Deer at cemeteries.
Zelda (BOTW) stimboard with shiny things and the outdoors for anon!
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- Mod Squid
Finished sticker design!! I ordered them and theyre set to arrive between .. next week and a day before one of my tabling events😅
tarantula by Linda De Volder on Flickr
Fireflies, Mia Bergeron
Be a friend to snakes
If you’re interested in getting one of these as a sticker, patch, or pin, reblog to let me know!! I can also draw your snake in; message me for details :)
are people online really promoting the idea that each crystal has a “lifespan” metaphysically and should be replaced after that time? that’s not sustainable and holy shit what kind of idiot really believes that a rock can sit nicely for 300 million years and still keep its ~ magic ~ but also believe that you have to replace your stone after 4-5 months because it’s “not magical anymore”
hey!! not having a Great Time because of school so can i get some wholesome facts about nurse sharks? they are my favs and that one time i got to pet one was truly a fantastic experience
sure! Nurse Sharks are incredibly social animals that hang out in large groups during the day. it’s why they’re so docile and allow humans so close- they are biologically predisposed to be Friends.
Tumblr for some reason is not letting me publish asks but anyway…
The fuzzy fur-like stuff that covers a lot of moths is actually modified scales, like the scales on their wings, made of a substance called chitin, rather than keratin as in mammal hair. Chitin also makes up their exoskeleton. Wing scales are used to absorb heat, possibly to assist with flight, and to display colors/patterns as defense/camouflage or to attract a mate. The fuzz on their body is thought to muffle the sonar of predatory bats as well as keep them warmer in the chilly night air. Unlike mammal hair, though, these scales are not continually growing and cannot be replaced if lost or damaged.
Here’s a fun extreme macro photo of a sunset moth’s wing scales and longer modified hair-like scales:
Photo via Johan J.Ingles-Le Nobel
Arright so i saw something really cool in Texas, the kind of thing you read about but don’t expect to actually encounter
I flipped over a rock and found a tarantula sharing its burrow with a tiny narrowmouth toad
This is a symbiotic relationship where the tarantula provides protection and affordable housing, while the toad feeds on ants that could harm the tarantula or its eggs. Other small frogs, lizards etc. are just prey to tarantulas, but they instinctively recognize and welcome narrowmouth toads for their ant-eradication abilities.
Basically, tarantulas keep tiny toads in their home for the same reason humans domesticated cats. This sort of went viral as a piece of trivia a while back, but there’s not a lot of actual photos showing it.
This isn’t the only case of this I saw either. I saw two other burrows with toads in them, including a massive tarantula that had at least 4-5 toads, but they hopped deeper into the burrow before I could take pics.
Anyway here’s some better quality photos I took of both animals during the day. The toad is Gastrophryne olivacea and the tarantula is an Aphonopelma species (probably hentzi but their taxonomy is a clusterfuck)
skull and spider enthusiast//check out @voooorheestaurus sun moon & rising
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