Thank God it's Owl Friday

Owls can communicate all kinds of things with their body language.  They often bob their heads around with their eyes wide open in order to get a better view of something.  But head bobbing can be a sign that the owl is excited or alarmed as well. They also cock their heads from one side to the other or flick their tails when excited or alarmed. They may extend their feathers and wings as much as possible if they feel they are facing a possible threat.

Owls vocalize and a number of ways too - they hiss, screech, howl, hoot, whistle, cluck and scream.  Mating calls and alarm noises are the most common cause for vocalization.

cool owl videos -
tranformer white-faced scops owl

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Toucans Strap on GPS Backpacks

Scientists in a study funded by the Smithsonian captured 6 toucans and strapped GPS backpacks on them to see how active they are and where they go. They are trying to see any pattern in their activity especially related to consuming and dropping seeds. The birds are most active early in the morning and late afternoon. They found that the seeds eaten earlier in the day were more likely to be dispersed about a wider range.

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Owl Battle Royal

The US Fish and Game Department is having trouble formulating their owl conservation plan. For years they have struggled to protect the spotted owl (pictured) in the Northwest of the US. Traditionally, the enemy was timber industry and loss of habitat. The trouble is that there is a new owl in town, taking over the range of the spotted owl – the barred owl! New studies have shown that the barred owl has larger populations in the forests of the Pacific Northwest than was previously thought. The timber industry is ticked off saying that conservation efforts should concentrate more on addressing the owl on owl conflict than coming after their money making activities.


Spotted owl numbers are down to just 5,000 in the wild and it is thought that they are losing about 3 percent a year.


Lets hope the other owls of the region don't join in the fray. Some will even attack and kill other species of owl. There is no shortage of the nocturnal big-eyed bird of prey in this region. Snowy owls may be seen as far South as the US Northwest and burrowing owls are sometimes that far North. Barn owls, screech owls, long-eared owls, great gray owls and a few others will also be found in the area.


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Bobcats found feeding on domestic cats in New Mexico

People of the neighborhood were thrilled and excited to see bobcats around until they started to notice their own cats were going missing. The people have been used to seeing wildlife for years but the wildcats have become a little more aggressive lately (or else hungrier.)

Neighbor Lauri Michael said, “I thought I saw a neighborhood cat but it was much larger than a neighborhood cat and it jumped the wall and I noticed that the tail was bobbed.”

Michael said the wildcats seemed a bit more brazen than in years past.

We heard some commotion on our roof, and we heard other neighbors say that the bobcats can actually climb up on the roof, and we found evidence to that fact that they left behind," she said.

But climbing roofs wasn’t all they were doing.

I know they have gotten the neighbors cats,” Mike Tullai said.

A neighbor had a cat snatched right before her by the bobcat,” said Michaels.

The neighbors estimate at least four cats have probably been eaten by their wild cousins from the mountains, but they say they understand the cats are just trying to survive tough conditions.

We are not against them being here because we are in their territory; we are visitors in their territory, but when they start messing with folks and their pets it may be time to start relocating them,” said Tullai. 

That’s just what Game and Fish did. The mom and baby were released in a wildlife area near Belen.

 

Bobcats

Other cats:

Ocelot

Pallas' Cat

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Could lizards be the new pet of choice?

In the UK pet sellers have recently reported that the number of reptiles and related products have surged, up 250% in the last year. The main driver in the reptile-pet decision seems to be low-maintenance aspect of these pets. They are smaller and they won't be very noisy and usually don't soil your carpet and eat your sofa but it is possible. It is a little more difficult for them to get pregnant while you're not watching too. Most popular in the UK are the gecko and the bearded dragon. Also popular in the US are iguanas, anoles and of course many snakes. Turtle sales seem to be picking up too. In the UK there are 9 million reptile pets compared with about 7 million dogs. It is often said that fish are the favorite pet of Chinese people, maybe Westerners are slowly headed in that direction. Koi fish ponds are increasingly popular as well.

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Monkeys swipe camera to take pictures of themselves

A professional photographer was out in the forest of Indonesia taking pictures when he came across a group of rare  black-crested macaques. It didn't take long for them to assess the situation. They swiped his camera and took hundreds of pictures of themselves! Most of the photos were out of focus but they somehow knew to smile! and some came out great. Put a thousand monkeys in a room with cameras and they might come up with enough material for a National Geographic magazine.

Hanuman monkeys in India are known to get into whatever they like but I don't know if they have figured out how to shoot photos of themselves and look at the preview window.

more recent monkey pages:

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A Few Baby Animal Pics in Time for Spring

Sea Photos From Bite Back

Underwater photos from the site http://www.bite-back.com/ raising funds for marine conservation.

Humans take a toll on sea life. 
The whale population initially decreased because of hunting. The blue whale, which once numbered 200,000, was estimated to be 10,000 in 2001. Marine mammals also become accidentally entangled in fishing nets and collide with boats. Dolphins died at a considerable rate due to tuna fishing methods until U.S.legislation prohibited the method and the number caught in nets was reduced dramatically. Manatees,who move slowly and sometimes sleep near the surface of the water, are particularly vulnerable to being fatally hit by motor boats.

Some affected species


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Serpents in the world's legends and mythology

Serpents and snakes play a role in many of the world's myths and legends. Sometimes these mythic beasts appear as ordinary snakes. At other times, they take on magical or monstrous forms. Serpents have long been linked with good as well as evil, representing both life and death, creation and destruction.

