Hey! My name's Sarah. Nature enthusiast, amatuer wildlife conservationist, marine biologist and zoologist in the making, soon to be fervent diver. My heart lies in the Pacific and I'll be researching sharks this fall.


animal info about me project noah personal/quotes

♥ May 30th, 2012
thailanddiveandsail:

Chromodoris annulata, Boonsung Wreck, Thailand
♥ May 30th, 2012
our-lips-locked:

Yawn by Makgobokgobo on Flickr.
♥ May 30th, 2012
our-lips-locked:

Landscape with elephant by jeremyhughes on Flickr.
♥ May 30th, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Pretty-eyed glass frog (Centrolene callistommum)
The scientific name of this species “callistommum” is derived from the greek kallistos that means “the most beautiful” and omma that means “eye”. This individual is from the Chocó in Esmeraldas province, Ecuador.
(text/photo: Santiago Ron)
♥ May 30th, 2012
♥ May 30th, 2012
♥ May 30th, 2012
certified-0rca:

Faith’s dorsal fin was so tall and majestic. Rest in peace buddy.
♥ May 30th, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna) at Reserva Chimborazo in the Andes of central Ecuador
(photo: Santiago Ron)
♥ May 30th, 2012
zoo-logic:

New research has shown that Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) experience a feeling akin to frustration when they are not given a reward they are expecting to receive - a response previously only observed in mammals. Debates over the ethics of fishing often throw up questions of whether fish are ‘conscious’ and have an awareness of pain, which has fuelled a fair amount of research in the area. Fish have been shown to be capable of responding to classical conditioning and to have long-term memories; however, we are still unsure to what extent their cognitive abilities are linked to conscious moods and emotions. This concept was studied in the salmon using a model commonly used in mammalian research called omission of expected reward (OER). In these experiments, animals are conditioned to associate a certain stimulus with a positive reward, such as food, and are then subjected to the stimulus without receiving the reward to record how they react. In mammals, OER has consistently been shown to cause animals to become stressed and aggressive.Six groups, each consisting of 200 fish, were conditioned to associate a flashing light with feeding over a period of 22 days. By the end of this period, the fish showed attraction to the light due to association with the food reward, as opposed to their initial reaction of avoiding it. Three of the groups were then subjected to OER for 9 days - the fish were fed three times a day, and at two of these mealtimes, the expected food reward was delayed by 30 minutes. The other three groups carried on as normal, acting as controls.When the groups were compared, OER groups showed higher aggression and greater hierarchy, causing some individuals to grow more quickly at the expense of others - interestingly, even during the one meal a day when the reward was provided immediately, aggression levels remained high. Stress levels were measured by detecting the concentration of cortisol (a hormone which is involved in stress response) in the blood, but unlike the variation seen in aggressive behaviour, these were the same across all groups, suggesting that although there were behavioural signs of stress this did not translate to a physiological stress reaction.There are two possible explanations for the variation in aggressive behaviour:- Dominant individuals may be trying to keep their position for prime access to food in expectation of the coming reward- Aggression triggered by the stressful situation may be being displaced towards other individuals to help in coping with the conditions.In either case this leads to stronger hierarchy and more uneven distribution of resources, as was observed in this study. The overall conclusion is that fish respond behaviourally to frustrating conditions just like birds and mammals, suggesting this could be an adaptive response to unpredictable environments that has been conserved throughout vertebrate evolution. While we cannot yet conclude that fish definitely experience conscious emotional states, the results do highlight the importance of regular routine for domestic or farmed fish in order to reduce aggressive interactions between individuals that may be detrimental to the health of the population.Ref: Vinas M. A. et al., 2012. Omission of expected reward agitates Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). Animal Cognition  Online first [link]
♥ May 29th, 2012
♥ May 29th, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Devastating Disease Found in Endangered Gray Bats 
by Wynne Parry
The deadly disease white-nose syndrome has been confirmed in endangered gray bats in Tennessee, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today (May 29).
The disease, caused by the fungus Geomyces destructans, has decimated some bat populations in eastern North America after first being documented in a New York cave in 2006. White-nose syndrome (WNS) was named for the powdery, white fungal growth that develops on infected bats’ snouts.  
“The documented spread of WNS on gray bats is devastating news. This species was well on the road to recovery, and confirmation of the disease is great cause for concern,” Paul McKenzie, Missouri Endangered Species Coordinator for the USFWS, said in a statement. “Because gray bats hibernate together in colonies that number in the hundreds of thousands, WNS could expand exponentially across the range of the species.”…
(read more: Live Science)        (photo: Cory Holliday, USFWS)
♥ May 29th, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Saving Tiny Toads Without a Home
by Cornelia Dean
Feb. 1, 2011 - This is a story about a waterfall, the World Bank and 4,000 homeless toads. Maybe the story will have a happy ending, and the bright-golden spray toads, each so small it could easily sit on a dime, will return to the African gorge where they once lived, in the spray of a waterfall on the Kihansi River in Tanzania.
The river is dammed now, courtesy of the bank. The waterfall is 10 percent of what it was. And the toads are now extinct in the wild.
But 4,000 of them live in the Bronx and Toledo, Ohio, where scientists at the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Toledo Zoo are keeping them alive in hopes, somehow, of returning them to the wild. This month, the Bronx Zoowill formally open a small exhibit displaying the toads in its Reptile House.
Meanwhile, though, the toads embody the larger conflicts between conservation and economic development and the complexity of trying to preserve and restore endangered species to the wild. Their story also raises questions about how much effort should go to save any one species…
(read more: NY Times)      
(image: Julie Larsen Maher/Wildlife Conservation Society’s Bronx Zoo)
♥ May 29th, 2012
reptilefacts:

