Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
Fruit Flies Are Cannibals
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| Aka/Creative Commons |
Interesting discovery about the common fruit fly, one of the most widely studied animals in the world, and one of its cousins. It seems there's always something new to see, even right under our noses.
Young Flies Cannibalize The Plump - Science News:
"In a feeding test, more than a third of the younger larvae survived by eating nothing but the older ones.
“I have never read or heard about this, and I was absolutely stunned that nobody has ever noticed this before,” said Thomas Flatt of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna."
Thanks to Erin for the news tip.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Giant Sturgeon Caught
Monster white sturgeon weighing 1,100 pounds caught in Canada:
"A monster white sturgeon weighing an estimated 1,100 pounds and measuring 12 feet, 4 inches was caught and released on the Fraser River.
This sturgeon is believed to be the biggest freshwater fish ever caught on rod and reel in North America...and possibly the oldest."
Related Post: Strange Creature from the Sea
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Video of Killer Whale Roughing Up Trainer
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| Parties not involved in the incident |
Video shows SeaWorld trainer's underwater struggle with orca | Reuters:
"A newly released video shows a killer whale clamping down on a SeaWorld trainer's foot in 2006 and dragging him underwater, as he tries in vain to get back to the surface for air before the mammal finally sets him loose."
Thanks to Croconut for the news tip.
Related Post: Bimbo the Pilot Whale
Friday, July 27, 2012
Animal Attack Movies: Eyes Without a Face
Eyes Without a Face (Georges Franju, 1960)
A horror movie about face transplants. It sounds pretty cheesy, but in fact it’s an understated, underplayed, beautifully photographed film. The genius is in the details: cars waiting at a train crossing, the sky gray, the pavement wet. The sound, unexplained for the moment, of dogs wailing when a man opens his garage door. The death of one of the malefactors, stabbed with a scalpel in the neck, between the strands of her pearl choker, which has been mentioned before because it hides her surgical scar. "Why?" she says as she sits down in the corner to die.
The dialog is full of authentic medical touches that lend credibility. In fact the film never seems incredible for a moment. What makes this truly impressive is that it precedes the first genuine face transplants by 45 years. Real-life recipients include people mauled by a bear, a chimpanzee, and, in the very first successful transplant, a dog—-which makes the movie’s combination of dog attack with face transplant weirdly topical.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Electric Catfish, Part 2: Edison
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| James's Bengal cat, Aslan |
by guest writer James Smith
My second electric catfish, Edison, was doubtless purchased as part of
an act of subconscious hostility towards one of my other pets. At least, that’s
how it seemed later.
I had cut back on my fish-keeping—partly to have more room to devote to
my major interest, reptiles and amphibians—although I did maintain a 30-gallon
marine tank (the store where I worked, and still work, had just begun carrying
saltwater fish and I wanted to be competent.) Marine fish are fascinating,
beautiful and can, with proper selection and care, be hardy animals—if
expensive. The hobby has come a long, long way from the old days. However, my
marine endeavors were curtailed thanks to a very bored and highly predatory
animal that shared my house—a domestic cat, specifically a Bengal named Aslan.
Bengals are gorgeous animals, deriving from a cross between a regular
domestic cat and an Asian wildcat called the leopard cat (no relation to the
leopard, apart from both being cats—leopard cats are around the size of a big
domestic.) The more the wildcat blood is diluted, the smaller and more
manageable the cat, as a rule: Aslan weighs about thirteen pounds, no bigger
than a normal cat and smaller than my overweight female Maine Coon cross.
Bengals do have a down side: they are very energetic and destructive when mood
suits them; they have a distinct and very unpleasant yowl, best described as
the sound a peacock might make while trying to impersonate an echolocating
whale; and they have an incredible prey drive.
Aslan would spend hours leering in through the tank at my saltwater
fish, and one day I arrived home to the inevitable: the cat, in my absence, had
jumped up on the tank, and pawed open the hood, probably out of simple
curiosity—he does the same thing with cabinet doors that don’t have a real
latch. The fish, conditioned to rise when they sensed a tap up there signaling
food, had come to the surface—where they were easy prey for the Bengal.
I swore off fish entirely for a while after that, but eventually I
broke down and set up a 20-gallon long-style tank, and while musing about what
to put in it, ran across a young electric catfish in a specialty aquarium store,
again about six inches long. Given the sedentary habits and slow growth of the
fish, I decided he would be fine in the tank I had for some time to come, and
purchased him. As I say, I’m sure a psychologist would have a field day with
the whys and wherefores here—they’d probably argue I had to know what was
coming. All I can say is, I never consciously thought about the inevitable
meeting until it happened.
This catfish, christened Edison, was a bit more outgoing than Galvani,
perhaps due to being the only fish in his tank, and was out prowling about at
all hours (I did not keep a light on in the tank, given the nocturnal behavior
of its occupant.) I did give him live feeder fish from time to time, and he did
appear to use his current to kill or stun them—the problem in ascertaining this
was that as any aquarist knows, dumping a fish straight into a different tank
can kill it from shock. So whether it was “death from shock” or “death from shocking”
was open to question. When I gave him a baby crayfish about the size of a bee,
however, Edison unmistakably made use of his current to subdue the crustacean.
Edison had initially simply tried to grab the crayfish in his jaws, but
after receiving a pinch to the nose for his efforts, he retreated just beyond
claw-range and seemed to almost be taking stock of the situation. The crayfish
spun and pivoted wildly for several seconds while Edison hung back, and I could
not help feeling a little sorry for it: it was clearly trying to keep its claws
facing danger at all times, and in its efforts to deflect any fish that might
be creeping up from behind, actually wound up doing the precise opposite every
so often.
