Wildlife photographer Dale Morris created this multiple exposure photo of a lemur scampering across the ground in Madagascar, Africa Picture: Dale Morris / Barcroft Media
Source: Flickr / maelick
Source: waterbody
Neon cross by stevenswart64
Striking view of the back of a Half-collared Kingfisher, Alcedo semitorquata (Alcedinidae), an African species.
(via moreanimalia)
Source: superbnature
Devil Rays Leap High Into The Air and No One Is Sure Why
by Chau Tu
The Munk’s devil ray (Mobula munkiana), pictured above, got the nickname “tortilla” from the fishermen in the Gulf of California where the species lives, says Octavio Aburto, an assistant professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, who took the photo.One reason for the moniker, he says, is because this species is smaller than the three other devil ray species also found in the Gulf, averaging about three feet in wingspan compared with two or three times that size for its brethren. And secondly, the sound of the ray smacking its belly onto the ocean surface after jumping into the air is reminiscent of the slapping of tortilla dough between a chef’s palms.All 9 species of devil rays leap out of the water, but no one yet knows why, says Giuseppe Notarbartolo di Sciara, a marine ecologist who was the first to describe the Munk’s devil ray while he was earning a Ph.D at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in the early 1980s. But as far as scientists can tell, the Munk’s devil ray is the only species that engages in “spectacular, frequently repeated jumping while in large-to-humongous groups,” he says, although it’s not yet clear if there’s a pattern to their leaping…(read more: Science Friday)photos: devil rays in Cabo Pulmo, Mex, by Octavio Aburto / iLCP
(via monere-lluvia)
National Zoo’s Baby Giant Anteater by Meghan Murphy/Smithsonian’s National Zoo.
(via land-of-the-animals)
Source: farm4.staticflickr.com
Source: Flickr / burnett0305
Stumpy the ring-tailed lemur turns 28. (via In pictures: Scottish zoo celebrates the 28th birthday of one of the UK’s oldest lemurs in style - Daily Record)
(via fuckyeahlemurs)
Source: dailyrecord.co.uk
Leopard slugs (Limax maximus) mating! While dangling on a thick line of mucus, both slugs extend their male reproductive organs from their heads and twine them together to exchange sperm.
I wrote a haiku about this very scene last weekend when I was re-watching Life in the Undergrowth!
Entwining on line
of mucous; slugs enveloped,
transfer love juices
(via moreanimalia)
Source: scientificvisuals












