Saturday, 14 April 2012

SNAKE'S VENOM

Snakes Have Two Main Types of Venom: Neither is Nice


Deadly but beautiful are our snakes

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Eastern Diamondback RattlesnakeInland TaipanGaboon ViperKing CobraBlack Mamba
Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake

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Snake Venom is a Complex Substance

As one does, I was lying in bed thinking about snakes this morning. Before you lot start reading something Freudian into that, my own snake (Willy) was in its normal comatose state these days.
No. I meant the world's venomous snakes and the thing that was going round and around my mind was a big Why? Why do some snakes have haematoxic venom and others, neurotoxic? What has caused some species to evolve one way while the others have taken a different evolutionary route? Hey! What do you think about in bed then?
I investigated all possible souces, and couldn’t answer this within - sorry, but it turns out, there are less differences than similarities in the modified saliva, the Zootoxin, that snakes use to paralyse and slow their prey.
Most snakes have a lot of one type of venom and less of the other.
All snake venom (not poison as it is virtually harmless if swallowed) is made of extremely complicated compounds of proteins and enzymes, etc.
In a very general sense, this venom has neurotoxic or haemotoxic effects on the mammalian body. As its name suggests, neurotoxin attacks the nervous system, eventually paralysing the victim and causing death. Haematoxin attacks the red blood cells with the end result not much different from neurotoxin.
We have trouble in diagnosing and understanding the effects on humans because the experiments to determine toxicity, etc., are normally done on laboratory mice. As mice are on most snake's diet in the wild, it may be true their venom is more toxic to mice that it is to, say, a horse or a human.
Some venom of both types is faster acting than another, although the end result of fatality may be the same. Sea snakes, for example, have very fast acting venom so their prey - fast moving fish - keel over before they can escape. But a king cobra, in the top five of dangerous snakes, preys mainly on other snakes which it easily follows after being struck. Snakes which consume many birds may have a fast acting venom, and so on.
But it is curious why all he most venomous Australian snakes have venom predominantly neurotoxic. These include the two Taipans, (on a lighter note, my spellcheck changed this to “tampons!”). The Tiger, Death Adder, Copperhead, King Brown, Red-Bellied Black Snake. (The so called “Fierce Snake” is actually the Inland Taipan, and the world’s most venomous snake. Luckily, it is rare and people are seldom bitten. as both Taipan bites are 100% fatal in most cases if the attack is not treated.)
But why are all these snakes equiped with neurotoxin, while the most dangerous snakes in Africa, including the mambas, several cobras, puff adder boomslang, gaboon viper and many more, have varying types of toxin?
The same applies in Asia, with both neurotoxin and haemotoxin found in many species.
Venom has been evolving in the organs and glands of snakes and other creatures for at least 100 million years. Many of the snakes themselves have come and gone as has their specialized prey. Their venom has two functions: predatory and defensive, the latter use the one that victimises man, usually after he has blundered onto the snake or is tormenting it in some way. Snakes are normally passive and slow moving creatures, but most can change in an instant into several feet of sinew and muscle, in a homicidal rage and bent on doing its tormentor severe harm.
Yet most are passive to the extreme. I have stroked wild rattlers in Baja with no reaction. Even one of the world’s most lethal snakes, the Gaboon Viper, with the most venom in volume and the longest fangs on the planet is so reluctant to employ its armory that experienced bushmen handle it with impunity, meanwhile marvelling at the beauty of this exquisite creature. (see pic).
On the other hand, nobody handles Black Mambas, Taipans, Eastern Diamonback Rattlesnakes and King Cobras, among several more highly exciteable reptiles. The Black Mamba is perhaps the world’s most dangerous snake as it is lightning fast, can reach head height and has an awful venom and character to go with it.
In North America, rattlesnakes reign supreme and no Hollywood shitkicker would be complete without Big John or some other bone- head jerking out his hawg’s leg and blowing the crap out of a rattlesnake. The two largest are the Western Diamondback and the Eastern Diamondback, there are several other species