As with Galvani’s defensive strike, there was nothing to indicate that
Edison had just released his weapon—no equivalent to a rattler’s S-coil or the
dramatic handstand display of a skunk—except for the crayfish’s reaction: it
flipped on its back, convulsed once, and lay still. Edison swam over, and,
apparently satisfied of its death after cautious probing with his whiskers, set
about ripping the crayfish into manageable chunks, shaking and worrying at it.
It was like watching a bottom-dwelling shark—a nurse shark, say—in miniature,
at work on a lobster.
In the course of tank maintenance, Edison managed to zap me a couple of
times, something Galvani had never done—of course, Galvani had more room to
maneuver out of the way in the 75. I’m uncertain just how high he had the juice
turned up, because while it was startling and certainly unpleasant—rather like
a very bad doorknob shock from discharging static electricity—it was less
painful than assorted stings and bites I’ve suffered at various times over my
checkered career. Granted, he was a small fish. But I have an idea things could
have been much worse had he felt truly threatened, because one day, the epic
confrontation of Cat vs. Catfish finally occurred.
Aslan, who had been on model behavior for over a month, finally
succumbed to his baser urges and decided to send Edison the same way as he had
the saltwater fish. I was sitting in my easy chair, multi-tasking—watching a
movie, reading and having a snack—when I heard the telltale thump of the cat
landing atop the tank and the sound of him pawing at the lid, then the splash
of his paw in the water. I was getting up to shoo the cat off the tank when
Edison saved me the trouble. Aslan let out an unholy screech and shot into the
air with all four feet. He came down bristling, arching and spitting like a
witch’s Halloween cat, snarling and shaking his head as he bounded out of the
room. From that time on, Aslan studiously avoided Edison’s tank, to the point
of not even resting on top of it as he frequently did—and still does—with some
of my reptile cages.
Edison died unexpectedly about two years ago—I was home one night when
I heard the splash of a jumping fish, and turned to see him flapping and
gasping on the floor. Scooping him up with a piece of cardboard and dumping him
back into the tank, I watched as he settled to the bottom. I had seen fish
survive jumping from tanks before and assumed he would recover. Unfortunately,
he must have fallen in just the right way to damage something internally, and
within a day or two, he was dead. Since the electric charge of a dead fish can
still fire by reflex until decay causes the organ to break down, I netted him
out somewhat gingerly. After placing him
in a small wooden box, I took him down to the garden—where most of the family’s
pets have ended up after shuffling off this mortal coil—and interred him next
to the horseradish. Somehow such a remarkable fish deserved more than “burial
at sea” or simply being tossed over the neighbors’ bank for the crows or
resident fox to clean up.
Edison’s tank is now inhabited by a Ruthven’s kingsnake, and I
currently have no fish. But it’s only a matter of time and circumstance before
I set up another tank—and I have more than half an idea that if I only find
space and time for one aquarium, with one fish in it, that fish will be an
electric catfish.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Electric Catfish, Part 1: Galvani
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| Stan Shebs/Creative Commons |
by guest writer James Smith
My taste in pets has been characterized by various friends and family
members as being “exotic,” “eclectic” and “just plain weird,” and I must admit
that there may be something to their claims. Perhaps no animal better
exemplifies the point than one of my favorite fish, an unprepossessing species
from western and central Africa. Sluggish and dull-colored, perhaps best
imagined as a finned sausage with two tiny, though functional, eyes and six
whiskers at one end, it does not strike one at first glance as an exciting or
dynamic aquarium inhabitant. In fact, one might be forgiven for wondering if it
is even alive when glimpsed by day, resting on the bottom beneath a cave or
driftwood.
The fish in question is the electric catfish—technically, there are two
genera of electric cats, one made up of large species reaching nearly three
feet in length and the other one of dwarf species under a foot long, totaling
some twenty-odd varieties. Only a couple really appear in the aquarium trade
with any regularity. As the name implies, these fish can generate a powerful
electric charge by means of an organ made up of modified muscle cells, spanning
the length of the body. A fairish number of fish possess some form of
electrical organ, but in most of these fish, the organ is “weakly
electrical”—that is, it is only useful for orientation, communicating with
others of the same species, and detection of prey: given the small eyes,
nocturnal habits and murky habitat of most electric fish, it is as vital to
their existence as are their gills or fins. However, the electric cats—like a
handful of other species, most notably the electric eel—is a “strongly
electrical” species: that is, it produces a fairly powerful current—a
modest-sized 20-incher can unleash up to 350 volts, though thankfully at a
relatively low amperage—which can be used to stun or kill prey, or conversely,
in the fish’s own defense against an attacker.
Electric catfish in the wild have been recorded at lengths approaching
four feet and a whopping 44 pounds, although in aquaria this size is rarely
attained and 20 inches is more likely the upper limit. Growth is not very rapid,
or at least, does not seem to occur at anything like the headlong rate of, say,
some of the larger cichlids. This suggests that these animals enjoy a long
lifespan, even by the standards of large fish—and plenty of the bigger aquarium
fish will comfortably outlive a large dog under ideal conditions.
