
bliss lane

@theartofmadeline
YOU ARE THE REASON
we're not kids anymore.
Claire Keane
Sade Olutola
Jules of Nature

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Monterey Bay Aquarium
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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Fai_Ryy
The Stonewall Inn
art blog(derogatory)
KIROKAZE
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EXPECTATIONS
noise dept.
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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@vennix
Kenyaâs White Giraffes Killed by Armed Poachers reports say.
https://www.the-star.co.ke/amp/news/2020-03-10-kenyas-only-white-female-giraffe-calf-killed-by-poachers/
#WildlifeCrime #whitegiraffe https://www.instagram.com/p/B9jk5qAAVBa/?igshid=9wtwspmamtit
Why the world can't have nice things.
Outdoor cat enclosure.
On 6 February 2012, a female black-footed cat kitten, Crystal, was born to a domestic cat surrogate after interspecies embryo transfer.
A black-footed cat served as the surrogate mother for [2011âČs] litter. Researchers next sought to show that vastly more plentiful domestic cats can serve as surrogate mothers in efforts to save the small wild cat from extinction.
âBeing able to use domestic cats adds another extra dimension to that, being able to produce more,â said Earle Pope, acting director of the center. Only 53 of the cats, which are native to South Africa, live in zoo collections in the United States.
(source for text, images from Dara oâBriainâs Science Club)
This is one of the rarest species of African cats, but most people donât even know it exists.
Save the kitties
Using surrogates to save a species, Iâm here for it.
New footage of the elusive Chinese Mountain Cat!Â
(Image Credits: Shan Shui Conservation Center)
This documentation of a barely-known species of small wild felid is incredible - itâs potentially the first active Chinese mountain cat den ever found! As documented in a recent blog post, a researcher working on a crane conservation project took photos of what he thought was a Tibetan fox, only to discover later that heâd actually photographed a cat so rare it was only discovered as a species in 2007! Researchers returned to the site later and were ecstatic to find that the cat was a mother with two young kittens. The placed a camera trap close to one of the den entrances and was able to record multiple days worth of footage before the family moved on.
Chinese mountain cats (Felis bieti) live in a very small, high-altitude range in remote northern China. Theyâre well-adapted to the harsh weather at those heights, with a stocky build and thick fur in the winter, and are often called âgrass catsâ by locals because they blend into the the dry grass of the alpine meadow habitats where theyâre most often observed. What little information we have about these elusive felids comes mostly from observations by herders whose livestock graze in those meadows. The IUCN lists that no substantive knowledge has been gained about Chinese mountain cats since 2010, so this new footage from Shan Shui Conservation Center is a major contribution to the scientific understanding of the species.Â
Click through here to watch the footage of the Chinese mountain cat family!Â
but the good news is:
What about:
Cheetah ambassador, Roketi, has come a long way. As a cub, Roketi was hand-reared because she was very small compared to her siblingsâfour brothers and one sister. She could not successfully compete with them at nursing time and was not gaining weight. Once bottle feedings began at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, however, she began thriving and gaining weight consistently. Today, Roketi has a new ambassador companion and cheetah tug-of-war challenger named Jabula.
San Diego Zoo Global is a member of the national cheetah Breeding Center Coalition (BCC). The Coalitionâs nine member facilities are breeding cheetahs with the goal of creating a sustainable cheetah population. As a leading partner, we are working closely with the other BCC members to ensure that cheetah numbers increase significantly over the next decade, ultimately resulting in a sustainable âsafety netâ population.
Tigers
Tiger tongue By Colin Langford
âAmur leopards now number more than 100 for first time in decades, say experts.
The cats remain highly endangered in eastern Russia but the latest population estimates for the species are encouraging.
Twenty years ago there were a mere 30 Amur leopards living in the wild, and scientists feared they were on the brink of extinction.
But now there are celebrations in the Land of the Leopard Nature Reserve, as results of the 2017 monitoring showed a significant growth in number of predators.
It is now believed there are 84 adult Amur leopards in the wild.
