#animal science
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kadystudies · 3 days ago
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i’ve been inactive for so long but i adopted her 11 days after i posted this, it’s been 3 months now!
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she makes work so worth it 💖 my motivation rn!
(i want to adopt her so bad 🥲)
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imhereboo · 2 years ago
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cosmiccowboystuddies · 7 months ago
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[4.16]
today I: drunk 3 bottles of water ate 3 meals got advised sewed a dress studied organized writing projects journaled
It's only Tueday, and I end the day with a horrible uncomfortable feeling. It's like someone is gently tugging at my heart, and it only makes me feel all wrong, like something bad is about to happen. I can't do anything about it but sleep it off I guess, but at least I end the day knowing that I managed to be somewhat productive. I have a lower grade in one of my classes then I thought, and though I'm passing, I'm not doing as well as I hoped. That's to be expected considering how I procrastinated on every assignment at the beginning of the semester, though there is no use in dwelling on what I could have done better, just doing better. So I am doing better now by working on my assignment even though it is due next week. I go to bed early because Tomorrow I have to wake up at the ass crack of dawn to register for classes and sign up for summer classes.
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aleblr · 4 months ago
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14.06.2024
Day 2/30 of productivity
So today I've studied for a 2ish (maybe more) hours. I wanted to do more but with this heat (34°C w/ 60% humidity) it's very difficult to stay focused. Biblio was full so I couldn't go there either.
Tbh I'm a little anxious for tomorrow, it will be my first day of internship plus I'm so scared to miss the bus to go there (I've actually dreamt of this last night). Wish me luck 🍀
Studies
Wrote more anatomy flashcards
Did some mind maps to better understand some concepts of animal nutrition
Other stuff
Laundry 🧺
Pic of today's mess + me and my bf last month enjoying some delicious ice cream (miss him!!)
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mistermidwest · 2 months ago
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Culex tarsalis embroidery
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sock-ness-monster · 2 years ago
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My soil texture triangle post has become popular beyond my wildest dreams so sorry not sorry to report that soil texture triangle is old news in this new year its all about
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✨️Anura Limb Length and their Adaptions✨️
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chronicallydragons · 17 days ago
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being a fantasy author with an veterinary science background is sometimes really awesome, but sometimes you're forced to consider super cursed concepts like: can dragons drop their tails like some other reptile species?
I decided no because they're such large creatures with such thick tails that the blood supply to the tail would be too massive and dropping the tail would lead to catastrophic blood loss. There ARE some larger lizards that can drop their tails under extreme circumstances, but it’s super risky and dangerous
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babayanska · 2 months ago
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a mock cover for a book I read recently that I really enjoyed :] highly recommend
mostly for my portfolio but figured I'd share it here too!
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lilliths-httyd-blog · 1 year ago
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I am calling upon the science side of Tumblr for uhh fanfiction purposes. Here's my stupid question:
You know how some animals can see better in the dark and shit because something something eyes let in more light or whatever idk?
Would those animals be capable of seeing more stars than us? (ignore the effects of light pollution for a second, pretend like light pollution isn't a thing in this scenario).
thank you in advance, science side of Tumblr
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phoenix-reburned · 8 months ago
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Hey gang anyone know why this squirrel was doing this? Started recording because "aww silly squirrel on sidewalk" and then he started doing this.
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balkanradfem · 2 years ago
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I started reading the book 'Pests' by Bethany Brookshire. I thought it would be a book filled with information on how to protect your garden without causing any harm to animals. I could not have been more wrong, but soon it didn't matter, because I was drawn in immediately. This book is written by a brilliant scientist, who presents to you, the history, the data, the results and the cultural context of pests all around the world. It starts with squirrels, but then goes on to talk about pythons, pigeons, cats, rats, mice, frogs, coyotes, wolves, elephants, dogs, raccoons, deer, bears – and how they've been seen as a pest, most often for no fault of their own.
I learned about the numerous ways people in the past have created a 'pest' problem for themselves, and how they went on resolving it, and honestly I was shocked  at the most of it. I did not know that human scientists developed specific plagues for animals in order to get rid of them. I also had no idea how quickly humans turned the perception of a certain animal from 'useful' to 'pest', without even realizing they're responsible for the behaviour of the animal in the first place. Also the number of times humans have attempted to introduce a predator in order to get rid of an invasive species – only to immediately cause a new invasive species, absolutely incredible.