My first electric cat, Galvani, was the mild-mannered but tough guy in
a tank full of decidedly antisocial finned hoodlums. At the time I was running
a 75-gallon tank where I would toss any fish that became too obnoxious and
nasty for my 38 and 55-gallon jobs. I did notice that every so often, perfectly
healthy and aggressive fish would go, literally overnight, into a sudden
decline spanning the course of a few days, swimming erratically, being unable
to stabilize in the water, and eventually dying, but I could not find anything
to suggest disease or parasites. It was not until I observed Galvani’s
encounter with a clown knifefish named Rajah—a large, predatory Asian species,
which like the electric cat, can attain lengths of over three feet in nature,
but averages about half that in aquaria—that I began to realize what had been
happening.
Galvani was only about six inches long, while Rajah was easily twice
that. While not big enough to swallow such a large meal, Rajah would attack and
beat up fish far too big to eat, and he ruled the tank. Even my nastiest
cichlids—red devils—feared him. So far, Rajah had left the catfish alone, but
this particular evening, he spotted Galvani leaving his cave to munch up a
juicy nightcrawler I had dropped on the bottom, and took action, arrowing
towards the catfish with open jaws. There was, of course, no blinding flash, no
crackling sound, but Galvani clearly unleashed his charge as Rajah was closing
with millimeters to spare. The big knifefish stiffened and nosedived into a
cluster of fake plants, gills pumping furiously. Galvani turned and wriggled
back into his cave, dragging the earthworm, which he had not dropped during the
whole episode. After some time, Rajah hauled himself groggily up into the water
column, and more or less returned to normal by morning. He did, however, give
Galvani a wide berth from then on.
As with venomous snakes, an electric fish has some discretion over the
amount of voltage it unleashes, and would probably as soon not have to waste
energy on something it cannot eat, so a defensive shock is designed to
discourage, not necessarily kill, an attacker. Because Galvani ate pellets and
the occasional earthworm or piece of frozen fish, I never saw him use his
extraordinary weapon for killing prey. But I suspect that the fish who
mysteriously died—all of them cichlids of one sort or another, and all young
specimens around four or five inches—had received a defensive shock from
Galvani and were simply not sturdy enough to withstand it, dying of stress or
perhaps even some internal injury.
When I dismantled the tank, Galvani was still going strong and at last
report, is still alive—when I last saw him he was perhaps fifteen inches long. If
he has a lifespan comparable to some other big, slow-growing fish, he will be
around for a long, long time to come.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Opossums Immune to Poisons
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| Piccolo Namek/Creative Commons |
What are Opossums? ‹ Bittel Me This:
"We’re talking timber rattlers, cottonmouths, Russell’s vipers and common Asiatic cobras. We know this because scientists rounded up a bunch of nasties and forced them to bite a bunch of unfortunate opossums, the latter of which responded like it was a mild bee sting. "
Update: In another interesting venom-related story, scientists have found scorpion venom kills MRSA, the notorious drug-resistant strain of Staph, as well as other resistant bacteria. Findings like this are one reason for preserving species: nature has already solved a lot of the chemistry problems we'll soon be facing.
Thanks to Erin for the tip.
Monday, July 23, 2012
Lioness vs. Farmer
Looks like a case of an animal protecting her cub:
Zimbabwe Lion Attacks Local Farmer, Joel Ngwenya:
""The lioness looked straight into my eyes, staring and roaring," Ngwenya told the paper from a hospital.
It pinned him down with its claws and continued staring at him "face to face," he said. The lioness briefly moved away toward a lion cub then turned back on him."
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Hyenas Kill Two, Injure Six
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| Tram2/Creative Commons |
Two children killed in hyena attack:
"A pack of hyenas has attacked a family in Kenya, killing two children and injuring six others.
A 10-year-old boy mauled in the attack last week has been airlifted to a hospital in Nairobi for specialised treatment"
Kenya is home to three different species of hyena. The brown hyena has been implicated in only one attack on a human that I know of. The striped hyena is an occasional predator of human children. This case, however, looks like the work of the far more dangerous spotted hyena, a significant predator of humans. There have been other, similar cases of spotted hyenas attacking entire families and even refugee encampments to take several victims at once. Sometimes this species stages a prolonged attack, even in the face of armed opposition. The injured boy sustained serious facial damage. That, too, is a trademark of the spotted hyena, which sometimes uses its powerful jaws to remove face, limbs, or genitals and eat them, not necessarily as part of further predation.
Related Posts:
Cannibal Attack in Perspective (including choice quotes about facial injuries caused by spotted hyenas)
Hyenas Maul 17
What Eats People, Part 15: Spotted Hyenas
Spotted Hyena Attack
Thanks to Dee for the tip.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Coyote vs. Cougar
Interesting footage from a wilderness area in Southern California. Thanks to D'Arcy for the tip.
Related Post: Fatal Coyote Attack
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Chimpanzees Escape at the Hanover Zoo
A rather breathless article from the Telegraph:
Chimpanzees pictured rampaging through Hanover Zoo - Telegraph:
"Five chimpanzees caused havoc at Hanover Zoo when they escaped their enclosure, injured a five-year-old girl and caused the zoo to be evacuated.
The animals climbed out of their enclosures by using branches as makeshift ladders and escaping over the fences.
One chimp knocked a five-year-old girl to the ground, causing a cut to her head and bruises to her face."
*
These recent chimp escapes remind me of another that occurred in Kansas City a couple of years ago, receiving surprisingly little coverage. Most chimp escapes don't end in tragedy, and it's only since the attack on Charla Nash a few years back that the average citizen has begun to take them seriously.
Thanks to Croconut for the news tip.
Chimpanzees pictured rampaging through Hanover Zoo - Telegraph:
"Five chimpanzees caused havoc at Hanover Zoo when they escaped their enclosure, injured a five-year-old girl and caused the zoo to be evacuated.
