Casper, the black-and-white ruffed lemur out for some socialization and play time at Zoo to You, in Paso Robles Ca. I remember when this little guy was just born and could fit in the palm of my hand! ^_^
Cue the cuteness alert!
#ThrowbackThursday: In honor of Peter the Anteater’s 50th Birthday (11/30), here’s a baby anteater chilling in Aldrich Park, circa 1968. 😍 🐜🍴
See Peter the Anteater’s virtual birthday card. 💙💛🎂
Photo courtesy of the Special Collections (@uciarchives) in the UCI Libraries.
Giant anteater hitchhiker. Junior was napping in the safety of mom’s back fur as she walked him to sleep. by PauerKorde Photo
Study of crabs suggests they are capable of feeling pain
A pair of researchers with Queen’s University in the U.K. has found via testing, that contrary to conventional thinking, crabs appear to be capable of feeling pain. In their paper published in the journal Biology Letters, Robert Elwood and Laura Adams describe how they subjected a group of crabs to jolts of electricity and the ways they tested them to see if the shocks elicited a pain response.
In humans and a host of other vertebrates, demonstrations of pain are obvious, from cries and moans to activities related to escape to avoidance behavior afterwards. But do invertebrates and/or fish feel pain? It is a reasonable question because of the way that some invertebrates are treated by humans—dunking them, while still alive, into a pot of boiling water, for instance. Doing so to a cow, pig or chicken would be unthinkable, yet it is done routinely with crabs and lobsters, which do generally attempt to escape their fate. The conventional view is that such creatures are not able to experience pain, at least in the sense that humans feel it, because they do not have brain parts that would appear to be able to process it. But, that may be oversimplifying things—to better define if a creature experiences pain, scientists have begun to establish rules or guidelines to help, such as noting types or degree of reactionary behavior or changes in hormone levels—if such guidelines are met, the creature can be said to feel pain, in whatever form.
In this new study, Elwood and Adams set out to determine if common crabs experience pain. To find out they obtained 40 specimens and put them in plastic tanks—all had wires attached but only 20 were actually given shocks—for 200-milliseconds every 10 seconds for a two minute period. All of the crabs were watched to observe their behavior, before, during and after the shocks were applied.
The researchers report that the shocked crabs displayed more vigorous behavior than those in the control group, which included walking around, taking a threatened posture or trying to climb out of the tank. Even more tellingly, they noted that the shocked crabs experienced spiked levels of lactic acid in their haemolymph—a fluid in crabs that is analogous to blood in humans.
Taken together the evidence indicates very clearly, the team claims, that crabs do indeed feel pain.
Text credit: Bob Yirka
Image credit: Taylor Spaulding
(via moreanimalia)
Source: Flickr / spudjnr123
Source: lonnie11941-blog
A Long-Necked Marine Reptile Is the First Known to Filter Feed Like a Whale
The bizarre Mortuneria used sieve-like teeth to strain tasty morsels from the muddy Cretaceous seafloor
by Brian Switek
If you’ve ever flipped through a book of prehistoric creatures or ambled through a major museum’s fossil halls, you’ve probably seen a plesiosaur.
These were the four-flippered marine reptiles that patrolled the seas for almost the entire Mesozoic era, some 250 to 66 million years ago. Some plesiosaurs were big-headed apex predators. Others had ludicrously long necks and snatched up fish and crustaceans with their little jaws.
Now, Marshall University paleontologist F. Robin O’Keefe has discovered that some of them filled their bellies in a way thought to be impossible for the aquatic reptiles: filter feeding.
The findings, presented last month at the annual Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting in Dallas, centered on a plesiosaur that has puzzled paleontologists for over 25 years. Named Mortuneria, this plesiosaur was found in the 66-million-year-old rock of Seymour Island, Antarctica…
(read more: Smithsonian Magazine)
photograph by John Harper/Corbis
(via moreanimalia)
Source: typhlonectes















