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Wow, that's amazing. Makes you wonder how such arrangements happen in nature.

Anyway, saw this a few days ago and thought of you, @The Rebel CRS:

Just listen to the call of that Steller's Sea Eagle :o 

Some cool footage from the wild:

 

Edited by nudge
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On 28/11/2017 at 8:39 PM, nudge said:

Wow, that's amazing. Makes you wonder how such arrangements happen in nature.

Anyway, saw this a few days ago and thought of you, @The Rebel CRS:

Just listen to the call of that Steller's Sea Eagle :o 

Some cool footage from the wild:

 

Amazing, look at the size of their legs and talons. We actually have a species of sea Eagle in the UK, the White Tailed eagle, but only really in Scotland these days and the numbers are low compared to what they will have once been.

It's the same with Golden Eagles, we used to have them in England(the Lake District in fact), but due to being persecuted by man(or better said, morons), there are none left now. The last one went missing a few years ago(probably died of old age) and hasn't been seen since. Unfortunately, they were unsuccessful in introducing a mate to him, so he weren't able to reproduce. The numbers in Scotland are rising which is good news, but we have none left now in England. Maybe one day they will try and reintroduce them like they have done successfully with Red Kites.

 

 

Edited by The Rebel CRS
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4 minutes ago, The Rebel CRS said:

Amazing, look at the size of their legs and talons. We actually have a species of sea Eagle in the UK, the White Tailed eagle, but only really in Scotland these days and the numbers are low compared to what they will have once been.

It's the same with Golden Eagles, we used to have them in England(the Lake District in fact), but due to being persecuted by man(or better said, morons), there are none left now. The last one went missing a few years ago(probably died of old age) and hasn't been seen since. Unfortunately, they were unsuccessful in introducing a mate to him, so he weren't able to reproduce. The numbers in Scotland are rising which is good news, but we have none left now in the UK. Maybe one day they will try and reintroduce them like they have done successfully with Red Kites.

Yep they're huge, supposed to be the heaviest eagle worldwide, I think, and their wingspan is over 2 meters on average :o 

It's a shame that... We still have quite a few species of eagles here in Cambo, with the white-bellied sea Eagle being the most impressive one. I'm actually going on a wildlife watching tour during the Christmas days off in a local national park, the wildlife and marine life diversity there is unbelievable (around 200 bird species alone), but this is going to go downwards now as they succumbed to a huge Chinese investment and allowed them to build monstrous hotel/casino resorts in the area, so I want to take the last chance to see it untouched. I'm particularly keen on spotting great hornbills, herons, pelicans and cranes, mouse-deer, sun bears, dugongs and freshwater dolphins. Hope I'll manage to take a few decent pics and avoid pythons and king cobras while I'm on it, haha.

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What's funny is that cockroaches have a wingspan of around 1", yet they are far more terrifying :ph34r:.

That sounds amazing nudge and I'd love to join you if possible. You will have to definitely take some pictures and post them on here before the Chinese investment potentially ruins the true beauty of it.

They must have an endless amount of different species of animals out there. That would be the plus side to living over there for me personally.

Eagles are the ultimate predator in my opinion.

 

 

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Fellow teacher had to kill(think so) a dugite just outside my class today. Would've preferred if he didn't kill it as it was only a baby I reckon, although they're extremely venomous they're quite scared of humans. 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dugite

 

edit: didn't realise there are massive fines for injuring or killing one! 

Edited by Anton
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9 hours ago, The Rebel CRS said:

What's funny is that cockroaches have a wingspan of around 1", yet they are far more terrifying :ph34r:.

That sounds amazing nudge and I'd love to join you if possible. You will have to definitely take some pictures and post them on here before the Chinese investment potentially ruins the true beauty of it.

They must have an endless amount of different species of animals out there. That would be the plus side to living over there for me personally.

Eagles are the ultimate predator in my opinion.

They have those big fat roaches here, like 5-6cm long :/ Ewwww. I had three snake younglings crawling into my room through the balcony and trying to make love with my stereo cable once (almost stepped on one of them, hrrr), probably venomous, but I still prefer that over roaches xD 
They have some really strange species here, haha. The weirdest living thing I've seen was some mutant insect which had wings, grasshopper-like legs, at least 4 antennae and fur on it's mid-section xD Don't even know what the fuck that was haha, but it could run, jump, fly and was damn huge. I think a proper trip to the jungle would be a real treat in terms of spotting unusual species, but I'm too soft for that, haha.