The animals climbed out of their enclosures by using branches as makeshift ladders and escaping over the fences.
One chimp knocked a five-year-old girl to the ground, causing a cut to her head and bruises to her face."
*
These recent chimp escapes remind me of another that occurred in Kansas City a couple of years ago, receiving surprisingly little coverage. Most chimp escapes don't end in tragedy, and it's only since the attack on Charla Nash a few years back that the average citizen has begun to take them seriously.
Thanks to Croconut for the news tip.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Aquatic Attacks (Beaver and Otter)
Possibly your only chance this year to see a dead beaver in an ice chest. This one was killed with a BB gun after injuring two children.
2 girls injured after beaver attack in Spotsylvania County lake - DC Breaking Local News Weather Sports FOX 5 WTTG: "A beaver attack on Sunday morning at Lake Anna in Spotsylvania County has left two sisters seriously injured.
The girls were rushed to Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center after the 65-pound animal bit both of them, leaving each with serious wounds to their leg.
Meanwhile, in Minnesota:
A woman suffered some 25 bites when her swim was interrupted by an otter. This would be a river otter, not to be confused with the giant otters discussed here recently.
Minn. Swimmer Recovering After Attacked by Otter Near Duluth | KSTP TV - Minneapolis and St. Paul: "The attack lasted for about seven minutes. When Prudhomme's father heard her screams, he jumped into his boat to help.
The Department of Natural Resources says there have only been 40 otter attacks in the U.S. in the last 20 years. Animal experts believe the otter in Prudhomme's case may have been a mother attempting to protect her young."
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Invasive Giant African Land Snails
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| Tomas Vokaty/Creative Commons |
Of all the exotic animals that have invaded Florida—and there have been a lot, from Gambian pouched rats to wild boars to Burmese pythons—my favorite is a nematode called the rat lungworm. It’s thin as a sewing thread and less than an inch long. Other invaders are crassly direct in their trouble-making. Recently, for example, a study published in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) blamed the invading giant snakes for the disappearance of mammals in the Everglades. It cited a 99% drop in sightings of opossums and raccoons, a 94% drop in sightings of whitetailed deer, and so on. The pythons eat the natives, says the report; it’s as simple as that.
But the rat lungworm only hurts other animals by getting eaten. That happens because, like thousands of other nematode worms, it’s a parasite. You’ve probably heard of its cousin Trichinella spiralis, the reason we overcook pork. It’s famous, of course, for taking up residence in the human intestine. The rat lungworm is different. It takes up residence in the brain, causing headache, stiff neck, vomiting, visual disturbances, and malfunctions in the sense of touch. But let’s not rush to that. First, a little background, a little biography.
The obvious sign of rat lungworm is the dramatic appearance of giant land snails. A giant land snail looks like other snails, moist wrinkles of yellow hide pulsing as its two antennae probe ahead of the muscular foot that constitutes its body. These creatures are native to Africa, but lately they have been crawling the lanais of North America. Like the giant snakes, they probably arrived as pets, though imported produce is another possibility. The giant land snail can grow a shell a foot long. Even one half that size is a rippling, muscular handful. They are not picky eaters; leafy greens will do, but so will 500 other kinds of plants. The snail laps at any handy food. Since its tongue fairly bristles with tooth-like spikes, the result is to gouge holes in the food, whether it’s a fruit, a leaf, or even a stucco wall. And they can reproduce like mad, each snail laying twelve hundred eggs per year. (They’re hermaphrodites, by the way, so any two can fertilize each other.) Farmers in Florida are feeling apprehensive. So are home owners; that plaster-licking habit can render buildings unsafe for use.
But what does this have to do with worms? It is, as they say in Hollywood, complicated.
The rat lungworm begins life as an egg in the arteries that supply the lungs of a rat. From there, it follows the blood stream into the lungs proper, then crawls to the throat. The rat swallows it. Now it travels through the gut, finally making its exit in the rat’s droppings.
Getting swallowed is, in fact, a big part of the lungworm’s life plan. Ideally, some animal with low standards—a giant land snail, say—will come along and swallow it with the rat’s droppings. It’s not built for crawling, but in a pinch, it can swim in search of a snail by thrashing about like a fire hose.
Inside a snail, the lungworm matures further. It bides its time, waiting for its snail host to meet a gruesome fate. (Remember, its life depends on getting swallowed over and over.) Ah, but what would eat a softball-sized gobbet of snail?
A rat would. They’re not picky. The worm survives the eating. Once inside the rat, it travels to the brain. There, it finally reaches adulthood. The rat doesn’t mind. Parasite and host have spent countless generations adapting to each other. They get along. The worm swims the bloodstream to the lungs, and there, having engaged in romance, lays its eggs. We’ve come full circle.
What keeps the well-informed Floridian from treating the giant land snail as an economy-sized escargot is the lungworm. A single giant land snail may contain thousands of lungworm larvae. If we eat the snails, the worms, unschooled in our pretensions, treat us as rats. They proceed to the brain. However, they find us inhospitable hosts, and they die. It’s at this point that we fall sick, as our bodies react to the disintegration of the parasite. The result is a kind of meningitis. Grave as the symptoms sound, they generally pass in a week or two. Still, nobody seems to enjoy them.
Of course we could choose not to eat giant land snails. The problem is that they may have left their lungworms lying around in produce. We may also eat something—a crab or a shrimp, say—which has itself eaten an infected snail.
The pythons look more dangerous, of course. I often hear people fretting that they’ll slither into houses and eat babies. But for direct impact on human lives, look to the snails and their cargo of tiny parasites.
