The swamp rat.
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The swamp rat.
That’s not an Orangutan, it’s a Shitgibbon, which I believe are not protected.
Except by PETA, you don't want to fuck with PETA.
Let’s get back on subject before we start making observations/comparisons about rape and orangutans
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As I recall. they only secrete it when really stressed, so don't piss it off and you will be fine.
Had some batts swooping around tonight, you could tell when the ly got into the bugs as their flight path and flapping would change. They can have as many as they like, I hate bugs that bite.
Good to see given the decline in population around here. Crossing my fingers they aren't nested in the shed I need to tear down.
Build some bat house near tour shed.
Walking into my house I noticed something small and dark in the crease below the door sill. Turned out to be a little brown bat. Not sure why it was on the ground during the day and not sleeping upside down somewhere dark and cool. But it was still breathing and still alive so I poked holes in a box, put the bat in the box, and brought it inside to get it out of the heat thinking maybe it ran into a wall - which would seem weird given radar - and just needed to sleep it off. It didn't make a peep.
Took the box outside and opened it up at dusk. Bat was breathing but not moving. I took off for a few hours and the bat was gone when I returned. Thought another animal might have eaten it but I walk outside the next day and see this hanging on the door frame. It hung out there for a day and then was gone and never seen again.
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I agree. They look very similar at first glance. We had a little freakout (not knowing the spp) when we first moved to our place and one of the kids kept licking them like homer simpson. They're all over the place around us. Cute little buggers.
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Both are toxic. Different species, same genus, and are more similar then different. Best not to lick, or even handle them, toxin can be absorbed through cuts and abrasions.
Quote:
Poisonous skin secretions containing tetrodotoxin repel most predators. This potent neurotoxin is widespread throughout the skin, muscles, and blood, and can cause death in many animals, including humans, if eaten in sufficient quantity. (One study estimated that 1,200 - 2,500 mice could be killed from the skin of one California Newt.) This poison can also be ingested through a mucous membrane or a cut in the skin, so care should always be taken when handling newts.
purty
I also showed this thread to andrew and I think I could hear him having a nature-gasm from the next room
here are a few cool ones from his recent park adventures
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This morning from the porch
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The most toxic Newt:
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...and the ugliest too.
up close bison
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7CgZuDHa4E
Loon couple and their chick been hanging out in front of the dock all week, and serenading us at night. The chick is often riding on their backs, but sometimes both parents dive for food and leave the little one alone on the surface.
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I love loons. We get them here sometimes but only briefly during migration season. They remind me of northern michigan, wisconsin, northern ontario--places I spent time a long time ago.