Redtail Catfish (Phractocephalus hemioliopterus)
… a pimelodid (long-whiskered) catfish named for its red or orange caudal fin. In Venezuela it is known as cajaro and in Brazil. It is the only extant species of the genus Phractocephalus. This fish originates from South America. Despite reaching a large size, this fish is a common aquarium fish. The redtail catfish is native to the Amazon, Orinoco, and Essequibo river basins of South America. It is found only in fresh water…
(read more: Wikipedia) (photo: Monika Betley)
Grupo Gorila
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Posts tagged grupo gorila
Dec22
Dec21
'Climate Change May Bring Big Ecosystem Shifts, NASA Says'→
From Science Daily:
By 2100, global climate change will modify plant communities covering almost half of Earth’s land surface and will drive the conversion of nearly 40 percent of land-based ecosystems from one major ecological community type — such as forest, grassland or tundra — toward another, according to a new NASA and university computer modeling study.
Researchers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., investigated how Earth’s plant life is likely to react over the next three centuries as Earth’s climate changes in response to rising levels of human-produced greenhouse gases. Study results are published in the journal Climatic Change.
The model projections paint a portrait of increasing ecological change and stress in Earth’s biosphere, with many plant and animal species facing increasing competition for survival, as well as significant species turnover, as some species invade areas occupied by other species. Most of Earth’s land that is not covered by ice or desert is projected to undergo at least a 30 percent change in plant cover — changes that will require humans and animals to adapt and often relocate.
In addition to altering plant communities, the study predicts climate change will disrupt the ecological balance between interdependent and often endangered plant and animal species, reduce biodiversity and adversely affect Earth’s water, energy, carbon and other element cycles.
“For more than 25 years, scientists have warned of the dangers of human-induced climate change,” said Jon Bergengren, a scientist who led the study while a postdoctoral scholar at Caltech. “Our study introduces a new view of climate change, exploring the ecological implications of a few degrees of global warming. While warnings of melting glaciers, rising sea levels and other environmental changes are illustrative and important, ultimately, it’s the ecological consequences that matter most.”
When faced with climate change, plant species often must “migrate” over multiple generations, as they can only survive, compete and reproduce within the range of climates to which they are evolutionarily and physiologically adapted. While Earth’s plants and animals have evolved to migrate in response to seasonal environmental changes and to even larger transitions, such as the end of the last ice age, they often are not equipped to keep up with the rapidity of modern climate changes that are currently taking place. Human activities, such as agriculture and urbanization, are increasingly destroying Earth’s natural habitats, and frequently block plants and animals from successfully migrating.
Check out the rest of the article here.
Dec20
To really get a sense of the volume and obscenity of America’s food waste, you need to visit the place where the excess goes: the garbage.
(via nocarbon)
7 green things you’re already doing this Christmas
Tired of reading about how to be greener this holiday season? Give yourself some credit for the green things you do automatically.
And now, a monkey washing the dishes in a stream.
Milak the polar bear plays with a plastic tube at Aalborg Zoo, Denmark. He has taken to wearing it on his head for fun.
Picture: Sussi Kober/Rex Features (via Pictures of the day: 19 December 2011 - Telegraph)
Dec16
Baby Sloth Orphanage: Cutest Place on Earth
by Betsy Mason
Baby sloths are completely irresistible. Perhaps it’s because their faces are shaped in a permanent smile. Or maybe it’s because they love to hug — stuffed animals, trees, other sloths, people. It could simply be their signature comical slowness.
And orphan baby sloths? Well, If you think you can resist them, try watching this video only once.
The trailer is just a taste of the new documentary, “Too Cute! Baby Sloths,” airing Saturday Dec. 17 at 8 p.m. ET on Animal Planet. The show is filmmaker Lucy Cooke’s follow-up to her wildly popular internet video “Meet the Sloths.” Both were shot at the Aviarios Sloth Sanctuary in Costa Rica…
(read more: Wired Science)
Dec15
(via earthhour)
Dec14
SIGHMATE A three-month-old orangutan peeks out from inside a wooden box in East Kutai, East Kalimantan province, Indonesia; it had been separated from its mother. (Photo: AFP-Getty via the New York Post)
(via earthhour)
