands, he noted that many of its animal inhabitants were so unafraid of people that “a gun is here almost superfluous”. He swatted birds with his hat, pulled the tails of iguanas and sat on giant tortoises.
lizard
These antics fuelled his famous idea that animals become tame when they live on remote, predator-free islands. Now, William Cooper Jr of Indiana University–Purdue University in Fort Wayne has tested Darwin's hypothesis on 66 species of lizards from around the world and found that island dwellers tended to be more docile than their continental relatives — the strongest evidence yet for this classic idea. The results are published this week in Proceedings of the Royal Society B1.

Source: Here
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

“Extinct” Pinocchio Lizard Found in Ecuador

It’s no lie—scientists have spotted a lizard with a nose like Pinocchio in an Ecuadorian cloud forest. What’s more, the long-nosed reptile was thought extinct, having been seen only a few times in the past 15 years.
Pinocchio Lizard
“It’s hard to describe the feelings of finding this lizard. Finding the Pinocchio anole was like discovering a secret, a deeply held secret. We conceived it for years to be a mythological creature,” Alejandro Arteaga, a photographer and one of the lizard’s spotters, said in a statement.

Source: Here
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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Prehistoric lizard surprises with fish tail

Until now it was thought havøglene had fish-like, but with long narrow body without caudal fin, and they made their way into the water by meander forward, like an eel. Now scientists might reconsider sight.
Prehistoric lizard surprises with fish tail
It was an international research team, led by Swedish researcher at Lund University, Johan Lindgren, who discovered a clear imprint of a fish-like tail fin of the prehistoric Mosasaurs Prognathodon.

Source: Here
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Thursday, September 19, 2013

4 Legless Lizard Species Discovered in California

Four previously unknown species of snakelike creatures have been found in California — but don't call them snakes; they're legless lizards. Prior to the discovery of the new species, there was only one known legless lizard species in the United States: the California legless lizard.
Legless Lizard
Surprisingly, the newfound legless lizards were discovered at a series of sites that weren't exactly pristine: They include a dune bordering a runway at Los Angeles International Airport; an empty lot in downtown Bakersfield, Calif.; a field littered with oil derricks; and the margins of the Mojave Desert.

Source: Here

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Friday, September 13, 2013

Reptile: Monitor Lizard

Monitor lizards, large and sometimes fearsome lizards common throughout Africa, the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and Australasia, aren't just big and scary: they're also among the fastest learners in the reptile world. Monitor lizards have been proven to be able to count--not just know which of a group has the highest number of objects, but to know exactly which that number is. (You can read more about that experiment here.)
Monitor Lizard

Source: Here
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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

23-Million-Year-Old Lizard Fossil Found In Mexico

San Cristobal de las Casas, Mexico –  Mexican scientists are studying a complete fossil of a lizard that lived some 23 million years ago and whose soft tissue remains have been preserved in amber.
The small piece of fossil resin, which is in the shape of a trapezoid and entombs the skeleton, was found several months ago in the Simojovel amber deposits of the northern part of the southeastern state of Chiapas.

Source: Here
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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Why Lizards Always Have Safe Landings


It comes little to no surprise to us, when lizards land right on their feet without having to use much of
their energy. Well, its natural and becoming of these reptiles, we suppose. Call it instinct, or what have
they, but we do not really mind. Here’s something that might stir you up and give something to think
about. Lizards do not have wings whatsoever, why do most lizards have a knack for always finding the
perfect way to land on their feet, and safely at that. What propels them to leap as high as they could and
land ultimately on safe ground without having to inadvertently lie flat on its back?
Why Lizards Always Have Safe Landings
Lizards, in fact have the innate ability to swing their tails one way to rotate their body the other, an
amazing kind of reptilian gymnastics! In an article from redOrbit, a research was presented at the
Society for Experimental Biology showing the science behind lizards’ safe landing techniques. The
remarkable thing about this experiment was not just limited to the lizards landing prowess per se. The
main goal was to look suitable application of such science to help engineers design air or land based
robots with better ground manipulation and perfect stability, something like what they achieved in Iron
Man.

What is the mechanism behind precise aerial righting? According to the study, the capacity to
manipulate aerial righting and recovering from falling in an upside down position may all depend on the
creature’s body size, morphology and mass distribution. Although not all lizards practically launch an air
striking pose, some have learned, adapted and developed a way to land safely on their feet without all
the parachutes and gears.

Along the way, lizards living in their natural habitats have to co-exist with others and adapt to their
changing environment. There are countless situations where they could put themselves at risk from
falling. To counter the risk, many times over they have adjusted their reptilian bodies and tails hard
enough to land with so much ease.

Although it would still take time to discover the strategies that lizards employ, one thing is helpful. By
swinging their tails in one direction and moving their bodied in the other, scientists have developed a
robot based on their understanding of the lizards’ aerial righting techniques. Named “RightingBot”, what
lizard can actually do, this robot is about to do as well! Amazing, isn’t it?
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