Share Animal Pictures: For Animal Lovers

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In summary: In summary, this conversation consisted of various links to funny and cute animal pictures and gifs. The conversation also touched on the dangers of raising wild animals, the importance of having a sense of humor in certain areas of the forum, and an amusing owl meme.
  • #2,066
Here are some fun photomicrographs from this year's Nikon Small World Contest:

Developmental series of a clown fish (a small salt water fish common in salt water aquariums):
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A slime mold fruiting body:
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Head of a Midge:
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Network of endoplasmic reticulum (er) in a cell:
Screen Shot 2021-09-15 at 1.22.28 PM.png


It's too bad more people don't get to use a microscopy.
They seem to be missing out on a lot:
 
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Physics news on Phys.org
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DennisN said:
The details in the "Head of a Midge" photo made my jaw drop. :))

If you were to work in a fly (Drosophila) lab, you would see something similar any time you handle flies (usually done under a dissecting microscope).

Flyheads are smaller, so they have fewer detailed pattern elements (like the "hairs"), but they have al the same parts. Drosophilologists have names for all the large hairs as well as the other parts. There are genetic lines of flies where mutations affecting these little details have been identified.

It is similar with almost any biological entitiy.
The closer you look the more organized detail you will find, down to the molecular level.
 
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  • #2,069
BillTre said:
Drosophilologists
TIL this was a word. :wink:
 
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Star-nosed mole:

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  • #2,071
Does his mama think he is cute?
 
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berkeman said:
Does his mama think he is cute?
Of course.
To not would not be adaptive as it would be more likely to lead to abandonment.
 
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A Fox and Frog, from National Geographic, photo by Kirsten Ferguson:

Screen Shot 2021-09-23 at 1.56.44 PM.png
 
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  • #2,074
The first half of this video (after the first ~30 sec) shows a gibbon teasing two tigers.
Slapping their heads and pulling their ears and tails.
It is hilarious.

 
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  • #2,075
BillTre said:
Slapping their heads and pulling their ears and tails.
It is hilarious.
Incredibly funny! What an annoying gibbon! :smile: The skill is incredibly impressive. Also the guts and the playfulness.
 
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  • #2,076
Flat fish start off in development, up-right, like a normal fish. However, early in development they flop over on one side.
The eye on the underside then migrates to the top side and other changes occur.

Apparently the side that is up has changed in this group of flatfishes (Pleuronectoidei) through evolution.
A labile trait.
Closer to the center are more ancient branch points.

Screen Shot 2021-09-25 at 11.04.30 AM.png


https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1055790321002487?dgcid=coauthor
 
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This looks like a hole, danger. Why would the cats be attracted? Curiosity?
 
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pinball1970 said:
This looks like a hole, danger. Why would the cats be attracted? Curiosity?

Interesting! I thought it was fake black hole until the cat fell into it.
 
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The dearly departed and beloved Anatolian, Dr Who

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  • #2,082
I recently saw two extremely fascinating seminars (on the World Science Festival channel) which I can't get out of my head.

I have had a great fascination with animal intelligence for many, many years. I don't know why, maybe it's partly because I also like artifical intelligence, which borrows some ideas from biology and also is connected to cognitive science.

As I've said to one of my friends, in another life I could have ended up studying the behavior and intelligence of animals. I am that fascinated by it.

Anyway, if anyone has the slightest interest in these things, these seminars may be for you.

The first seminar includes a neuroscientist, a dolphin researcher, an octopus researcher and an ant reasearcher.

Rethinking Thinking: How Intelligent Are Other Animals?
Intelligence was once thought to be uniquely human. But researchers have discovered astonishing cognitive abilities in many other species—not just our close cousins like chimps, or fellow mammals like dolphins—but also crows, parrots, and even octopuses. If we consider the intelligence of swarms, we must add bees, termites, and ants to the list of super smart creatures. Join the scientists who study smarts as we ask: What is intelligence? Why do some species get an extra dose? And just how special are humans, really?
The second seminar is also very fascinating. It is, as far as I understand, partly about quite new and pioneering work with plants, bioacoustics, fungi, slime molds, ants and swarms.

Intelligence Without Brains
How much brain do you need to be smart? Bees and ants perform marvels as colonies, though each insect has barely any brain. And plants—with no brain at all—exhibit behaviors that, by any definition, count as intelligent. Brace yourself for a mind-bending exploration of plants that learn new behaviors and warn their brainless fellows of danger; vines that compete with each other; molds that solve puzzles; and trees that communicate and cooperate through a ‘wood-wide web’ of microscopic mycological fibers. Perhaps the real question is, are we smart enough to appreciate the vast range of intelligence that surrounds us?
 
