Nature is Metal
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@Mik said in Nature is Metal:
...after a prolonged 20 minute struggle, the snake finally relents,
LOL
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@blondie 555
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Our duck nest is now empty. I think the mother destroyed the eggs before leaving it. I saw small pieces of shell but no larger pieces, and certainly no babies. I guess the eggs were not fertilized. She waited as long as she knew she needed to. They would have hatched by now.
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Our duck nest is now empty. I think the mother destroyed the eggs before leaving it. I saw small pieces of shell but no larger pieces, and certainly no babies. I guess the eggs were not fertilized. She waited as long as she knew she needed to. They would have hatched by now.
@Horace Interesting that they instinct know whether the eggs will be good or not.
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@Horace Interesting that they instinct know whether the eggs will be good or not.
@taiwan_girl said in Nature is Metal:
@Horace Interesting that they instinct know whether the eggs will be good or not.
She didn't know, beyond waiting enough time for them to hatch, which is a month. But she sat on them for a month. She only knew after they didn't hatch.
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Only about twice the size of domestic cats, Florida's bobcats may be small in size, but they're big in moxie.
Case in point: A bobcat appears to have killed a massive, 13-foot Burmese python in the Everglades recently and made a meal of it.
The 52-pound male python was a Conservancy of Southwest Florida scout snake nicknamed Loki. Scout snakes have implanted transmitters that are tracked and used to lure breeding females.
The invasive snake was found in a pile of debris, apparently mauled, with its head smashed and slashed, and partially buried for later feeding.
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Giant centipede, after having babies, allows them to eat her for their nourishment. :eek
Link to video