Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Australian Star Finches Pics and Informations & Wallpapers

Gouldian and Longtail Finches Drinking
Gouldian Family with Star Finch
Gouldian Family with Star Finch
Black Head Gouldian Hen
Adult and Juvenile Star Finches
Budgerigars Drink with Masked Finch and Gouldians
Gouldian Finch Scouting the Water Hole
Bee Eaters Working a Water Hole
Proud Gouldian Poses for Camera
Proud Gouldian Poses for Camera
Star Finches Wait in Reeds to Drink
Double Bar Finch Drinks with Gouldians
Yellow Rumped and Chestnut Breasted Mannikins
Chestnut Breasted and Yellow Rumped Mannikins
Yellow Rumped Mannikins with Longtail Finches
Owl Finch Drinks with Longtail Finch
Budgie and Black Head Gouldian Finch
Gouldians Drinking with Masked and Longtail Finches
Longtail Finch with Zebra Finch Hen
Zebra Finch
Budgerigars and Gouldians Waiting to Drink
Longtail Finch
Longtail Finches Waiting to Drink
Star Finch and Gouldian Hen.
Adult and Juvenile Gouldians Drinking
Red Head Gouldian Surveys the Territory
Owl Finch Reflection
Double Bar Finch
Flight and Water.
Masked Finch
Black Head Gouldian and Longtails Waiting to Drink
Longtail and Owl Finch
Gouldian Group at Water Hole

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Australian Star Finches

The Star Finch Neochmia ruficauda is a species of estrildid finch found in Australia. It inhabits dry grassland and dry savanna habitats.

Subspecies

It has three subspecies:
  • Neochmia ruficauda subclarescens (inhabits in three separate subpopulations, from Pilbara,Fitzroy River Valley and Gibb River, Western Australia to the Northern TerritoryQueenslandborder.)
  • Neochmia ruficauda clarescens (located on the Cape York Peninsula)
  • Neochmia ruficauda ruficauda (probably extinct)

Threats

The habitat of Star Finch is threatened by overgrazing of grasslands, removing essential cover, as well as sources of food. Selective grazing of perennials during the dry season may also remove grasses that are needed for survival during the wet season. Burning of grassland during the dry season may reduce the fallen seed during the wet season and thus reduce the food supply needed by Star Finch. This species is also threatened by cage-bird trades.

Availability

Despite the Star Finch having been listed as Near Threatened in the wild it is a common aviarybird. This species has mutations such as the Yellow & Cinnamon varieties.

Origin

Origin and phylogeny has been obtained by Antonio Arnaiz-Villena et al. Estrildinae may have originated in India and dispersed thereafter (towards Africa and Pacific Ocean habitats).

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Naked mole rat's genome 'blueprint' revealed

African Naked mole rat baby Photo
The industrious but unlovely naked mole rat is the latest creature to have its genome sequenced by scientists.
A genetic blueprint for this bizarre-looking rodent could help researchers understand why it is so long-lived.
Naked mole rats are also of interest to scientists because they appear to have some resistance to cancer.
A team from the University of Liverpool, UK, led the project and have made the "first draft" of the genome available online for other researchers.
Dr Joao Pedro Magalhaes, the Liverpool-based biologist who led the study, explained that he became interested in naked mole rats when he discovered how long they lived.
"Bigger animals tend to live longer, but the naked mole rat is an exception to that rule," he told BBC Nature.
"It can live over 30 years, which is very impressive for an animal that's smaller than a rat. Rats live for just four years."
Dr Magalhaes worked with researchers from Queen Mary, University of London, which is home to the UK's only naked mole rat colony.
The animals are native to the deserts of East Africa, where they dig their tunnels using their impressive teeth.
Unlike true rats, mole rats form a distinct group of rodents that are adapted to live underground.
Unique physical traits allow naked mole rats to survive in these harsh, underground environments for so many years. And the genetic secrets of those traits are contained in the mole rats' DNA.
Previous research has shown that the small wrinkled rodents have very little or no pain sensation in their skin and a low metabolic rate that allows them to live with limited oxygen.
The animals are also resistant to many diseases, particularly cancer.
Naked mole rat (image: photolibrary.com)
Naked Mole Rat Picture
"I think that's the most interesting thing about them from a biomedical perspective," said Dr Magalhaes.
"To date, there have been no reported deaths of cancer, and there are [teams] around the world that have kept and studied naked mole rats for decades."
The gene sequencing technology the team employed used chemical scissors to snip out chunks of the long strands of DNA code that make up the animal's genome. This technique allows these shorter sections of code to be read and jigsawed back together into the complete genome.
Dr Chris Faulkes, who studies naked mole rats at Queen Mary, University of London, was keen to help with this project. The genome, he explained, was a valuable research tool.
"We're interested in how the animals evolved their amazing social behaviour," he told BBC Nature.
"They live in groups of up to 300 animals and each group has a [reproductively active] queen who can 'switch off' the reproduction in other animals."
These findings will allow Dr Faulkes and his team to find any features of the rats' brains that might drive these unusual social bonds and behaviour.
Dr Magalhaes says that the team now has a "blueprint" for the naked mole rat that will allow "much more sophisticated studies of the animals".
"You can start to look, for example, at the DNA repair systems in naked mole rats, and find out if they are different from mice, which have a much shorter lifespan," he said.
"It's a first step to uncovering the mysteries of this creature's remarkable longevity and its resistance to diseases."
The mole rats spend their entire lives underground

