a rift

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything
nickstanley:
“ lavender at last light
”
Pop-up View Separately

nickstanley:

lavender at last light

(via moreanimalia)

Source: nickstanley

    • #nature
    • #plants
    • #colours
    • #photography
    • #fav
  • 3 years ago > nickstanley
  • 1742
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
wonderous-world:
“ Grizzly Bear by Mike Wilson
”
Pop-up View Separately

wonderous-world:

Grizzly Bear by Mike Wilson

(via moreanimalia)

Source: flickr.com

    • #reference
    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #bear
    • #photography
  • 3 years ago > wondrousworld
  • 3571
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
cactifetish:
“ When lemurs eat your cacti friends
”
Pop-up View Separately

cactifetish:

When lemurs eat your cacti friends

    • #well they are delish
    • #apparently
    • #animal
    • #lemur
    • #katta
    • #nature
  • 3 years ago > cactifetish
  • 14
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Q:Fairly sure the spider you found is a brown recluse... They are highly venomous and their bite can really harm you! Get rid of it ASAP.

Anonymous

rotifers:

jennrosefx:

scalestails:

I am 100% sure that she is not a brown recluse, or even related to a brown recluse!

The misidentification of spiders is so common, and the misinformation spread about them by the media, hearsay, etc. all ends up with so many innocent spiders- who are totally harmless to humans and pets, being killed on the spot.

Unless you are an entomologist, keep spiders as a hobby, or have a special interest in spiders and their biology, you will probably be 100% wrong 100% of the time if you try to identify a spider.

Superficially, many spiders look the same. Similar colors, patterns, and they all have 8 legs right? But if you look closer there are many, many subtle signs that tell the species apart.

Leg shape, size, and how they hold them. Size of the cephalathorax relative to the abdomen can indicate gender as well as species. The size, shape, and arrangement of the eyes (which can sometimes only be seen with the help of a magnifying glass!). Where the spider was found is another helpful indicator.

So there are all these subtle things to help you identify a species, and unless you are really into spiders like I said… you’re probably wrong.

And I’d really like to address this whole “brown recluses are highly venomous” thing. Yes, their venom is hemotoxic. But bites that actually cause any medical symptoms are rare (yes, you can be bitten and NEVER KNOW IT) and ones that do actually tend to heal by themselves in a few days.  And over 80% of problems that medical doctors diagnose as “brown recluse bites” are actually something else. Staph infections, herpes, lyme disease, etc. are all misdiagnosed by actually doctors as brown recluse bites, sometimes despite brown recluses not even living in that state (looking at you, California).

Most bites from brown recluse spiders (Loxosceles reclusa) are “dry” bites, meaning they don’t inject venom. Venom takes energy to create, and a spider might not want to spend energy creating more venom when they can just run away. Which they will try to do. They are not a particularly aggressive or defensive spider, and rarely bite humans. If they do, it is because they are pushed against the skin and feel threatened. And even then, they aren’t likely to inject any venom at all.

There was literally a woman who lived in a house with over 2,000 brown recluse spiders and no one in the house ever got bitten… 

I’m not saying that no one has been harmed by them, I’m just saying that their danger has been greatly exaggerated by pretty much everybody.

SO onto my spider! I was looking around at work and now that I’m home I’m not 100% sure because the species I think she is is pretty variable with their pattern, but I’m almost certain that she is Pisaurina mira, a species of Nursery Web Spider. Why do I know for a fact that she isn’t a brown recluse and most likely a Pisaurina sp.? Because of her eyes!

These are the eyes of Loxosceles reclusa. There are three pairs of eyes, with 6 eyes total.

image

My spider has 8 eyes, in two rows. Unfortunately there is a peice of coco coir in front of half her face of the first picture, but you can clearly see there are not three pairs, and in the second photo you can see the entire top row.

image
image

And even just looking at the spider itself, they are pretty different in shape and pattern!