Northland Green Gecko (Naultinus grayii) is a gecko found only in the Northland region of New Zealand, north of Whangaroa. Its body length is up to 9.5cm, and its total length including tail, is up to 20cm .

The Northland green gecko is diurnal, often found sun-basking. It has an arboreal lifestyle, especially favouring stands of manuka, kanuka, and mingimingi.
In 2001 a German tourist was fined $12,000 for attempting to smuggle this species out of the country in his underwear.
Photo (C) Crystal Palace Reptiles
♥ May 28th, 2012
tropicsofjungala:

The Indri is native to the eastern forests of Madagascar and is the largest species of Lemur on the whole island. The local natives believe the Indri to be an ancestor of man and as such the species is protected to a certain degree with locals banning hunting and human consumption. Unfortunately even with this level of protection the population of the Indri is still in decline due to loss of habitat from human expansion and there is currently though to be anywhere between 1000 and 10,000 individual Indri alive in Madagascar today.
The Indri gets its name from the local word indri which literally translates to ‘there is is’. When trying to point out the Indri to visitors and explorers the locals would shout ‘indri, indri!’ (there it is, there it is!) and since then that is how the Indri has been known.
The Indri are covered in soft black and white fur which varies depending on localization with the Indri further south having more white fur and the norther Indri being predominantly black. The Indri have bright green/yellow eyes and black skin but what separates the Indri from other lemurs is that they have almost no tail at all, this is one of the traits the locals associate with the Indri being an ancestor of humans.
When looking for Indri you need to keep looking up as the Indri are arboreal which means that they spend almost all of their lives up in the tress. Its likely that you will hear the Indri’s distinct call before you see it which resembles a human wailing. As the Indri are arboreal they have adapted to this lifestyle and have long slim hind legs which can propel the Indri up to 10 meters vertically which is quite a jump!
♥ May 28th, 2012
kqedscience:

Small Furry Hyrax Sings in Regional Dialects
By recording hundreds of the animals’ songs and applying clever mathematics, researchers discovered that differences in note arrangement, or syntax, in hyrax songs vary as the distance increases between colonies — a surprising occurrence of dialect. 
(Click here to read more and view a short video of a singing hyrax.)
(via: Wired Science)