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  • #2,083
Sea Slugs (molluscs without shells):

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  • #2,084
Oh, by the way, here's another incredible documentary I saw recently. From one of the seminars I posted above I learned that the very, very strange animal, cuttlefish, has astounding camouflage abilities I did not know about. And the way they can disorient/hypnotize prey is simply incredible. :))

Cuttlefish - the King of Camouflage
 
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  • #2,085
Cuttlefish are amazing with their color pattern control. I used to know some cuttlefish researchers and heard a lot of cuttlefish stories. They do patterns for both social interaction as well as camouflage.
They can make a "hey baby" signal on one side of their body to a potential mate, while making a threat signal on the other side for a potential mating competitor.
 
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  • #2,086
We would clone fish and do a lot of genetic tricks in the lab, but never did these tricks:

Screen Shot 2021-09-29 at 8.45.02 AM.png
 
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BillTre said:
They can make a "hey baby" signal on one side of their body to a potential mate, while making a threat signal on the other side for a potential mating competitor.
Yes, I heard about that in one of the seminars. It is incredible. In the documentary above they also demonstrated that some male individuals during mating competition make themselves appear as females. This fools the other males, and also let's the "crossdresser" get close to another female, and sneak into mate with it. Just incredible. :smile:
 
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DennisN said:
Yes, I heard about that in one of the seminars. It is incredible. In the documentary above they also demonstrated that some male individuals during mating competition make themselves appear as females. This fools the other males, and also let's the "crossdresser" get close to another female, and sneak into mate with it. Just incredible. :smile:
Other things can do amazing pattern changes too.
Once I was scuba diving in a large Hawaii tide pool (bigger then a football field and ~20 feet deep) and saw a couple of trumpet fish, somewhat like this:
Screen Shot 2021-09-29 at 3.48.54 PM.png


As the waves mottled the sunlight coming through the water surface, trumpet fishes moved a mottled pattern along their body.
 
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I visited the pet store a couple of days ago to get some things for my cats.
I was taking the time to go around and look at different fish and found a couple of very beautiful fishes that were in their own tanks. I asked if I could take some photos, which I was allowed.
The told me they were fighting fish (I don't know which species, though), and they were in separate tanks because otherwise they fight each other.

Here are two photos of a beautiful blue and red one:

DSC9608_DxOm1.jpg


DSC9609_DxOm1.jpg
 
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  • #2,094
They are Bettas (Betta splendens).
The adult males fight and have to be kept separate. They also grow longer fins.
The females have shorter fins, may be less colorful, and can be kept together.
They have been bred in SE Asia (and now all over the world) for a long time. There are many spectacular lines. Pictures here.
They (and their relatives) are bubble nesters. They keep their fertilized eggs in nests of bubbles (mixed with fish spit).
 
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Longest insect tongue (proboscis actually) found (from Science mag news):

Screen Shot 2021-10-05 at 10.35.28 AM.png


This moth’s whole history is absurd. Charles Darwin predicted its existence when he first saw the shape of the Angraecum sesquipedale orchid (which apparently prompted him to exclaim, “Good heavens, what insect can suck it?”). About 2 decades later, in 1903, the moth was actually discovered, and ever since, the Malagasy variant has been considered a subspecies of its mainland counterpart, X. morganii. But no longer.
 
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  • #2,096
Call yourself a dog?

 
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  • #2,097
They can remain dessicated for decades.
Hatch out and live for a few weeks (filter feeding), lay eggs, and dry up.
I did not realize they got so big.
Screen Shot 2021-10-09 at 10.25.30 AM.png
 
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One of my friends (who actually works with various animals herself) recommended this documentary, and I saw it recently. It was one of the most fascinating, thoughtful and emotional documentaries I've seen, so I warmly recommend it. It is about a person who befriends a wild octopus during a tough time in his life.

My Octopus Teacher (2020), trailer:
About it on Wikipedia: My Octopus Teacher
 
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  • #2,099
Red heads verses yellow heads in gang warfare. This gets ugly quickly guys so viewer discretion advised.
(Joke)
 
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Here is a fun little video that compares domestication of wolves to dogs with the results of the Russian experiment over the last ~50 years on domestication of foxes.
Goes into behavioral details not often mentioned.
Cute foxes.

 
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