Related Post: Gordiid Worms
Monday, July 16, 2012
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Great White Shark Bites Man in Half
A spectacular fatality in Perth. Predictably, a politician is speculating that there are too many great whites. In fact, the great white remains endangered and can't possibly bounce back within a short span of years because it's a slow-growing species. The only population that's growing here is the human one.
Beaches Closed After Surfer Is Bitten In Two - Yahoo! News UK:
"He was surfing near Wedge Island, north of Perth, with a friend when he was mauled by the huge shark, said to be up to 16ft (five metres) long.
A man jet-skiing near him said it was a gruesome scene, with "half a torso" being all that remained of Mr Linden."
On a different note, here's interesting footage of a whale shark sucking the contents out of a fishing net. The whale shark, largest of all fish, is a harmless filter-feeder.
More about shark attacks--and shark conservation--in my National Geographic eBook short:
Labels:
Fish,
Man-eaters,
Shark
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Zoo Tigers Kill Intruder
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| Wayne T. Allison |
Tigers kill man who scaled zoo enclosure - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation):
"A man was killed by tigers at a Danish zoo on Wednesday after he scaled a fence and crossed a moat to get into their enclosure.
The man, in his early 20s, was savaged by three tigers after he broke into Copenhagen Zoo in the early hours of the morning. He was dead when staff arrived for work."
Friday, July 13, 2012
Chimpanzees Escape in Las Vegas
1 chimp dead, 1 tranquilized after Vegas escape - Wire Weird News - The Sacramento Bee:
"Two chimpanzees escaped a Las Vegas backyard and rampaged through a neighborhood Thursday, pounding on cars and jumping into at least one vehicle before police killed one primate and tranquilized the other, authorities said."
Raccoons Attack Woman
According to this report from the Seattle area, the victim suffered more than 100 wounds. In a previous attack I've read of, the group of coons turned out to be a mother and her nearly grown offspring.
Pack of raccoons attacks woman in Lakewood - Seattle News - MyNorthwest.com: ""She took off running for her residence," Lawler said. "Five or six raccoons chased her, eventually knocked her down and attacked her."
Lawler said a neighbor heard the commotion and witnessed at least three large raccoons maul the woman for 15 to 20 seconds. "
Thanks to Bob Haynie for the news tip.
Pack of raccoons attacks woman in Lakewood - Seattle News - MyNorthwest.com: ""She took off running for her residence," Lawler said. "Five or six raccoons chased her, eventually knocked her down and attacked her."
Lawler said a neighbor heard the commotion and witnessed at least three large raccoons maul the woman for 15 to 20 seconds. "
Thanks to Bob Haynie for the news tip.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Teen Loses Part of Arm in Alligator Attack
Moore Haven teen loses part of arm in alligator attack | firstcoastnews.com: "As Fred was being rushed to Lee Memorial Hospital, a frantic search began for the gator - and the arm inside the creature's belly."
Thanks to Dee for the news tip.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Monster Crocodiles, Part 3: Crocodile vs. Dinosaur
by guest writer and artist Hodari Nundu
Most
books tell us that dinosaurs dominated the world with an iron claw during 160
million years or so. They were so big, so fierce and so powerful that all other
animals had to flee from them (becoming flyers, like pterosaurs, or aquatic
like crocodiles) or become so small and insignificant that dinosaurs wouldn´t
even pay any attention to them (like mammals).
Kaprosuchus, the Boar Croc, is only one of many newly discovered
creatures that seem to challenge this idea. Here we have a dinosaur-eating,
sabertoothed crocodile that coexisted and probably competed with some of the
largest meat-eating dinosaurs known.
And
that's not all; the remains of a similarly-sized land crocodile, Pissarrachampsa,
were found in Brazil in 2011, suggesting that this lineage of
dinosaur-eaters may have been more widely distributed than previously thought.
Some
scientists have even noted that where land crocodiles were abundant,
meat-eating dinosaurs were scarce.
Not all
land crocodiles were big game hunters, however. In 2010, the fossils of a
strange little land crocodile were found. It had a short snout, long slender
legs, and teeth incredibly similar to those of a mammal.
In fact,
it looked a lot like the reptilian version of a small feline, hence the name it
was given: Pakasuchus, the cat-croc.
At 50 cm
long, it was certainly the size of a house cat and probably behaved in a
similar way. It may have been nocturnal, hunting for small mammals, reptiles
and baby dinosaurs and killing them with its canine-like front teeth. In order
to become more agile, it had lost most of its body armor, but it retained it on
its tail. It is possible that its heavy armored tail was its main defense
against predators.
Even
stranger was Simosuchus, whose remains were found in Madagascar. This
creature measured less than one meter long, had a short tail and a blunt snout,
and its maple-leaf-shaped teeth suggest it was herbivorous.
Its
robust, erect limbs suggest it didn´t swim, and it may instead have been a
burrower. Simosuchus is therefore the most extreme example of
crocodylomorph diversification; it would never be mistaken for a crocodile in
our times.
Other
Cretaceous crocs were more typical in appearance. Perhaps the most famous of
all is Deinosuchus, which many of us knew first as Phobosuchus in
popular books. Either way, the name means "frightening" or
"terrifying" crocodile, and the name fits it perfectly.
Although
technically an alligator relative, Deinosuchus looked like a scaled up
crocodile, measuring at least 12 meters long.
It lived
in what is today North America, including Mexico, where scutes from its armor
have been found, as well as bite marks in the bones of its dinosaur prey.