Thursday, June 30, 2011

World's Scariest ,Venomous Biggest Snakes Pictures and Information

Note  ; These snakes are both scariest and venomous animals. Some of them have extremely high toxic venoms which can stun and even kill their prey at once. They’re not only largest in size but also longest in length.

Black Mamba

 Inhabiting in the areas of open woodlands, open savannahs, and rocky outcrops of Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Angola, South Africa, Kenya, Botswana, Ethiopia, Malawi, Uganda, Mozambique and Namibia, Black Mamba (Dendroaspis polylepis) has long been known as the longest venomous snake in Africa and the second longest dangerous snake in the world.  Their adults can reach to an average length of 2.5 meters or 8.2 feet and some of them can even grow to a length up to 4.3 meters or 14 feet.

Even though it’s called “Black Mamba”, its entire body isn’t all in black; the name is particularly given for its inky black mouth. It may be in the color of metal, olive green, dark olive, grey brown and you can see a light band around the body of some of their species. Normally, their skin becomes to darken when they age. They rely upon external heat to regulate their body temperature just like other extant reptiles.
Black Mambas move extremely fast, that is, up to 19.5km/h or 12mph. No wonder, they’re regarded as the fastest snake in the world.
Vipera Berus
Dwelling in most of the Western Europe to as far as the Far East Asia, vipera berus, a type of venomous viper species, enjoys basking its thick body in dry sunny places. Even though its bite is extremely painful, it’s rarely fatal. Its adult can grow up to 60 cm in length with the largest ever found in Sweden with a length over 90 cm and the other one observed in France and Great Britain was said to achieve a maximum size of 80 to 87cm.

Agkistrodon Piscivorus
Discovered mainly in shallow and slow-moving lakes and streams, Agkistrodon piscivorus is a semi-aquatic viper which is primarily found in the eastern United States. Since it’s a venomous snake its bite can be potentially fatal. It feeds on fish and frogs, and it’s a good swimmer that is always observed successfully colonizing islands of both Gulf and Atlantic coasts.
Crotalus Oreganus
Crotalus oreganus is a Northern Pacific rattlesnake which is found primarily in parts of British Columbia, and north-western Mexico. This snake is often thought to be the most aggressive, notorious and venomous rattle snake in the U.S. It has a well-camouflaged under a log during a warm winter day and has shown its remarkable climbing and clinging skills in a tree. Wow, amazing!
Pseudechis
Generally, Pseudechis refers to a black snake. It’s found inhibiting a variety habitat of arid areas and swampland in Papua New Guinea and in almost every part of Australia (excluding Tasmania). Its bite is potentially fatal and it’s no doubt a member of the dangerous snake species. Further, it’s capable of producing large amounts of venom. In the world, it’s regarded as the largest venomous snake but in Australia, it’s the second largest snake. The adult snake can grow up to 2.5 to 3 meters and its size actually exceeds the size of the Australian Taipan, Black Mamba and King Cobra.
Bushmaster
The Bushmaster, lachesis muta muta, is the largest thick-bodied venomous Pit Viper has an amazing record reaching up to 14 feet. It’s marked by its triangular shaped head and is capable of performing multiple bite strikes, injecting large amount of venoms, which are potentially deadly and dangerous to humans. Even its juvenile’s bite can be fatal. Earning itself a nasty reputation of a “cruel and fierce dude”, it can be seen throughout the regions of Guyana, Nicaragua, Panama, Trinidad and Brazil.
Oxyuranus scutellatus
Oxyuranus scutellatus is an extremely dangerous largest venomous snake dwelling primarily in tropical regions of the Northern Territory, including Melville and Bathurst Islands, and the West Kimberley’s of Western Australia and it’s also seen along the coast and nearby areas of Queensland. It’s said that one single Oxyuranus scutellatus bite can kill up to 12,000 guinea pigs. It’s characterized by its larger fangs, orange-brown iris, and light to dark brown above its body with paler sides. Its highly toxic venoms from the bite can result in vomiting, abdominal pain, dizziness, nausea, and headache. Often, the poison from its bite causes blurred vision accompanyied by convulsions, and in severe cases, one may become coma after being attacked by an Oxyuranus scutellatus. The bite too, can sometimes cause death.