Nature is Metal
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wrote on 21 Apr 2024, 13:36 last edited by
I know alpha male lions will kill the cubs of another male as will bears. But I have never heard of it among migratory grazing herd animals such as elk, cariboo or bison. But then…zebras live in Africa where the rules seem to be different for everything.
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I know alpha male lions will kill the cubs of another male as will bears. But I have never heard of it among migratory grazing herd animals such as elk, cariboo or bison. But then…zebras live in Africa where the rules seem to be different for everything.
wrote on 21 Apr 2024, 13:38 last edited by@Renauda said in Nature is Metal:
alpha male lions will kill the cubs of another male as will bears
Had no idea. Amazing.
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wrote on 21 Apr 2024, 13:40 last edited by
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@Renauda said in Nature is Metal:
alpha male lions will kill the cubs of another male as will bears
Had no idea. Amazing.
wrote on 21 Apr 2024, 14:35 last edited by@George-K said in Nature is Metal:
@Renauda said in Nature is Metal:
alpha male lions will kill the cubs of another male as will bears
Had no idea. Amazing.
And the weird thing is, as soon as he’s done the mom gets frisky with him.
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wrote on 1 May 2024, 03:10 last edited by
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wrote on 1 May 2024, 03:16 last edited by
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wrote on 1 May 2024, 14:45 last edited by taiwan_girl 5 Jan 2024, 14:56
@Axtremus Interesting that the hand sanitizer immediately made the snake "regurgitate" himself. I thought maybe the curve of his teeth or something was preventing that.
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wrote on 1 May 2024, 14:53 last edited by
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wrote on 24 May 2024, 13:42 last edited by
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wrote on 25 May 2024, 01:20 last edited by
Love that laugh at the end.
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wrote on 10 Jun 2024, 10:04 last edited by
https://www.yahoo.com/news/python-swallows-woman-whole-indonesia-165250920.html
A missing woman was found eaten alive by a massive python
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wrote on 19 Aug 2024, 21:37 last edited by
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wrote on 19 Aug 2024, 22:14 last edited by
I dunno. Visually, that's kind of metal lite.
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wrote on 16 Sept 2024, 01:02 last edited by taiwan_girl
A team of biologists recently discovered a new parasitic wasp species in the United States that has a unique way of infecting its hosts. Syntretus perlmani lays its eggs in the bodies of living, adult fruit flies instead of larvae or pupae. The wasp larvae then burst out of the fly’s abdomen, killing it.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07919-7
a,b, The development of wasp larvae inside host flies (a) is accompanied by growth of wasp teratocytes (b, black arrows), which can be seen through the host abdominal cuticle and obstruct the view of the testes (b, white arrow). c, The second and following larval instars lack a head capsule and tail spike, and the final instar grows to nearly the length of the host fly (see Supplementary Video 2). d, Pupal development takes place within a white silken cocoon as is typical of euphorine wasps. e, Larval emergence is always from the abdomen and has been observed to occur between the second and third tergites (dorsolaterally) or laterally through a tear in the abdominal cuticle. f, The adult wasp (male shown) is small, yellowish brown and approximately 1.5 mm in length. Scale bars, 0.5 mm (a–d) and 1 mm (e,f). -
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wrote on 25 Nov 2024, 19:34 last edited by
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wrote on 25 Nov 2024, 19:35 last edited by
Closest he can come to reattaching his head.
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wrote on 25 Nov 2024, 19:44 last edited by
That's not the first impressive tail we've seen here recently.
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wrote on 26 Nov 2024, 00:19 last edited by
No. The Aston Martin one comes to mind.
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wrote on 26 Nov 2024, 15:39 last edited by
Kind of disgusting but at the same time, a bit interesting.
A japanese leech eating a worm
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wrote on 26 Nov 2024, 19:55 last edited by
I wonder how long that worm stayed alive after being consumed whole.