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DEAR READER
Today's Document
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Peter Solarz

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Kaledo Art
Sweet Seals For You, Always
sheepfilms
RMH
Three Goblin Art
dirt enthusiast

Origami Around
Acquired Stardust

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tumblr dot com

shark vs the universe
NASA

ellievsbear
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@whirlwindofcats
Is it June or July?
June
July
Rescued manul kitten eye colour changed from blue to yellow just before she was two months old. What a fantasy creature!
Has There Ever Been A Better Combination Than Cats & Glass Tables.
@soliamurr
Amazing cat tree made by Robert Rogalski
Wolfie the Werecat and his wonderful Enchanted Forest Kitty Sanctuary.
Photos by Wolfie
Cat Tree made by Hollywood Kitty Company
🐯 🐯 🐯
good morning everyone have an absolutely furious mongoose
It’s cuter when you recognize that the lion with visible spots is a juvenile. There’s a very high chance the other lion that runs over to investigate is the MOTHER.
The first lion is asking for comfort because she was given a big spook!!! and she needs mommy to tell her it’s safe and ok!!!! (What’s cuter is that mommy clearly reassures her, and goes on to take the parent role of ‘deal with the scream rat in order to protect my large and easily frightened daughter’)
this is all in all an adorable video 10/10
Who Would Win?
Three apex predators
OR
One Screaming Long Boi
thank you
some lesser known small cat species
the kodkod
the flat headed cat
the pampas cat
the andean mountain cat
the jaguarundi
I’m just going to add the Margay here:
“But Tumblr user severalowls, that’s just an Ocelot!”
No, you fool! You Buffoon! The Margay has mastered something generations of cats have only dreamed of! Getting down out of trees:
The Margay has reversible ankles, and uses them to do some pretty sweet tricks (And also hunt down monkeys, birds and other tree-dwelling critters in their otherwise safe treetop homes.)
Pictured: Margay who is not stuck.
New species of bat found, Niumbaha superba, and it’s adorable.
Oh wow! I’m glad people are as excited about animals as I am. Here’s some additional photos. Fun fact: this bat is so different from others that a new genus was created!
new bat!
BEE BAT
Hello! I'd like to know your opinion on feline purring. I vaguely remember reading that the exact mechanism by which cats purr is actually subject to debate. Do you have any current info about this?
I don’t think it’s up for debate anymore, and yes, I can talk about that! The easiest way to explain why small cats can purr is to first talk about why big cats roar, because they’re effectively different modifications of the same structure.
Basically, the ability to purr or roar boils down to the physiology of two structures in a cat’s throat: the vocal folds and the hyoid apparatus. The vocal folds are the flaps of flesh that are used to shape air and produce noise during vocalization. The hyoid is a specific bone, but the entire structure around it is actually comprised of seven small bones. It joins the larynx to the middle ear and supports the voice box. (Bones 1 and 7 aren’t pictured in this drawing because they’re mostly made of cartilage).
What type of sound a cat can make will depend specifically on how much cartilage and bone comprise that third structure in the hyoid apparatus, and how much movement there is in their vocal folds.
Big cats that roar have the ability to stretch their hyoid apparatus down and back because the third bone in the structure is mostly cartilaginous. When big cats open their mouth wide and drop that structure back, it basically opens up their throat to produce chamber in which sound can reverberate (like the bell of trumpet). Big cat vocal folds have a part that is fused together (called a vocal pad) and it’s what produces the sound of a roar, which is then amplified in the space of the open mouth.
In small cats, the third bone in the chain is ossified (hardened into a rigid mass of bone) and that means the structure can’t really move or stretch. In addition, small cats don’t have pads on their vocal folds, which means they all vibrate individually - and that produces the buzzing purr we know and love.
(Interestingly enough, the source I pulled that graphic from mentioned that snow leopards - who can’t roar - do have a highly elastic hyoid structure, but lack the vocal pads necessary for producing the sound).
Vocal tracts and hyoid apparatuses in cats are super cool, but not something to google if you’re faint of heart. Most images that come up on a search are going to be from dissections, and I learned most of this from papers in which the mechanism of a roar was studied by literally running air through the disembodied vocal tracts of deceased animals.
Tails! Editorial for Answers Magazine about how various animals have different uses for their tails. Any idea who these belong to?
Science Fact Friday: Everything You Never Wanted to Know About Bird Tongues
Tut being confused by water.