WORLDS AMAZING PURPLE ANIMALS
Amazing Fun Facts About Platypus

The platypus was indeed God’s idea of having fun. Imagine him at work, taking the beak and feet of a duck, the tail of a beaver and the body and fur of an otter and through divine power bringing to life an oddity. However, that was not enough as ‘He’ was in a mood for some more mischief. So, ‘He’ didn’t bless it with any teeth, made the females lay eggs like a bird but nurse their young ones with milk like a mammal, and armed male with venomous spurs on the hind feet (probably to stun anyone who dares to laugh at this monstrosity). If that was not enough, ‘He’ equipped their beak with thousands of electroreceptor so that it could catch its foods without using the other sense organs. The result was the platypus, which ‘He’ released into the wilds of Eastern Australia and chose to baffle humanity for generations. After seeing this animal, anyone can be sure that the bat was just a rehearsal. If you want to know more on this enigmatic, hodgepodge quirk of nature, continue reading the interesting and amazing facts on platypus.
Fast Facts
Scientific Name: Ornithorhynchus anatinus
Type: Semi-aquatic mammal
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Monotremata
Family: Ornithorhynchidae
Genus: Ornithorhynchus
Origin: Eastern Australia and Tasmania
Diet: Crustaceans
Size: Males – 50 cm (20 in); Females – 43 cm (17 in)
Weight: 0.7 to 2.4 kg (1.5 to 5.3 lb)
Lifespan: 17 years in captivity and about 11 years in the wild
Habitat: Freshwater lakes and streams
Gestation Period: 1 month
Number Of Eggs: 1 to 2
Amazing Fun Facts About Platypus
  • When European naturalists first encountered the platypus, they thought that it was a hoax. They believed that someone has sewn a duck’s bill and an otter’s tail into a beaver like animal.
  • The name platypus is derived from the Greek word “platys” meaning broad and “pous” meaning foot because of its large webbed foot.
  • The platypus is a warm blooded, egg laying mammal with webbed feet and fine, dense fur, which is waterproof and resembles that of a mole. Unlike other mammals, the platypus lays eggs, typically two eggs, which cling to the female’s fur on her belly.
  • The female platypus has two ovaries, but only the left one is functional.
  • The platypus is also a mammal that produces venom. However, only the males have the ability to do so. The animal injects the strong toxic venom from a spur on its hind foot and it is powerful enough to kill a small animal and cause severe pain to humans.
  • The females do not suckle their babies, as they do not possess any nipples. Instead, they have two glands in their belly that secretes milk and it oozes into the mothers fur, which the babies slurp off.
  • The platypus, apart from using its tail to paddle underwater, also uses it to store fats. About 50% of the animal’s body fat is stored in its tail.
  • The fur of the platypus is denser than the polar bear and the river otter with about 800 hairs per square millimeter.
  • The platypus is the only mammal to have extra bones in the shoulder girdle including an interclavicle.
  • It uses its snout as a sensory organ to search for prey and its mouth is located under it.
  • The platypus emits a growl that resembles a puppy.
  • Its webbed feet and flat tail makes it an excellent swimmer. In fact, it is so graceful underwater that early sailors considered it to be the mermaid. When underwater, its eyes and ears are covered by folds of skin and the nostrils close tightly to prevent the water from entering. Therefore, the only way that it can locate prey is with its sensitive, rubbery and flexible gill, which has hundreds of receptors that respond to tiny electric currents. The platypus can remain underwater only for a minute or two.
  • It feeds on insects, worms, larvae and small shellfish found at the bottom of the water source and hunts mostly at night. It does not feed underwater, storing its catch in cheek pouches and feeding only after reaching the surface. Since it does not have any teeth, it mashes its catch before swallowing. It also swallows bits of gravel to help it digest its food.
  • On land, the platypus moves around awkwardly and walks on its knuckles to protect the webbing on its feet. To run, it retracts the webbing on its feet and exposes its nails.
  • It lives near freshwater lakes and streams and uses its nails and feet to dig a burrow on the water edge. A borrow can be as long as 100 feet in length and most of the time there are two entrances/exits. It can spend as much as 17 hours a day resting inside a burrow.
  • The female lays eggs after sealing herself in one of the chambers of the burrow. She lays about one or two eggs and holds them between her body and tail to keep warm. The eggs hatch in about ten days and the mother nurses the infants for three to four months, by which time they can swim on their own. The infants have teeth, which later fall off.
  VINE SNAKE
                                                                                One of the many things I love about wildlife photography is finding an animal to photograph that is so interesting it’s hard to take your eye off of them. One of such creature that I photographed during my recent trip to Costa Rica was the Vine Snake (Oxybelis fulgidus). The intensity of green color in this snakes scales is like nothing I’ve seen before. Not necessarily evident in this photo is that the shape of its head is nearly identical to the most common leaf shape in Costa Rica making it well camouflaged. This camouflage helps it hide from predators and hunt other animals. This is certainly one of the more amazing animals I’ve seen let alone photographed.

