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@shrimpcakes
masterpostĀ
Red Eyed Jellyfish-Ā Polyorchis pencillatus
Salt Creek, August 2019
Wee baby fish... endler's livebearer fry :)
lunch āØš
She
thanks for the tip marie
#i like the sort-of implication that if the fish werenāt eel-like
#like if they had a more leash-appropriate body shape
#that she would have put the fish on a leash
I have the ability to speak to shrimps (Shrimpathy). unfortunately this does not allow them to respond or understand what im saying
Meet unnamed and Cerberus. They are both beautiful and ass-oholic. Cerberus specifically needs to learn some manners.
Someone is VERY angry ššš theyāre both lovely
Endlers livebearers deserve more love. I donāt know why they arenāt more popular.
Whoās your friend who likes to play?
Not Kaiju.
Kaiju will fucking kill you.
She bites?? How does she manage to bite?? I thought her claws would be the menace.
I say bite when I mean pinch. The claws are definitely the deadly part. Kaiju knows more mercy.
This is the most accurate image of Kaiju in existence. Somehow even more accurate than a photograph.
Got these 4 pretty endlers! I love the purple that's coming out on the scarlet ones. Hoping to add a few more here soon!
Some action on the anemone. š¦š¦
worldwidecorals
real leaf baby hours
New variant not in America. Caridina sp. Stardust. Created by Ben Buckley on Facebook.
driving home from Rivers to Reefs very carefully with a sharp man on my thigh to keep him from catapulting across the car during columbus freeway shenanigans
this pointy, googly-eyed bastard named Seymour is a Sharpnosed Giant Chocolate Gouramiā¢ļø and my male wild splendens is convinced that heās the most stunning female betta heās ever seen
Humans can recognize their own face in the mirror, and so can apes, monkeys, dolphins, elephants, and some birds. Now a fish species has passed the mirror test for the first time, which may suggest that the animals are smarter than we give them credit for.
It might not seem like a big deal, but the ability to recognize that the face in the mirror is your own makes us part of a pretty exclusive club in the animal kingdom. Humans obviously can do it (from about 15 months of age), and so can apes, monkeys, dolphins, elephants, and some birds. Now a fish species has passed the mirror test for the first time, which may suggest that the animals are smarter than we give them credit for. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute, the University of Konstanz and Osaka City University conducted the experiment with a species called the cleaner wrasse. The team put a colored mark on each fish in a place that can only be seen in reflection, then held up a mirror. The idea was to check whether the fish could tell they were looking at themselves and would try to clean the mark off. Since these fish are naturally in the habit of cleaning parasites off other fish, theyāre fairly well-adapted to spotting marks like these. Sure enough, after seeing their reflection the fish rubbed themselves on hard surfaces, trying to clean the marks away. That suggests that the creature understood that the reflected image was itself and not a neighboring fish ā an ability that was long thought to be beyond their capabilities.