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Sunday, 30 June 2024
Cubs in the Snow
Sunday, 23 June 2024
Bats in the Daytime
Consider: the great majority of bats eat insects and, sure there are plenty of insects around at night. But there's hardly a shortage during the day, either. Swallows, robins, and thrushes are all flying vertebrates that eat insects, and you see plenty of those around during the day. While for fruit bats and other herbivorous species, it's quite obviously not going to make a difference. If birds are perfectly happy flying around during the day, why not bats? It's not even as if there are only a small number of bat species that happen to occupy some narrow niche; there are well over a thousand of them.
Sunday, 16 June 2024
Antilopine Antelopes: Blackbuck and Springbok
Blackbuck |
Sunday, 9 June 2024
Oligocene (Pt 9): Rise of the Dogs
Sunkahetanka |
Saturday, 1 June 2024
Wombats Moving Home
Understanding how and when animals disperse from their place of birth can be important for conservation as well as, on a broader scale, how new species and subspecies evolve and adapt. Nor is it necessarily something that only applies to young approaching maturity, since older animals may also choose to move from one place to another and often for similar reasons - competition or a lack of suitable mates. Whether a given animal chooses to move home, and how far they travel to do so, can be influenced by several different factors.