Vine Snake (Oxybelis fulgidus), Costa Rica
Vine Snake (Oxybelis fulgidus), Costa Rica


Read more: http://www.jmg-galleries.com/blog/2009/05/14/vine-snake-oxybelis-fulgidus/#ixzz1s1hybrpO
AMAZING INSECT IN THE WORLDThe Oriental hornet The Bone skipperThe Cacoxenus indagatorThe OlmThe Symbion pandoraThe Yellow-bellied three-toed skink
AMAZING BIRTH OF ELEPHANT   


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Flipping miracle: at 29 weeks the dolphin is moving its eyes and swimming around the womb. At six weeks it can curl its tail fin around its body. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
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Flipping miracle: at 29 weeks the dolphin is moving its eyes and swimming around the womb. At six weeks it can curl its tail fin around its body. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
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Dog in the womb: at 52 days a full coat of light cream hair is visible with whiskers forming. At 39 days, the eyelids are fused to protect from contamination. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
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Dog in the womb: at 52 days a full coat of light cream hair is visible with whiskers forming. At 39 days, the eyelids are fused to protect from contamination. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
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Tiny animal kingdom: the elephant foetus at 12 months, when it is 18 inches long and weighs approximately 26 lbs. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
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Tiny animal kingdom: the elephant foetus at 12 months, when it is 18 inches long and weighs approximately 26 lbs. Pic The Daily MailSource: The Sunday Telegraph
animals
Tiny animal kingdom: the elephant foetus at 12 months, when it is 18 inches long and weighs approximately 26 lbs. Source: The Sunday Telegraph
animals
Tiny animal kingdom: the elephant foetus at 12 months, when it is 18 inches long and weighs approximately 26 lbs. Source: The Sunday Telegraph
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AN unborn elephant, perfectly formed in every way. A dolphin swimming in the womb, just as it will have to swim in the ocean the moment it is born. An unborn dog asleep as if by its master's side.
Using new technology, these images, published in UK's Daily Mail, reveal what until now has been a secret - exactly how animals develop in the womb. They were created by the same team who in 2004 showed how human embryos "walk in the womb".

Using a combination of three-dimensional ultrasound scans, computer graphics and tiny cameras, the team were able to show the entire process from conception to birth.

"These kind of images from inside animals have never been seen before," Jeremy Dear of Pioneer Productions, who made the film, told The Daily Mail.
"We worked with dozens of zoos and animal sanctuaries across the world. There were a lot of different challenges - recording a dolphin is very different from an elephant, for instance.

"Animals were trained to sit still near the scanners and we also inserted cameras into the womb via the elephant's rectum-But it has been worth it. It one sequence we follow an elephant developing. When it is finally born, there is not a dry eye in the house.

"The images in the film are a testament to the ingenuity and patience of the production team led by Yavar Abbas and Dr David Barlow, who worked with some of the world's leading vets to obtain these pictures."

The images were created for the programme Animals In The Womb, a two-hour show to be broadcast on the National Geographic Channel.

Researchers used scans to track elephant calves developing for almost two years in the womb - the longest gestation period of all mammals.

It shows at 16 weeks the elephant foetus starting to look more like an elephant as the trunk develops.

At almost a year, the trunk is longer than the legs, and by 14 months, the characteristic elephant ears are visible. They will eventually grow to almost two feet across to help regulate the body temperature of the fullymature-elephant. At birth, he will weigh nearly 260lb and be able to take his first steps in minutes.

Animals closer to home were also studied. A golden retriever foetus is shown exhibiting some of the same behaviour as family pets, panting with its tongue out, while still in the womb.

Programme makers also reveal the moment at eight weeks when a baby dolphin learns to swim while in the womb. During the next few weeks, it develops flippers, a tail and a blowhole before being born after a year, and must be able to quickly swim to the surface to take its first breath of air.

Experts also found that at 24 days, the dolphin embryo develops tiny leg-like buds, which then disappear over the next two weeks.

After 11 weeks, the dolphin embryo's fins display bone structures resembling human hands, which experts believe may show that dolphin ancestors were land dwellers.

The footage also shows how many animal embryos are like human ones.

"The incredible thing about the early images is how we all look very similar - it is obviously we humans share a common mammalian ancestry very early in life," Mr Dear told The Daily Mail

Wednesday, 11 April 2012


Woman Attached By Polar Beer (Shocking Moment)

This is the terrifying moment a woman was attacked by a polar bear after jumping into its zoo enclosure.

The 32-year-old leapt over bars at Berlin Zoo during the bears' feeding time yesterday.

Despite six zookeepers' efforts to distract the four predators kept in the enclosure, the woman was bitten several times on her arms and legs.
Woman Attached By Polar Beer
Shocking attack: A woman was mauled by a bear after jumping into a enclosure at Berlin Zoo yesterday

The brave keepers eventually managed to push the Polar bear away and pull the woman to safety.

She was bitten by one of the four older polar bears in the enclosure and not by the famous Knut, who took Germany by storm as a cub after he was hand-raised by a keeper.

Woman Attached By Polar Beer
Build-up to the attack: The woman swims towards a polar bear

Woman Attached By Polar Beer
Still under attack, the woman swims for and then finally grabs a rope hanging down by rescuers