Deinosuchus is often depicted as coexisting with Tyrannosaurus
rex; this, however, is inaccurate, as the giant crocodilian disappeared
millions of years before the rise of the "king of dinosaurs". In
fact, for as long as Deinosuchus existed, no carnivorous dinosaur grew
to particularly large size. The monstrous crocodilian had monopolized the top
of the food chain.
Not
satisfied with ruling the swamps and rivers of its time, Deinosuchus, like
modern day saltwater crocodiles, seems to have lived in marine habitats as
well, and there's good evidence that it swam across the Western Interior Sea,
the shallow body of water that divided North America in half.
***
At the
end of the Cretaceous, 65 million years ago, a series of catastrophic events
caused a great number of species to die out. The most famous casualties of this
mass extinction were of course dinosaurs (except for birds and perhaps a few
large species that faded into oblivion over the course of the next millennia).
Many
unique crocodiles, like the aforementioned Simosuchus, disappeared as
well. Some, however, survived, and found themselves in a silent world in which
large meat eating dinosaurs were gone. Without competitors, crocodilians
quickly started to diversify again, ready to take over the vacant niches left
by their distant cousins.
If it
hadn´t been for mammals, which also diversified at the time, it is possible
that crocodiles would've given rise to the dominant lineages of future times.
They were certainly adaptable enough.
Mammals,
however, had some advantages over them. One of them was warm-bloodedness, which
allowed mammals to conquer habitats and regions that crocodiles could not.
Eventually, mammals secured their place as the dinosaur's successors. But even
then, they had to be alert; crocodilians started evolving into monstrous and
deadly forms. One of them, the three meter long Pristichampsus, had
large, blunt toenails, more like hooves than claws, and was able to run at high
speed. Not even early horses were safe from this land crocodile, able to walk
either bipedally or on all fours.
Even more
formidable were the sebecids, a group of short snouted land crocodiles with
blade-like, flesh-slicing teeth like carnivorous dinosaurs. The largest
sebecid, Barinasuchus, was a nine meter long monster that roamed the
forests of what would become South America.
It was
not only the largest land crocodile of all times, but also the largest
post-Cretaceous land predator known. To the hapless mammals that lived in these
Eocene forests, it was as if dinosaurs had never disappeared.
As time
went on, mammals became more and more successful. Many forests disappeared, and
many herbivores became adapted to open plains. Being cold blooded, crocodiles,
even the land-based ones, were limited as to how fast they could run, and for
how long. When the warm-blooded mammals evolved into lightning fast runners,
only other mammals (and the legendary, towering “terror birds”) could keep up
with them. Felines, canines and other carnivorans appeared, and land crocodiles
started to become a thing of the past.
By the
Middle Miocene, the sebecids (the lineage of land crocodiles to which Barinasuchus
belonged), had disappeared. Crocodiles simply couldn´t compete with the
warm-blooded killers that were evolving-- bears, sabertoothed tigers, giant
hyenas. In most of the world, crocodiles became restricted to the habitats we
relate them to nowadays: rivers, lakes, swamps.
The very
last land crocodiles survived as relicts in Australia and nearby islands, where
the most formidable predatory mammals were absent. Early aborigines probably
encountered one of the most formidable when they arrived to Australia 40,000
years ago: Quinkana was the size of
the largest saltwater crocodiles and had dinosaur-like flesh-slicing teeth. It
probably tore a few humans apart before being exterminated itself.
Australia
had also been home to a strange, probably tree-dwelling crocodilian named Trilophosuchus during the Miocene epoch.
This creature measured about 1.5 meters long and held its head high when
walking, like a monitor lizard and unlike most crocodilians today.
The
Miocene also saw some of the most terrifyingly large crocodilians ever to have
evolved.
8 million
years ago, the region known today as the Amazon basin was a huge inland sea,
the Pebas sea.
All sorts
of strange creatures, from cetaceans to gharials to giant turtles lived in this
sea, and all of them were food for the monstrous reptile that sat at the top of
the food chain: Purussaurus, a giant caiman measuring up to 13 meters
long, perhaps more. Unlike the long, slender snout of Sarcosuchus or Machimosaurus,
the skull of Purussaurus was broad and massive, like that of the
modern day broad-snouted caiman. Its teeth were small and blunt, especially
adapted to crush any unfortunate animal it could catch, including turtles the
size of dining room tables, whose fossil skeletons show proof of the caiman's
terrible appetite; many of them lack huge portions of their shell or even entire
limbs due to Purussaurus' attentions.
Also from
the Miocene, the enormous Rhamphosuchus looked a lot like a gharial,
although its closest living relative is actually the false gharial. Its fossilized
remains, found in India, suggest a length of at least 11 meters long, although
some estimates have suggested a much larger size. If, as some believe, Rhamphosuchus
could grow up to 18 meters long, it would be as long as the longest
carnivorous dinosaur, and likely much heavier. Unfortunately, since its remains
are not complete, it is impossible to know if this colossal fish-eater is, as
has been suggested, the largest crocodilian of all time.
Ironically,
it is possible that in the end this title will be claimed by a docile creature,
a monster only in size but not in temperament. Just as crocodiles gave rise to
ferocious dinosaur hunters and sea monsters, they also produced some species
that, although gigantic, would probably pose no threat to humans if they
existed today. These animals are the stomatosuchids and the aegyptosuchids.
Found
mostly in Africa, these Cretaceous crocodiles had flat heads with diminutive
teeth, and large gular sacs. Some scientists believe they were filter-feeders
that spent most, if not all of their time in the water, feeding on very small
fish and other similar prey.
