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Thanks I could help, bro!

@mobileleprechaun / mobileleprechaun.tumblr.com

please be aware of untagged bugs! i'm no longer sorry tho i love them more than anyone's opinion! C:

i;m mobile.....

  • Gay TME alterhuman furry capybara-armadillo thing 
  • they/them or it/its 
  • over 28
  • autism™
  • Texan
  • failed child prophet/prodigy
  • I love every beast on this earth and make no apology for it
  • I get winded easily by social interactions and am most likely not interested in talking on the regular or making new friends. Nothing personal at all, I am just satisfied by the amount of friends I have already.
  • if I don’t know you, I’m not sharing any personal info
  • I don’t tag many things (aside from gore and abuse CWs) and don’t recommend you follow me if you need things tagged
  • I also don’t recommend you follow me if you don’t like seeing pictures of insects and spiders
  • i’m always rlly tired please be nice to me......
  • look at him

the term "phasmid," meaning "stick insect," comes from a latin word meaning "apparition" or "phantom," due to the creatures' ability to hide in plain sight, and then move around and scare people.

the largest phasmids likely remain undiscovered; the longest insect known to science was a phasmid from a species that remains formally unnamed and undescribed, even since being captured for the first time in china in 2014.

a female specimen of the quasi-mythical australian species of gargantuan stick insect was sought by a curator of museum victoria for three years before he encountered one, also in 2014. upon realizing what it was, he says, “I started screaming."

They found that the bat noises are not just random, as previously thought, reports Skibba. They were able to classify 60 percent of the calls into four categories. One of the call types indicates the bats are arguing about food. Another indicates a dispute about their positions within the sleeping cluster. A third call is reserved for males making unwanted mating advances and the fourth happens when a bat argues with another bat sitting too close. In fact, the bats make slightly different versions of the calls when speaking to different individuals within the group, similar to a human using a different tone of voice when talking to different people. Skibba points out that besides humans, only dolphins and a handful of other species are known to address individuals rather than making broad communication sounds. The research appears in the journal Scientific Reports.

forty arguing bats

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evilparker
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rwrbzzl

Bats be like

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