Classic Care Bears art from the 1980s!
what an owner would do for their pet
This isn’t sonic….I have monkey brain rot
Crying over these lesbian cats
Brown Rat (Rattus norvegicus)
Family: Typical Mouse Family (Muridae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern
Fossil evidence and historical records suggest that the Brown Rat plausibly originates from somewhere in northern China and southern Mongolia, but after centuries of stowing away on ships and exploiting the resources available in human-altered habitats it is now among the most abundant and widely distributed mammals on earth, being found in large numbers almost anywhere where permanent human settlements exist. Relatively large for a member of its family, it owes its success to its extraordinary adaptability; intelligent and opportunistic, members of this species are able to endure a huge range of different climates by constructing elaborate burrows in which they can regulate the temperature, and (owing to their strong, continually growing teeth and unspecialised digestive system) can feed on almost any form of organic matter - while coarse plant matter, carrion, bird’s eggs and small vertebrates are preferred, the diets of different populations vary enormously depending on what resources are available. Brown Rats are also remarkably fast learners, and seem to teach one another - it has been observed that once a single Brown Rat living in an area has learned a specific skill needed to exploit a specific resource (such as learning to dive for fish,) others within its social group will quickly develop the same skill. Brown Rats live in loosely-structured social groups with a linear dominance hierarchy in which body size determines rank (with larger rats ranking higher,) but when resources are scarce these groups will become smaller or break apart entirely. Like most rodents, Brown Rats breed frequently and mature rapidly - after mating (usually during periods of warm weather, and often with numerous different males in a single breeding period,) females produce litters of up to 14 pups and gather in all-female social groups, with all of the mothers in a group sharing a communal burrow and cooperating to feed and protect their young until they become independent at around 4 weeks old. Although they can benefit ecosystems (serving as seed distributers, sustaining populations of rodent-eating predators and providing soil-dwelling organisms with oxygen by breaking up compacted soil when burrowing), invasive populations of Brown Rats have had devastating effects on many species, destroying the nests of birds, competing with indigenous mammals and transferring diseases between species. While humans generally regard members of this species as pests, a domesticated subspecies of Brown Rat (the Domestic Rat, Rattus norvegicus domesticus) is widely kept in captivity, both for use in research (where they are known as Lab Rats) and as pets (where they are called Fancy Rats.)
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Image Source: https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/44576-Rattus-norvegicus
Spring fungi
what a wonderful world
This is so cool oh my god
Deviantly sharp teeth, with chunks of smaller fish lodged between. A hunger in its eyes.
🅱uss in 🅱oots