In addition, there are seven adolescent big cats and 12 cubs.â
The signage at the #cougarmountainzoo was wonderfully straightforward: #zooanimals are #wildanimals and will act accordingly for their species, and no, you may not annoy or tease the #predators . Each enclosureâs signs outlined the range of normal behaviors for the species, serving doubly for both safety information and education. #zoosmatter #dontteasethetigers #speciestypicalbehaviour #notapettingzoo (at Cougar Mountain Zoo)
Run, Roketi, run!Â
Long and lanky, cheetahs are the sprinters of the cat world. Their bodies are uniquely designed to run very fast for fairly short distances, allowing them to catch prey that other big cats canât get. A cheetahâs ability to run starts with its flexible spine, which allows the front legs to stretch far forward on each stride.
Fun animal facts I have learned being a zoo docent
1. There are several ways to classify the large cats, one of the more useful ones is into the roaring cats (tigers, lions) and the purring cats (bobcats, lynxes). The puma (also known as the mountain lion) is the largest cat that purrs. Iâve heard it up close, itâs amazing. A cheetahâs purr sounds like an idling motorcycle engine.
2. Kangaroos cannot move their legs independently of each other, they have to move them in sync - when theyâre on land. When theyâre swimming, they can move them separately. Hopping is their most efficient way to move - a walking kangaroo is awkward as hell. They swing both legs forward using their tail as a third leg to prop up while their legs swing.
3. People often think that flamingoesâ knees bend the wrong way. They donât - the joint youâre seeing in the middle of their leg isnât their knee, itâs their ankle. Their knee is up by their body, and it bends the same way ours does.
4. Giraffes only sleep 1-2 hours a day.
5. Bald eaglesâ vocalizations are not what you expect. When you see a flying bald eagle in the movies and hear that majestic caw sound? That isnât an eagle, itâs been dubbed over with another bird, usually a red-tailed hawk. Bald eagles actually soundâŠnot majestic. Kind of like if a kitten could be a bird.
6. Elephants are one of only a handful of animals that can pass the mirror test - in other words, they can recognize their own reflection (and not think itâs another animal, as dogs and cats usually do). They tested this by placing a chalk mark on an elephantâs forehead and then showing it a mirror. The elephant investigated the mark on its own forehead, indicating it knew that it was looking at itself. Â The only animals that pass this test are the higher primates, the higher cetaceans (orcas, dolphines), elephants, and weirdly, magpies.
7. One-fifth of all the known mammal species are bats.
8. A kangaroo mother can have three joeys simultaneously at different stages of development: an embryo in her womb (kangaroos can do whatâs called embryonic diapause which means sort of putting the development on pause until sheâs ready for it to develop further), a joey in her pouch attached to one nipple, and a joey out of the pouch on the ground who nurses from the other one. The amazing thing? Each of her nipples make different formulations of milk for each joeyâs different nutritional needs.
9. Bonobos, our closest genetic relative (they are more closely related to us than they are to either chimps or gorillas) are almost entirely non-aggressive, matriarchal, and use sex to solve all their problems. They engage in both same and opposite sex interactions, non-penetrative sex (oral, rubbing, manual) and with any age. Thatâs an interesting area to work in, lemme tell you.
10. Tortoises have super loud sex. Like, really loud.
11. All grizzlies are brown bears, but not all brown bears are grizzlies (grizzlies are a sub-categorization of the brown bear).
12. Reindeer are the only deer species where both males and females grow antlers. The males shed theirs the beginning of December, the females shed theirs in the spring. So all of Santaâs reindeer are girls, heh. I love telling little kids that.
13. If a rhinoceros knocks off its horn, it grows back faster than youâd expect. One of ours, Rosie, has knocked hers off twice.
14. Gorillas get crushes on each other. And on the humans that take care of them. Male gorillas also masturbate. I donât know if the females do, Iâve never seen it. Sometimes itâs like a soap opera up in there.
15. Langur monkeys are silvery-gray in color - their babies are bright orange. Like Cheeto orange, I do not exaggerate.
16. Polar bear fur is not white, itâs transparent, like fiber optics. Also, their skin is black.
This is all excellent and awesome and I am a happier, better person for this knowledge.
Also, you go badass lady reindeer. Sleigh.
This was really cool to read actually.
The word caracal is from a Turkish word that means âblack-eared.â These agile cats have amazing jumping abilities, leaping up to 10 feet to swat a flying bird. Check out more caracal facts.