Loxosceles:

image

(Image source)

My spider

image

So please, read this article about the brown recluse spider and look them up from reputable experts! They don’t deserve the bad rap they get, and so many other spiders also suffer from being misidentified.

image

I’d kind of want to live in a house with 2,000 brown recluse spiders. Maybe black widows too. They’d be a great way to scare off door-to-door salespeople!

Source: scalestails

    • #arachnophobia
    • #arachnid
    • #spider
    • #spiders
    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #behaviour
    • #neat!
  • 3 years ago > scalestails
  • 1463
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #anteater
  • 3 years ago > trailcams
  • 257
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
ponderation:
“ Lakeland Low Pressure Autumn by Nigel Hudson
”
Zoom Info
ponderation:
“ Lakeland Low Pressure Autumn by Nigel Hudson
”
Zoom Info
ponderation:
“ Lakeland Low Pressure Autumn by Nigel Hudson
”
Zoom Info

ponderation:

Lakeland Low Pressure Autumn by Nigel Hudson

(via monere-lluvia)

Source: ponderation

    • #nature
    • #places
    • #landscape
    • #colours
  • 3 years ago > ponderation
  • 27873
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

ihomestuckguy:

why-animals-do-the-thing:

polychora:

Video by Alix Harvey, head aquarist at the Marine Biological Association of the UK

“Common cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, striking at 120fps”

Cuttlefish have ten tentacles - eight normal ones, and two longer that function (as seen here) as striking weapons to grab and ensnare prey. 

@violetsealover

(via monere-lluvia)

Source: twitter.com

    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #cuttlefish
    • #slightly terrifying
    • #but still a
    • #cutie
    • #video
    • #behaviour
  • 3 years ago > unsundered
  • 15410
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
typhlonectes:
“  Sierra Newt (Taricha sierrae) amplexus (”mating ball”) found in stream at Woolman Semester in Nevada County, California, USA photograph by Mark Begley
”
Zoom Info
typhlonectes:
“  Sierra Newt (Taricha sierrae) amplexus (”mating ball”) found in stream at Woolman Semester in Nevada County, California, USA photograph by Mark Begley
”
Zoom Info

typhlonectes:

Sierra Newt (Taricha sierrae) amplexus (”mating ball”) found in stream at Woolman Semester in Nevada County, California, USA

photograph by Mark Begley

(via moreanimalia)

Source: typhlonectes

    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #newt
    • #colours
    • #fav
    • #photography
    • #water
  • 3 years ago > typhlonectes
  • 762
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
moreanimalia:
“ sharealcatraz:
“ Rainbow Dace….Cyprinella lutrensis  Common name: Red shiner, rainbow dace, horse-head minnow, red horse minnow or shiner, rosysided dace, Asian fire barb, African fire barb, redfin giant danio, blue dace, shiner (note...
Pop-up View Separately

moreanimalia:

sharealcatraz:

Rainbow Dace….Cyprinella lutrensis

Common name: Red shiner, rainbow dace, horse-head minnow, red horse minnow or shiner, rosysided dace, Asian fire barb, African fire barb, redfin giant danio, blue dace, shiner (note that the red shiner is not a dace, minnow, barb, or danio!)
Scientific/Latin names: Cyprinella lutrensis, formerly Notropis lutrensis
Maximum length: 2 to 4 inches (usually 3)
Colors: Greenish brown, red and blue on breeding males
Temperature preference: 33 to 77 degrees F, 60 to 77 degrees F preferred
pH preference: 7 to 7.5
Hardness preference: Medium to hard
Compatibility: Good
Life span: 3 to 4 years
Ease of keeping: Easy
Ease of breeding: Easy

Gorgeous!

(via moreanimalia)

Source: sharealcatraz

    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #fish
    • #colours
  • 3 years ago > sharealcatraz
  • 243
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info
jedavu:
“  Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle
”
Zoom Info

jedavu:

Alexander Semenov Continues to Photograph the Earth’s Most Fragile Marine Wildlife Near the Arctic Circle

(via awrrrq)

Source: jedavu

    • #photography
    • #nature
    • #animal
    • #water
    • #colours
    • #fav
  • 3 years ago > jedavu
  • 27802
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Page 116 of 281
← 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