Some of
them, like Stomatosuchus, grew to 12 meters long, being as large as the
fearsome Sarcosuchus. Others, like the recently discovered Aegisuchus,
may have been even larger. With an estimate length of 22 meters, Aegisuchus
may have been the crocodilian equivalent of a whale- proving that the
history of crocodilians was every bit as complex, fantastic and successful as
that of dinosaurs or mammals.
That
crocodiles today are all similar in shape and behavior may suggest to some that
their lineage is finally over, and that eventually, these last remnants of a
once glorious dynasty will fall into darkness.
But let's
not underestimate them. Remember that all crocodylomorphs evolved from a few
small, agile terrestrial hunters that also looked very similar to each other.
Who knows what modern day crocs may give rise to one day, provided they survive
past the age of men.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Monster Crocodiles, Part 2: Primeval
by guest writer and artist Hodari Nundu
The
reason why crocodiles are more dangerous than sharks is that we are much more
likely to meet them, and when we do, the crocodile is more likely to see us as
prey than the shark.
According
to many shark experts, these fish bite people for a variety of reasons but many
attacks seem triggered by curiosity rather than actual predatory urges. Sharks
lack hands and fingers to examine new, unknown objects. They often explore
things by biting them. This is why, even if a great white shark does not
necessarily want to kill a human being, an innocent exploratory bite can spell
doom for its victim.
Crocodiles,
on the other hand, have always seen us as prey. Unlike sharks, they coexisted
with us from the very beginning. When our primate ancestors abandoned the
jungle and became savannah-dwellers, crocodiles of immense size populated
rivers. The fossilized remains of one of these crocodiles were found recently
in Tanzania.
They came
from a monster up to 7.5 meters long- larger than the largest Nile or Saltwater
crocodiles recorded for our times. The beast had a huge, heavy skull adorned
with a pair of crests or "horns" which revealed it to be a different
species from today's Nile crocodile. Scientists named it Crocodylus
anthropophagus, the "man-eating crocodile", as bite marks that
matched its teeth perfectly had been found in the bones of our hominin
ancestors. An even larger species, Crocodylus
thorbjarnarsoni, lived at about the same time in Kenya. This one was 8.2
meters long, or as the press put it, “big enough to star in Lake Placid”.
Because
crocodiles lived in rivers, which were vital to the survival of humans, there
was simply no way of escaping them. Other predators, like big cats, wolves and
hyenas, could be frightened with fire and other weapons. Crocodiles were
different. Like sharks in horror movies, they waited under the surface,
invisible, and attacked by surprise; and once they had you in their clutches, they
were simply too powerful to be fought.
Even the
arrival of civilization couldn´t stop crocodile attacks. In Ancient Egypt, land
predators such as lions and leopards were slowly exterminated, and attacks
became a rarity. Crocodiles, on the other hand, were an ever present threat
along the edges of the Nile. The Egyptians even had a special god, the
crocodile-headed Sobek, to protect them from the voracious reptiles. There's
even a legend from more recent times about an archaeologist in Egypt who found
a statue of Sobek by the river; removing it, however, was a mistake, as
crocodile attacks became incredibly frequent, and eventually, he was forced to
put Sobek back in his place; only then did the attacks stop.
To the
Greeks and other Europeans, the crocodile was a most fascinating beast. Absent
in Europe, it was therefore little understood, and in Medieval bestiaries, it
is often shown with a wolf or lion-like appearance, sometimes with spikes on
its back, and more often than not, weeping over the body of a human victim. For
according to many authors of the time, "if the crocodile findeth a man by
the brim of the water or by the cliff, he slayeth him if he may, and then he
weepeth upon him, and swalloweth him at the last".
This
tendency to shed tears during a meal eventually would make the crocodile a
symbol of hypocrisy, of false remorse. The expression "crocodile
tears" is a legacy of this legend, which has indeed a real life basis.
Crocodiles do shed tears while feeding. But these are not tears of remorse,
false or otherwise. It is simply the crocodile's way of keeping its eyes moist
while out of the water, for it cannot swallow under the surface, and its eyes
easily dry out in the air.
In Roman
times, crocodiles were sometimes seen at the Coliseum. The amphitheater was
flooded and epic naval battles were recreated. Crocodiles were released into
the water to devour any hapless gladiator or slave that fell from the ships.
Other
than this, however, the crocodile remained more or less a fantastic animal in
Europe for a long time. Unable to survive for long in cold climate, the
crocodile was restricted to tropical regions. But wherever it was found, it was
a constant danger along waterways, a dreaded and often revered force of nature.
To the
Aztec and many other Mesoamerican cultures, the Universe itself rested on the
back of a gigantic crocodile-like beast. The souls of the departed had to face
a terrible crocodile god during their journey towards Paradise.
But
although modern day crocodiles are big, scary and deadly enough to inspire
legends, nightmares and B movies, the truth is we only have to deal with a
shadow of what was once a frightening menagerie of monster crocodilians.
We often
think of crocodiles as "living fossils"; many people, including
crocodile experts, will tell you that they haven´t changed much in millions of
years.
This is
only half true. The basic design of all modern crocodiles- the low body, short
legs, long flattened tail and deadly jaws that make them such perfect ambush
predators- has indeed existed for millions of years. It has even been
"used" by non-crocodilian predators, including early whales and gigantic
amphibians from pre-dinosaur times.
But
crocodiles themselves are of rather recent origins, and they are only one of
many branches of crocodylomorphs, as scientists call them. Some of these
branches were truly the stuff of nightmares.