Eagles are great, pure force and elegance. Take crowned eagle, for example - not even THAT big, usually up to 4-5kg, yet they are prey on mammals weighing up to 20-30kg :o

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On 01/12/2017 at 8:26 PM, nudge said:

They have those big fat roaches here, like 5-6cm long :/ Ewwww. I had three snake younglings crawling into my room through the balcony and trying to make love with my stereo cable once (almost stepped on one of them, hrrr), probably venomous, but I still prefer that over roaches xD 
They have some really strange species here, haha. The weirdest living thing I've seen was some mutant insect which had wings, grasshopper-like legs, at least 4 antennae and fur on it's mid-section xD Don't even know what the fuck that was haha, but it could run, jump, fly and was damn huge. I think a proper trip to the jungle would be a real treat in terms of spotting unusual species, but I'm too soft for that, haha.

Eagles are great, pure force and elegance. Take crowned eagle, for example - not even THAT big, usually up to 4-5kg, yet they are prey on mammals weighing up to 20-30kg :o

Cockroaches are horrible and if they have wings and start flying, I'm gone :ph34r:.

Spiders(atleast the ones in the UK) don't bother me and I just leave them to get on with what they are doing. They are harmless after all and serve a great purpose. Anything that traps and kills flies is a friend of mine.

Snakes don't bother me, but I can't say I would enjoy waking up one morning and seeing a King cobra sat there hissing at me xD. But in general I like them and I even used to have a small Garter Snake when I was a kid. I can't say I'd go full on @Tanksie and start picking venomous ones up in the wild, although I wouldn't mind viewing them from a distance. They are quite fascinating to be honest.

One of the best things about going night fishing is all the wildlife you see. Other than rats, which are like roaches, and seem to scare the shit out of me despite being harmless, I''ve seen bats(you see those everywhere though), owls, foxes and badgers(on one occasion in the past, as it's hard to see badgers) at night and in the early morning, deer, kingfishers, etc. When I woke up the last time I went night fishing, a kingfisher was sat on one of my rods, just a few meters away from me. They are very timid birds, so to see one so close is a privilege and not something that many people will experience. Also when I was walking around to the other side of the lake to bait up in May last year, a deer came running out of the woods and ran past me, just a meter or so away from me. It nearly gave me a heartattack and would have taken me out had it ran straight at me xD. It's one of the best things about going fishing to be honest, being out in the wildlife. You see plenty of insects which you wouldn't think existed in the UK as well.

As for birds, I'd say in terms of UK wildlife, we have a greater variety of birds than any other species of animal. There is actually a nature reserve around 10 mile from me and there are 100s of different species there, including Marsh Harriers, Ospreys, Bitterns and Purple Herons, which are all quite rare. As for other animals, it's not shy of otters either, which have also found their way there.

The jungle would be an amazing experience and you should try and build up the courage to go while you have the opportunity.

I remember @El_Loco telling me a story about how he visited the Amazon Rainforest. It would be interesting to hear more. Also @Bravado, have you ever visited there mate? Since you're from Brazil and like to travel, I'd be surprised if you didn't.

 

Edited by The Rebel CRS
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8 hours ago, The Rebel CRS said:

 

That Eagle has a baby Hawk in its nest if you look. It must have adopted it!

 

 

Its called brood parasitism. Some birds don't make a nest ever ! the female lays the eggs in other birds nests who are similar in appearance to them either when there is no one around or the the male distracts them while the female lays the eggs. When they hatch the host bird thinks the other birds as it owns and raises them.      

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6 minutes ago, Azeem98 said:

Its called brood parasitism. Some birds don't make a nest ever ! the female lays the eggs in other birds nests who are similar in appearance to them either when there is no one around or the the male distracts them while the female lays the eggs. When they hatch the host bird thinks the other birds as it owns and raises them.      

Do hawks do that though? The cuckoo is the main culprit and there are a few other species that do that too, but I've never heard of hawks laying their eggs in other nests!

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Deep oceans fascinate me. That is some material worth sharing 

The 52-hertz whale is an individual whale of unidentified species, which calls at the very unusual frequency of 52 Hz. This pitch is a much higher frequency than that of the other whale species with migration patterns most closely resembling this whale's– the blue whale (10–39 Hz) or fin whale (20 Hz).It has been detected regularly in many locations since the late 1980s and appears to be the only individual emitting a whale call at this frequency. It has been described as the "world's loneliest whale".

 

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1 minute ago, nudge said:

Do hawks do that though? The cuckoo is the main culprit and there are a few other species that do that too, but I've never heard of hawks laying their eggs in other nests!

Never heard about hawks doing that plus it doesn't seems to fit on predator birds doing that xD

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