I was surprised to find out that some specific animals could be pests at all, for example, elephants. Absorbing the information presented to me thus far, I thought elephants were nothing short of wonderful and welcome in anyone's life – but, the story describes them eating the entire fields worth of grain, in only one night. And due to their size, they're unstoppable. They've destroyed houses, and even killed people, as a result of trying to get to the food. The elephants are a protected species, so the locals have been forced to develop different way of co-existing, namely, to stop growing grain and try to find different ways of survival and sustenance. There have been numerous other attempts to protect the fields from them, but how would you protect anything from an elephant? The only thing they're scared of, are bees. And if there's food to be gained, they'll overcome the fear of the bees too.
Did you know that if mice multiply too much, they'll have a mice plague that will wipe them out, without human interference?  Mice and rats are described as the animals closest to us – because they live where we live, eat what we eat, and learn whatever it takes to find their way in the land of humans. And it seems, we have the same problems as well.
One of my favourite little piece of knowledge in this book: the scientists studying the snakes in a lab name the snakes after Slytherins – so they have Snape, Draco, Crabbe, Goyle, and Bellatrix. It was amazing to listen about Snape the snake.
The author of this book is incredibly unbiased, and shows her love for every animal mentioned, but also understanding and compassion for people who have felt wronged, violated, helpless and cornered by the animal, and how awful it feels to not be able to protect their homes and livelihoods from an animal invading their territory. In author's mind, the animals are not at fault, because all they've been trying to do is survive, get to the source of food, for them this is foraging. For us, it's nature taking from us what we intended for ourselves.
The problem of seeing animals as pests, comes often from the perception of us being the dominating species, and having the right to remove or introduce or change animals, by how convenient and pleasing we find them. She sourced the problems from negative experiences, loss, violation and danger, but also from culture, colonialism, religion, behaviours of the people around us. Most children have no concept of danger or pests – babies in a study would reach out curiously seeing a picture of snake. Perception of which animal is good and which one is bad, comes with culture, experience and the behaviour of everyone else around it. And our collective perception comes from whether the animal is rare, whether it lives close to us, if we have to adjust our lives because of it or not, if we have had negative experiences or not, whether it can hurt us, whether we have something the animal wants (food) and tries to get from us.
I recommend this book to anyone who'd like to know more about the history of humans trying to live alongside – or refusing to live alongside certain animals. And anyone dealing with any kind of pest, or just not understanding why animals act the way they do around humans.
I come out from reading this, feeling no more wise on how to keep the pests out – except for, don't leave the food outside the house where animals can get to it, that's the #1 reason for most scenarios – but feeling way more understanding and at ease about animals that are perceived as pests. I know solutions  that have been tried to deal with them, I know what didn't work, and I know how badly some collective solutions can become. I understand we need to find a way to live with them as our neighbours, not enemies, not violators of our property. And most often, just being responsible about where you leave your food, how much animals you tempt to come close to you, how you reward them for interacting with you, is more than a half of the solution.
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kadystudies · 5 months ago
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so many cuties at work right now! they make all the schooling and work worth it 💖
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veganism · 7 months ago
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cosmiccowboystuddies · 6 months ago
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college tips from someone who survived their first year, and got themselves off of academic probation
study every day ( reread your notes, run through your flashcards)
it helps to avoid cramming around finals season
do assignments when you get them, it doesn't matter that its not due until the end of the semester, you will forget, you will get busy, you will get caught up with doing something else so do it when you get it, so you won't have to worry about it later
don't study in your bed, its a bad habit, it will make it harder to study and make it harder to sleep
go out at least once a month, to a party, to a club, on a late night walk
carry a knife if its legal ( not just for safety reasons)
join class group mes
go to office hours, even if you don't need to, lie and say you didn't understand something so the professor knows your name
its okay to skip a class occasionally, just never two in a row, and don't make it a habit
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aleblr · 10 months ago
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10.02.2024
Studying poultry farming and although it's not easy, definitely it is interesting. There are many aspects of this field that surely can be improved though (especially the animal welfare part).
These days I'm also very busy petsitting lots of dogs. Take a look at my favorite client above! Too cute!!!!
Hope you and your loved ones are doing good💓
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mistermidwest · 3 months ago
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whats your fave mosquito fact 🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟
i think the one that surprises people the most when i tell them is that only the females bite you! ngl i thought it was ubiquitous knowledge but i was very wrong lol
female mosquitoes take a bloodmeal from animals because they need the nutrients to produce their eggs! males don't bloodfeed and usually die within two weeks of eclosing (the word for emerging from their pupal casing). the females live about four times as long and they store the male's sperm to fertilize their eggs with, and ideally they have multiple bloodfeeds in one lifetime!
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