a rift

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything
zsl-edge-of-existence:
“ Hellbenders are normally solitary animals with a fixed home range. Once a hellbender has established a den, it will rarely leave it except to hunt or to find a mate. The territories of two animals may overlap, but the two...
Zoom Info
zsl-edge-of-existence:
“ Hellbenders are normally solitary animals with a fixed home range. Once a hellbender has established a den, it will rarely leave it except to hunt or to find a mate. The territories of two animals may overlap, but the two...
Zoom Info
zsl-edge-of-existence:
“ Hellbenders are normally solitary animals with a fixed home range. Once a hellbender has established a den, it will rarely leave it except to hunt or to find a mate. The territories of two animals may overlap, but the two...
Zoom Info

zsl-edge-of-existence:

Hellbenders are normally solitary animals with a fixed home range.   Once a hellbender has established a den, it will rarely leave it except to hunt or to find a mate.  The territories of two animals may overlap, but the two hellbenders are never found in the same place at the same time; should they meet by chance, they will challenge each other.  A larger animal will chase a smaller one away, but two equally matched hellbenders will engage in a vicious fight (see bottom image).  And should one hellbender kill the other, they are not above cannibalism.  

(via moreanimalia)

Source: zsl-edge-of-existence

    • #cool name guys
    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #salamander
    • #hellbenders
    • #amphibian
  • 2 years ago > zsl-edge-of-existence
  • 404
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

beardeddragonpuff:

the blue-ringed octopus!!!

🌀 don’t delete caption 🌀

    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #blue ringed
    • #octopus
    • #video
  • 2 years ago > luckdragonpuff
  • 46
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
paint-horse-dreamin:
“Marwari Mule
Photography by: Jumentos E Muares
”
View Separately

paint-horse-dreamin:

Marwari Mule 
Photography by: Jumentos E Muares

    • #so pretty omg
    • #hoers
    • #but not really
    • #animal
    • #mule
  • 2 years ago > paint-horse-dreamin
  • 3984
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
cephalopodsgonewild:
“ via Mola Mola
”
Pop-up View Separately

cephalopodsgonewild:

via Mola Mola

    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #octopus
    • #mimic
    • #the tag is a goldmine of awesome photos
  • 2 years ago > cephalopodsgonewild
  • 992
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

critty123:

His little guy stole my heart #cuttlefish #aquarist #aquarium #cephlopod

(via ilovecephalopods)

Source: critty123

    • #o no
    • #a vicious kraken
    • #; u ;
    • #cuttlefish
    • #video
    • #animal
    • #oh gosh
  • 2 years ago > critty123
  • 79
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

wanderingalaskan:

Another video from Xcalak, Mexico! I know octopus are inquisitive, so I set my gopro right beside his burrow and backed off to see what he would do. I wasn’t disppointed! In fact, it’s a good thing I had my red lens on a lanyard, or I probably would never have got it back.

    • #you have made an offering
    • #it's his now
    • #give it back
    • #octopus
    • #animal
    • #behaviour
    • #video
  • 2 years ago > wanderingalaskan
  • 3
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
typhlonectes:
“ Cannibalism Amongst Deep Sea Squid “ Cannibalism is not so unusual in the deep sea, especially for squid, but until recently the diet of Gonatus squid was largely unknown. By using ROVs to make observations of these squid in their...
Zoom Info
typhlonectes:
“ Cannibalism Amongst Deep Sea Squid “ Cannibalism is not so unusual in the deep sea, especially for squid, but until recently the diet of Gonatus squid was largely unknown. By using ROVs to make observations of these squid in their...
Zoom Info

typhlonectes:

Cannibalism Amongst Deep Sea Squid

Cannibalism is not so unusual in the deep sea, especially for squid, but until recently the diet of Gonatus squid was largely unknown. By using ROVs to make observations of these squid in their natural habitat, scientists now know a great deal more about their feeding behavior.

A recent paper by Henk-Jan Hoving and Bruce Robison reveals that the diet of the two similar Gonatus squid species—Gonatus onyx (bttm image) and Gonatus berryi (top) — have a higher than expected incidence of cannibalism.

Hoving is a former MBARI postdoctoral fellow and is now with the Helmholtz Center for Ocean Research Kiel, Germany; Robison is an MBARI senior scientist and midwater ecologist.

Read more about this new research in our news story:

ow.ly/2Jrg303LU1j

(via: Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute)

(via ilovecephalopods)

Source: typhlonectes

    • #woh
    • #:c
    • #squid
    • #animal
    • #behaviour
  • 2 years ago > typhlonectes
  • 95
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Spiders can hear you walking and talking from across the room

why-animals-do-the-thing:

definitelynotalibrary:

speciesofleastconcern:

sagansense:

mindblowingscience:

Here’s a comforting thought. When you arrive home and open the front door or enter your bedroom, the spiders can hear you.

It has long been known that spiders can hear sounds via leg hairs that bend in response to vibrations arriving through the air or through solid objects such as floors or walls. But until now, we thought they could only hear airborne vibrations a few centimetres or “spider lengths” away at most.

It now seems that this same approach actually lets them hear sounds up to 5 metres away.