Myths

Many mythical creatures, such as dragons, combine snake-like qualities with features of humans or animals. In Greek mythology, Echidna was a half-woman, half-serpent monster whose offspring included several dragons. Cecrops had a man's head and chest on a snake's body and was a hero to the Athenians. In Toltec and Aztec mythology, Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, held an important place. In medieval Europe, people told tales of the basilisk a serpent with a dragon's body that could kill merely by looking at or breathing on its victims. Melusina another figure in European folklore, was part woman, part fish and snake, and had to spend one day each week in water.

Sea Serpents

Mysterious serpents occur not only in ancient myths but also in modern legends. For centuries, people have reported seeing huge snakes or snakelike monsters at sea or in lakes. Although many marine scientists admit that creatures yet unknown may inhabit the depths, no one has produced reliable evidence of an entirely new kind of sea serpent. Most likely the mysterious creatures seen swimming on the water's surface are masses of seaweed, floating logs, rows of porpoises leaping into the air, giant squid, or just common sharks or sea lions.

Myths that emphasized the frightening or evil aspects of serpents and snakes often portrayed them as the enemies of deities and humans. The Greek hero Perseus rescued Andromeda who was chained to a rock, by slaying a sea monster that threatened to eat her. In Norse mythology, a monster called the Midgard serpent—also known as Jormungand was wrapped around the earth, biting its tail. Thor battled the serpent, which lived in the sea, where its movements caused storms around the world. Another Norse monster, the Nidhogg, was an evil serpent coiled around one of the roots of Yggdrasill, the World Tree. It was forever trying to destroy the tree by biting or squeezing it.

In the mythology of ancient Egypt, Apophis was a demon who appeared in the form of a serpent. Each night he attacked Ra, the sun god. But Mehen, another huge serpent, coiled himself around Ra's sun boat to protect the god from Apophis—a perfect illustration of how snakes can be symbols of both good and evil.

Mythological snakes that act as forces of good have various roles, such as creating the world, protecting it, or helping humans. Stories of the Fon people of West Africa tell of Da, a serpent whose thirty-five hundred coils support the cosmic ocean in which the earth floats. Another thirty-five hundred of its coils support the sky. Humans occasionally catch a glimpse of many-colored Da in a rainbow, or in light reflected on the surface of water.

The Aboriginal people of northern Australia tell how the Great Rainbow Snake Julunggul shaped the world. The threat he posed was more than a snake bite. When human blood dropped into a waterhole, Julunggul grew angry. He sent a wave of water washing across the earth, and he swallowed people, plants, and animals. Julunggul reared up toward heaven, but an ant spirit bit him and made him vomit up what he had swallowed. This happened again and again until Julunggul departed from the earth, leaving people, plants, and animals in all parts of it.

According to a story of the Diegueno Indians of California, humans obtained many of the secrets of civilization from a huge serpent named Umai-hulhlya-wit. This serpent lived in the ocean until people performed a ceremony and called him onto the land. They built an enclosure for him, but it was too small to hold him. After Umai-hulhlya-wit had squeezed as much of himself as possible into the enclosure, the people set him on fire. Soon the serpent's body exploded, showering the earth with the knowledge, secrets, songs, and other cultural treasures he had contained.

Hindu myths contain many tales of serpents. Kaliya was a five-headed serpent king who poisoned water and land until the god Krishna defeated him in battle. Kaliya then worshipped Krishna, who spared his life. Kadru was a snake goddess who bore one thousand children. Legend says that they still live today as snakes in human form. One of Kadru's children was the world snake Shesha that the gods used to turn a mountain and stir up the ocean, just as people churn milk into butter by using a rope coiled around a stick or paddle. As the gods churned the ocean with the snake, many precious things arose from it, including the moon, a magical tree, and the Amrita or water of life.

Serpents and Snakes in Context

In religion, mythology, and literature, serpents and snakes often stand for fertility or a creative life force—partly because the creatures can be seen as symbols of the male sex organ. They have also been associated with water and earth because many kinds of snakes live in the water or in holes in the ground. The ancient Chinese connected serpents with life-giving rain. Traditional beliefs in Australia, India, North America, and Africa have linked snakes with rainbows, which in turn are often related to rain and fertility.

As snakes grow, many of them shed their skin at various times, revealing a shiny new skin underneath. For this reason snakes have become symbols of rebirth, transformation, immortality (the ability to live forever), and healing. The ancient Greeks considered snakes sacred to Asclepius, the god of medicine. He carried a caduceus, a staff with one or two serpents wrapped around it, which has become the symbol of modern physicians.

For both the Greeks and the Egyptians, the snake represented eternity. Ouroboros the Greek symbol of eternity, consisted of a snake curled into a circle or hoop, biting its own tail. The Ouroboros grew out of the belief that serpents eat themselves and are reborn from themselves in an endless cycle of destruction and creation.

Living on and in the ground, serpents came to be seen in some religions and mythologies as guardians of the underworld, or land of the dead. In this role they could represent hidden wisdom or sacred mysteries, but they also had other, more sinister meanings. The use of serpents as symbols of death, evil, or treachery may be related to the fact that some of them are poisonous and dangerous. Satan and other devils have frequently been portrayed as snakes, as in the biblical story of Eden where a sly serpent tempts Eve and Adam into disobeying God. Some Christian saints are said to have driven away snakes as a sign of miraculous powers given to them by God. According to legend, St. Patrick cleared Ireland of snakes.

The Nagas of Hindu and Buddhist mythology show how serpents can symbolize both good and evil, hopes and fears. Although these snake gods could take any shape, including a fully human one, they often appeared as human heads on serpent bodies. The Nagas lived in underwater or underground kingdoms. They controlled rainfall and interacted with gods and humans in a variety of ways. Some were good, such as Mucalinda, the snake king who shielded Buddha from a storm. Others could be cruel and vengeful.