Black cats are beautiful
L'ala nera o Il tocco dell'angelo by Roberto Ferri
anyway though stop being rude please we just like animals
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Inktober 2019 - Day 19 - “Sling”
gynandromorphism in spiders
a gynandromorph is an organism that exhibits male and female characteristics. bilateral asymmetry can occur wherein one “side” of the animal is female and the other is male, mosaicism can occur wherein the characteristics are distributed in patches. in spiders, this phenomenon can present itself through presence of both testes and overies and split colouration. cases can also occur where, although parts of the spider are clearly male or female, the divisions can be less definite; certain reproductive organs like the palps and epigyne may be very poorly developed or completely absent. these individuals are referred to as intersexes. gynandry and intersexuality can occur in the same individual.
pictured: lampropelma nigerrimum, pamphobeteus sp. mascara, poecilotheria ornata, thyene imperialis.
A Tiel Tune
did you know that teeth actually evolved from scales hence why they have a coating when the rest of our bones don't and why they have nerves in their pulp
bones started out that way too! once upon a time, tiny vertebrates just wore everything on the outside
A proboscis monkey being released into the wild after being fitted with a satellite collar.
hand over the cursed Sphenodon facts.
sure, but PUT THE GUN DOWN.
the Tuatara is a medium-sized reptile native to New Zealand.
it looks like a lizard but it IS NOT- the Tuatara is actually a very basal reptile related to snakes and lizards but belonging to an entire different branch of the tree of life, of which it is the sole surviving member.
and it may look like a lizard on the outside, but the inside is what really counts! and on the inside, the Tuatara is basically a reskinned amphibian.
they only have a single lung, their heart is the most basic of all reptiles, and their nervous systems shares more in common with our friend the axolotl than with its lizard kin!
so if you happen to see one at the zoo, take a moment to stop and really appreciate the uninterrupted 240 million years of reptilian history you’re lucky enough to be looking at!
skull and spider enthusiast//check out @voooorheestaurus sun moon & rising
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