***
Like
their cousins the dinosaurs, crocodylomorphs started out small. The first ones
appeared in the Late Triassic, over 200 million years ago, and they coexisted
with the very first dinosaurs.
They were
small, agile and completely land-based. Rivers were already occupied by other
sorts of predators—giant amphibians resembling large-headed salamanders, and
the fearsome phytosaurs, which looked quite a lot like crocodiles themselves.
Crocodylomorphs would have to wait until these rivals disappeared to fill the
niche of the freshwater predator themselves. Meanwhile, they diversified into
plenty of different and often bizarre breeds.
This
diversification became most extreme during the Jurassic period. To avoid
competition with dinosaurs, many became aquatic. The most extraordinary ones
were the sea crocodiles.
Today,
the saltwater crocodile often lives in coastal waters and may even swim long
distances from island to island. They have been seen fighting- and devouring-
sharks in the sea. But they are still amphibious animals, and must return to
land to rest and to lay their eggs.
The sea
crocodiles of the Jurassic were different. They became so well adapted to the
ocean that if one of them appeared today, we would probably mistake it for some
sort of bizarre mutation- a cross between a crocodile and a fish. Many of them
lost their body armor; their webbed feet turned into actual flippers, and their
tails turned into caudal fins, very reminiscent of a shark's.
They
probably gave birth to live young, like many other sea reptiles of the time.
Free from the need of returning to land, they spent their lives in open waters.
Many, like Metriorhynchus, had long, slender snouts that would resemble
some living crocodilians, like the gharial; they were superbly adapted to
capture fish. Usually, they measured about three meters long-- smallish compared
to our largest crocodiles-- but they were far better swimmers.
Not all
of them were fish eaters, however. In 1987, the remains of an unusual (well, especially
unusual) four or five meter long sea crocodile were found in Argentina.
Instead of a long gharial-like snout, it had a short and deep skull, very reminiscent
of a carnivorous dinosaur's. The scientists nicknamed it Godzilla for this
reason.
A later
study found that this sea crocodile, formally known as Dakosaurus, could
slice its prey into smaller chunks with its large, blade-like serrated teeth.
This is completely different to the teeth of modern crocodiles which are
conical and blunt, meant to pierce and hold but completely unable to slice.
Indeed, Dakosaurus
was a crocodile turned by evolution into the Jurassic equivalent of a great
white shark. It didn´t chase after small fish like its cousins; it went for the
giant ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs of the time, even those larger than itself,
and bit off huge chunks of their flesh, killing them via blood loss. With
monsters like Dakosaurus roaming the seas, it is little wonder that, to
our knowledge, no dinosaurs ever managed to conquer the Jurassic oceans.
As if Dakosaurus
wasn´t scary enough, the Jurassic sea would give rise to even larger
crocodylomorphs. The largest we know of was Machimosaurus, found in
Europe in 1837. Unlike Dakosaurus, it had a crocodile-like body and
blunt, conical crocodile teeth. However, it was big enough to make a meal out
of Dakosaurus- at least 9 meters long, making it not only the largest of
its kind, but also one of the top predators of its days.
Although
its snout was long and slender, there's good evidence that Machimosaurus, being
so large, could feed on anything it wanted and not just fish. Its bite marks
have been found in the fossilized shells of sea turtles and even in the bones
of a giant long-necked dinosaur.
Scientists
believe Machimosaurus swam long distances in the open sea, but probably
hunted near coasts, snatching any unfortunate animal that got too close.
Machimosaurus was only the first in a long line of crocodylomorphs
(from different families) that achieved monstrous sizes.
During
the Cretaceous, both dinosaurs and crocs would reach their greatest diversity.
The largest carnivorous dinosaurs, such as Spinosaurus, Carcharodontosaurus,
Giganotosaurus and of course, the iconic Tyrannosaurus rex were all
from the Cretaceous. The biggest of them all, Spinosaurus, could weigh
up to 9 tons. But the largest Cretaceous crocodiles dwarfed even this monster.
In 1966,
two paleontologists named a new species of Cretaceous crocodile as Sarcosuchus
imperator, the flesh-eating emperor croc. Despite its awesome name, this
beast remained obscure until 1997, when American paleontologist Paul Sereno
found additional remains in Niger.
These new
finds were widely publicized and Sarcosuchus finally became famous under
the nickname of Super Croc. It was its monstrous size that captured the
public's imagination; at 12 meters long, with an almost 2 meter skull and
probably up to 10 tons, it was claimed to be the largest crocodile of all
times.
Sarcosuchus coexisted with large carnivorous dinosaurs such as Suchomimus,
but the general consensus is that it was the dinosaurs, rather than the
crocodile, who were in constant danger of being eaten. After all, dinosaurs had
to drink, and an adult Sarcosuchus was too big to survive solely on
fish.
As if
this wasn´t bad enough for the hapless dinosaurs, they had another crocodilian
enemy on land.
The
remains of this creature were also found by Paul Sereno, and described in 2009.
It was obviously a crocodile, but unlike any other crocodile ever found. It had
a pair of horn-like crests on its head, and some of its teeth jutted out of the
mouth like enormous tusks. The creature received the nickname of Boar Croc, and
was described as "a sabertooth tiger clad on armor". It was not a
water-based ambush hunter. It was a land-dwelling predator able to walk and run
at high speed, and its enormous teeth were probably an adaptation to deal with
large, thick skinned prey; a six meter long dinosaur hunter.
Next:
Crocodile vs. Dinosaur. . . and Beyond
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