Anything relating to pets and animals: Interesting and bizarre animal news and pet news. Pet related information, animal related web sites, stories about pets and wild animals. Humor,photos, and videos of animals and pets. Useful and unusual pet products, merchandise and pet supplies.
Saturday, January 31, 2009
Video: Starlings' spectacular show
A flight of 20,000 starlings has been performing a spectacular aerial display at a Wetland Centre in Gloucestershire.
Watch video
(via Cronaca)
Friday, January 30, 2009
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Today's awwww
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Sex pheronome will be used on vampire fish
Monday, January 26, 2009
Frog populations not helped by dinner menus
About one-third of all amphibians are listed as threatened species, with habitat loss the biggest factor.
But hunting is acknowledged as another important driver for some species, along with climate change, pollution and disease - notably the fungal condition chytridiomycosis which has brought rapid extinctions to some amphibians.
"Frogs legs are on the menu at school cafeterias in Europe, market stalls and dinner tables across Asia to high end restaurants throughout the world," said Corey Bradshaw from Adelaide University in Australia.
"Amphibians are already the most threatened animal group yet assessed because of disease, habitat loss and climate change - man's massive appetite for their legs is not helping."
Frogs are liquidised to make a "health drink" in parts of South America.
Frogs of the stream-dwelling Paa genus are among the most popular for hunting in China. But numbers in some areas have fallen 10-fold as a result of over-exploitation.
These frogs could be candidates for sustainable harvesting plans, where hunting is allowed but controlled. Image: Kadoorie Farm & Botanic Garden – KFBG
Rana chensinensis is declining steeply in some areas; a study in Heilongjiang found that the annual catch fell by 99% between 1971 and 1986. The main reason is traditional medicine.
Oil made from the female frog's oviduct is believed to be a tonic to the kidneys and lungs, and to cure respiratory ailments. Image: KFBG
Frogs and toads are also sold as tonics in the markets of Peru.
This stallholder in Cuzco sells "Extracto de Rana", a drink made from the extract of two to three frogs, which is blended with honey, malt and other ingredients.
Other recipes call for 30 frogs in a single drink. Image: Esteban Lavilla
In western Brazil and eastern Peru, frogs of the Phyllomedusa genus are used as a hallucinogen.
Chemicals secreted by the frog's skin and introduced into a human's bloodstream are said to lead initially to vomiting and incontinence, then deep sleep, and finally a period of enhanced sensitivity in sight and hearing. Image: E. Lavilla
Leptodactylus laticeps is exported from South America to the developed world. It can fetch prices of 600 euros in European pet shops.
In some areas where it lives, in Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay, people earn as little as 1,200 euros in a single year, giving them a real incentive to catch and sell it. Image: E. Lavilla
Mantellas are among the most popular frogs as pets. The principal source is Madagascar, from where many amphibians are exported into the pet trade.
This species, the black-eared mantella (Mantella milotympanum), is critically endangered. Habitat loss is also a major threat. Image: Franco Andreone/ARKive
Source: BBC
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Look, a necktie for your dog
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Friday, January 23, 2009
How old is that in dog years?
This puppy was photographed in 1845, which would make it 164 years old.
The photo, "Harriet Farnie and Miss Farnie with a Sleeping Puppy, Brownie" is from the National Galleries of Scotland's photostream, now available on Flickr.
Robert Adamson, David Octavius Hill
1920 (original negative around 1845)
Accession no. PGP HA 390
Medium Carbon print
Size 15.40 x 20.20 cm
Credit Elliot Collection, bequeathed 1950
Ouch!
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Way too cute!
Frankie, the Walk 'N Roll Dog
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Rabbid Rabbits?
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Time to appreciate penguins
January 20 is Penguin Awareness Day.
Why is today Penguin Awareness day? No one knows.
What's so special about this day? No one knows.
So - celebrate in your own way ...
from Flickr, by ekpatterson
from Flickr, by moria
from Flickr, by rarewren
(via Penguins!)
Monday, January 19, 2009
Looking back - origin of the 'Poodle Cut'
Cute or not? Giant Frog Fish
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Friday, January 16, 2009
Anamigo online pet community
It's crazy cold!
Al!
Al Gore!
Where are you, Al?
Where's that "Global Warming"?
This morning, my car's thermostat said that the outside temperature was -12 ! And that's without the windchill.
Photo from Flickr, by ekpatterson
What will happen to the dog bakeries?
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Amazing moths
Simone Preuss has posted a wonderful collection of 10 Amazing Moths with Multiple Personalities at Environmental Graffiti.
These moths employ an interesting tactic when dealing with predators: frighten the hell out of them by putting on a scary face.
I love this one:
Image: aegle~busy shifting
Too cold !
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Pet owners, beware!
Do you agree that this photo I found at No Ordinary Rollercoaster is cute?
I think it's cute, too, but fair warning:
the RSPCA (a UK animal rights group) is threatening to have people prosecuted for dressing up their dog.
Jo Barr, RSPCA spokeswoman, said that viewing animals as a fashion accessory is "quite humiliating and sends out the wrong message about pet care."
On the other hand, the owner of the following pet probably SHOULD be prosecuted:
and this poor little thing isn't even wearing clothes. But probably should be.
Photo from Reuters Pictures
An excellent idea
Creatures who serve
We're all familiar with guide dogs for the blind but what about monkeys for quadriplegia and agoraphobia, guide miniature horses, a goat for muscular dystrophy, parrots for psychosis and any number of animals for anxiety, including cats, ferrets, pigs, at least one iguana and a duck?
The Americans With Disabilities Act (A.D.A.) requires that service animals be allowed wherever their owners want to go. But now the United States government is considering a proposal that would force people to give up their nontraditional service animals because a growing number of people think the whole thing has gotten out of control.
Rebecca Skloot, a freelance writer, has done extensive research on this topic. See her post at Culture Dish, and read the article she wrote for New York Times Magazine.
A recent example of this issue is the story of Estelle Stamm, of New York, who claims her 120-pound dog is protection from childhood memories of sex abuse. Stamm won $10,000 from the city after two cops gave her a ticket for bringing the pony-sized dog into a subway station.
Now she's going for $10 million in a federal suit that argues Wargas, her service dog, is protected under the Americans With Disabilities Act.
Transit lawyers have recently taken the position that Stamm - who has been diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder and has partial hearing loss - is not really disabled.
Stamm said her stress disorder causes extreme fear of danger, severe depression and confusion. The dog keeps her "in the present," warns her of sirens and horns, and provides a large, furry barrier in crowded places, she said.
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Contest closes January 17.