Grupo Gorila

Creatividad. Sustentabilidad. Desarrollo Social

Posts tagged medio ambiente

rhamphotheca:

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)

rhamphotheca:

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 AmazonOrinoco, and Essequibo river basins of South America. It is found only in fresh water

(read more: Wikipedia)   (photo: Monika Betley)

rhamphotheca:

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)

allcreatures:

A diver swims alongside a Greenland shark, a rarely-seen species that  looks like it has been etched from stone. They can survive for more  than 200 years at depths of up to 600 metres under Arctic ice. They grow  to 23-feet long and are so fearsome they have even been known to eat  polar bears. Picture: Doug Perrine/Seapics.com/solent

¡No teníamos idea de que estos animales existían!

allcreatures:

A diver swims alongside a Greenland shark, a rarely-seen species that looks like it has been etched from stone. They can survive for more than 200 years at depths of up to 600 metres under Arctic ice. They grow to 23-feet long and are so fearsome they have even been known to eat polar bears. Picture: Doug Perrine/Seapics.com/solent

¡No teníamos idea de que estos animales existían!

(via earthhour)