Gil Menda at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and his colleagues were studying a type of jumping spider,Phidippus audax, that they assumed relied almost completely on sight and vibrations they can feel through other objects, such as leaves or floorboards.

But microelectrodes implanted in the spiders’ brains showed that neurons responded to sounds such as chairs scraping and people clapping even when the noises were made 3 to 5 metres away.

“We were very surprised,” says Menda. “Our studies extended the range of auditory sensitivity to more than 3 metres – over 350 body lengths – for our spiders.”

The team established that the spiders freeze when exposed to low-frequency sounds of about 80 to 400 hertz that resemble a low hum, or buzz. They discovered that this overlaps with the wingbeat frequency of predatory insects such as parasitoid wasps and flies, concluding that the hearing abilities they found in jumping spiders have evolved to help them avoid predators.

Continue Reading.

image

Originally posted by giphy

This makes it even LESS plausible that they would crawl in your mouth while you are sleeping, or bite you for any reason. You are a mountain that creates wind and thunder, they only want to avoid you.

WELL, to quote my former coworker who is an entomologist:


It’s not technically “hearing” as they have no ears or tympanic membranes but all the hairs sense changes in vibrational patterns. The fact that they can sense this and from such a distance is pretty amazing.

This additional pedantry is much appreciated.

(via moreanimalia)

Source: newscientist.com

    • #neat!
    • #spider
    • #spiders
    • #arachnophobia
    • #animal
    • #behaviour
  • 2 years ago > mindblowingscience
  • 2009
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
endlesssehnsucht:
“ Now I’m reminded of Madagascar, here’s a cuddly lemur I saw in Isalo.
Lemurs are very easy to get any photograph of (if you find them), but very difficult to get a good photograph of.
”
Pop-up View Separately

endlesssehnsucht:

Now I’m reminded of Madagascar, here’s a cuddly lemur I saw in Isalo.

Lemurs are very easy to get any photograph of (if you find them), but very difficult to get a good photograph of.

    • #darling
    • #animal
    • #lemur
    • #katta
  • 2 years ago > endlesssehnsucht
  • 1
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
todropscience:
“ JEWEL-LIKE CRUSTACEAN FROM THE DEEP SEA
“Amphipods are small crustacean that inhabits all acuatic environments, from ocean depths to groundwater, in freshwater systems, also found in caves and sea ice. Their feeding strategies are...
Zoom Info
todropscience:
“ JEWEL-LIKE CRUSTACEAN FROM THE DEEP SEA
“Amphipods are small crustacean that inhabits all acuatic environments, from ocean depths to groundwater, in freshwater systems, also found in caves and sea ice. Their feeding strategies are...
Zoom Info

todropscience:

JEWEL-LIKE CRUSTACEAN FROM THE DEEP SEA

Amphipods are small crustacean that inhabits all acuatic environments, from ocean depths to groundwater, in freshwater systems, also found in caves and sea ice. Their feeding strategies are various: detrital feeders, herbivores, scavengers and suspension feeder, over 800 Species of amphipods are know worldwide.
These amphipods of the families Epimeriidae and Iphimediidae are among the prettiest, these living gems are predominantly red, and fades quicly with increasing depth. They are foud in the Southern Ocean and are tiny, just 2-4cm long.
At 1950 m Epimeria larsi, aka the pink gem holds the deepest known species record for the genus, and was collected from the northern Ross Sea slope.
  • Photo: Top left: Epimeria rimicarinata; Top right: E. larsi; Middle row: E. schiaparelli (named after the photographer); Bottom right: Epimeria robusta. The bottom left image is of a closely related genus, Echiniphimedia, aptly named the ‘prickly’ amphipod. Credit: Stefano Schiaparelli (University of Genoa) and David Bowden (NIWA)/ IPY CAML voyage TAN0802.
  • More NIWA
  • more about Antarctic amphipods

(via nirdian)

Source: todropscience

    • #neat!
    • #crustacean
    • #colours
    • #animal
    • #nature
    • #behaviour
  • 2 years ago > todropscience
  • 5903
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Page 35 of 216
← Newer • Older →

Portrait/Logo

stuff and things

Pages

  • my doodles

<3

See more →
  • Video via earthstory
    Video

    fwcresearch

    Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

    Video via earthstory
  • Photoset via monere-lluvia

    ostinlein:

    Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat

    Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!

    Photoset via monere-lluvia
  • Photo via monere-lluvia
    Photo via monere-lluvia
  • Photo via end0skeletal-undead

    by Andrey

    Photo via end0skeletal-undead
  • Photo via red-ananas
    Photo via red-ananas
  • Video via earthstory
    Video

    fwcresearch

    Back in January, our research biologists came across this octopus when pulling up a stone crab trap in Cedar Key. Octopus can get in...

    Video via earthstory
  • Photoset via monere-lluvia

    ostinlein:

    Commission for https://www.deviantart.com/sweet-n-treat

    Forgot to mention it on Deviantart - I’ve opened Fur Affinity account!

    Photoset via monere-lluvia
  • Photo via monere-lluvia
    Photo via monere-lluvia
  • Photo via end0skeletal-undead

    by Andrey

    Photo via end0skeletal-undead
  • Photo via red-ananas
    Photo via red-ananas
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me anything
  • Mobile
Effector Theme — Tumblr themes by Pixel Union