The Gentle Giants of the Insect World

September 22, 2009
What is worst than coming face to face with a creepy crawly? Coming face to face with a giant creepy crawly!



New Zealand’s Giant Weta is the heaviest insect on the planet; weighing more than 71 g, this arthropod is heavier than a swallow. There are eleven species of giant weta, which are significantly larger than other weta or any other insect. The largest species of giant weta is the Little Barrier Island giant weta also known by the Maori name ‘wetapunga’, which means ‘god of ugly things’. These heavyweights have a body length of up to 10 cm, excluding their lengthy legs and antennae. They often live under rocks and bush floor debris and prefer a vegetarian diet. At approximately two years of age the female will lay anything between a hundred and three hundred eggs. Unfortunately, the parents of the ‘little giants’ will die before the eggs hatch three to five months later. However spine-chilling they seem, they are in actual fact gentle giants and need to be respected and protected. Weta are at risk from being eaten by rats, trampling by stock and killed by forest fires.

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Spiders that decorate their webs

September 22, 2009
Nature's true web designers



When you look at these pictures you can draw your own conclusion as to way some spiders decorate their webs in these elobarate ways.


Author EB White noticed the web of the Banded Garden Spider when looking for inspiration for his second novel. It was from this natural inspiration that he would come up with the idea of a writing spider and would go on to write one of the world’s most cherished children’s books, Charlotte’s Web.

These peciliar web decorations is ...
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Man's best friend – a giant croc

September 21, 2009


The Real Crocodile Dundee

Chito made friends with the croc after finding him with a gunshot wound on the banks of the Central American state's Parismina river 20 years ago. He had been shot in the left eye by a cattle farmer and was close to death. But Chito enlisted the help of several pals to load the massive reptile into his boat.

He says: "When I found Pocho in the river he was dying, so I brought him into my house". "He was very skinny, weighing only around 150lb I gave him chicken and f...

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Stunning shots of bats drinking in flight

September 21, 2009
bats

bat

Kim Taylor

How amazing are these pics? The amazing shots were taken after months of painstaking planning by wildlife photographer Kim Taylor. They are so detailed you can even see the night creatures slurping from the pool with their little pink tongues. Kim, 76, rigged ropes across the pond which encouraged the bats to drink from a certain point. Then, using special sensors designed by himself, he managed to get the perfect shots.

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A million snow geese stopover at a wildlife resort

September 21, 2009

snow geese

Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge

These pictures – taken by Mike Hollingshead in Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge near Mound City, Missouri – show one of nature's most amazing displays as more than a million snow geese stop for a rest during their annual migration. Every autumn the snow geese head from their main breeding grounds in central Canada to their wintering grounds in the Gulf of Mexico. The noisy birds migrate in unusually large flocks of 100 to 1,000 that are made up of many family groups.

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Never seen before footage: leopard vs. croc

September 21, 2009









A series of incredible pictures taken at a South African game reserve document the first known time that a leopard has taken on and defeated a croc. The photographs were taken by Hal Brindley, an American wildlife photographer, who was supposed to be taking pictures of hippos from his car in the Kruger National Park. The giant cat raced out of cover provided by scrub and bushes to surprise the crocodile, which was swimming nearby. A terrible and bloody struggle ensued. Eventually, onlookers...
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