creatures

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
fyanimaldiversity
why-animals-do-the-thing

New weird horse just dropped, folks.

A spotless giraffe was recently born at Bright’s Zoo in Limestone, TN and was just announced in the media this morning. They’re starting a public naming contest for her, of course.

A baby giraffe stands in a pen. she is a consistent soft brown with a lighter belly and has no spots.ALT
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I’d love to know what type of mutation causes this lack of of pattern, but I don’t know if we have genetics on that for giraffes the way we do other species. As far as is known, she’s the first spotless giraffe ever documented!

why-animals-do-the-thing

There’s been at least one spotless giraffe before! Gotta love how quickly the director debunked that “first” claim - good on him even though it changes the publicity slightly.

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The archival photos have to be licensed so the media is linking to them rather than reproducing them, and I’m going to do the same. You can find them at this link and see them for free (with watermarks).

mammals woagh.. so cool
tinfoilhyena

tiltingplanet asked:

Have any cursed facts about hyraxes?

bunjywunjy answered:

we like to toss around the “oh hyraxes are the closest living terrestrial relative to elephants, surprise!” fact a lot (especially on bar trivia nights), but this fact is actually a tad more apparent than it appears! (appearant! apparears?)

take the hyrax.

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(gently. take hyrax gently.)

while they may look VERY similar to a rodent at first glance, if we pop the hood for a second we find something much weirder.

behold, the feet!

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hyrax feet are modified plantigrade, and are SO modified that they’re pretty clearly more than halfway to being these things:

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also. they got fuckin tusks.

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mammals
hannibalthekingsnake

pussydust-unlimited asked:

Hey about your cartoon vs Real life Animals post, can you elaborate on the lenght of frog tongues? This is the one that shocked me, i study in a Field closely related to zoology and never heard that their tongues are human-like short, unless you were trying to make a point about their shape and not lenght, then Please disregard my inquiry :p

bogleech answered:

When I say their tongues are “more human-like” than chameleon-like, I mean, this is a chameleon’s tongue:

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And this is a frog’s tongue:

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A chameleon has an astonishingly long, thin tongue that launches like a grappling hook, and almost all media thinks this is also true of frogs and toads.


The tongues of frogs and toads DO come out farther than ours, especially because they attach at the front of their mouth, rather than the back, and “flip” outward to grab prey:

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But yes, between the two, their tongues are nowhere near like those of chameleons, but broad and flat like ours. The very farthest they can stretch is like this:

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When you google frog or toad tongues, unfortunately, you get many more fakes than the real thing, to the point that even science articles have been known to use them

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And, the first time I ever posted about this subject, someone retrieved exactly this fake photo to try and prove that I was making all this up. Frogs have never done this! Cartoons simply exaggerated it for fun at first, and then I guess confusion with chameleon tongues lead people to believe they worked similarly!


It’s such a pervasive misunderstanding that I didn’t know about until my teens, and I was a biology nerd well before that too. It felt like a betrayal. I was never made to believe in Santa Claus but finding out frogs Don’t Do That felt how I imagine that feels. Frog tongues were my Santa Isn’t Real moment.


But, frog tongues are in my opinion just as interesting as chameleon tongues. Besides the weird flip-out structure they are extremely adhesive and also so soft and membranous that they practically “shrink wrap” to the prey! Terrifying!!! Getting got by a giant frog would be like getting wrapped up in a giant stretchy sheet of cellophane covered in glue!

amphibians oh cool!!