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Watch the 2024 American Climate Leadership Awards for High School Students now: https://youtu.be/5C-bb9PoRLc
The recording is now available on ecoAmerica's YouTube channel for viewers to be inspired by student climate leaders! Join Aishah-Nyeta Brown & Jerome Foster II and be inspired by student climate leaders as we recognize the High School Student finalists. Watch now to find out which student received the $25,000 grand prize and top recognition!
planning on ordering a vinegaroon tomorrow now that its warmer again and i want an m. tohono so bad bc they can be kind of reddish and are apparently a bit more feisty, but the site selling subadult tohonos does not specify if they are WC (and i just assume all vinnies are yoinked out of the wild unless specified), and the site selling CB tohono babies has a horrible terms of service page and i have no idea when they would be shipped and if i would be off work to receive it...... perhaps i will settle for a CB giganteaus from the place i got my tenebs from. and get some ironclad beetles as a bonus.
tove is really scared of children (idk why. working on this in training). while we were out walking in the park we ran into a big group of middle schoolers and she started to get spooked, when a couple of them came over asking to pet my dog i was like “sorry she’s afraid of kids” and they got really offended and insisted they were not kids
Watch the American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 now: https://youtu.be/bWiW4Rp8vF0?feature=shared
The American Climate Leadership Awards 2024 broadcast recording is now available on ecoAmerica's YouTube channel for viewers to be inspired by active climate leaders. Watch to find out which finalist received the $50,000 grand prize! Hosted by Vanessa Hauc and featuring Bill McKibben and Katharine Hayhoe!
"subadults" has the same amount of syllables as "teenagers" so all i'm saying is that agripi's favorite song would definitely be "subadults" by my chemical quadrants
This past spring/summer when she was a subadult she had an absolute blast romping around and coming out to explore usually multiple times a week. As soon as her tank lights went out she’d come out of hiding, soak up the remaining heat on her basking area, and then I’d see her peeking her tiny head over the doors.
When she hit 1 she got much more reclusive but it’s also winter so she’s entitled to that
This morning we released a rescued green sea turtle!
The sea turtle was rescued near Avila Beach, California, on December 11, 2023, by The Marine Mammal Center’s San Luis Obispo Operations based in Morro Bay, California. The Marine Mammal Center in Morro Bay transferred the rescued sea turtle to the Aquarium with authorization from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Fisheries office for a medical evaluation, surgery, and care because of the Aquarium’s expertise in treating and releasing stranded and injured sea turtles.
When the sea turtle arrived at the Aquarium on December 11, 2023, it had an injured flipper and was in need of medical care and rehabilitation. The Aquarium’s veterinary and animal husbandry staff performed surgery on the sea turtle’s injured front flipper and had been caring for the sea turtle behind the scenes as it recovered. The animal is a subadult and is estimated to be between three and five years old.
“It was an incredible moment, watching the turtle make its way from the sand into the ocean and swim away. We are grateful to have had the opportunity to help it recover and return to the wild,” said Dr. Adams, Aquarium of the Pacific veterinarian.
The turtle is fitted with a microchip ID and also a microsatellite tag that was provided and applied by Upwell Turtles. If all goes according to plan, we should receive location updates in about 3 weeks. Stay tuned!
It's funny, barely a week after the reveal of Perucetus, perhaps the largest known basilosaurid so far, we immediately see the description of what may be the smallest.
Tutcetus, named after child king Tutankhamun, is a new species of early whale that may have measured only 2.5 meters. Known from a single skull of what is thought to be a subadult at the very edge of maturity, it is also one of the oldest basilosaurids. The fossil was discovered in the famous Fayum Depression, i.e. one of the most important regions for early whale fossils.
While its generally hard to tell age, the stage of tooth replacement and the fusion of the skull bones indicate that Tutcetus was about to reach maturity, so it likely didn't grow much larger than indicated by the holotype fossil.
Tutcetus seems to be an early diverging basilosaurid (which is paraphyletic according to the authors), with its closest relatives being Ocucajea (a contemporary of Perucetus) and Chrysocetus.
Although our sample size is obviously low, the authors still tried their best to deduce some parts of its biology. For instance, they suggest that the small size of this animal might be related to the warmer temperatures of its time and that Tutcetus followed the mantra of "live fast, die young". They argue that Tutcetus, again based on how its teeth were replaced, matured quickly to reproduce sooner, while never reaching an especially old age. This would contrast later basilosaurids, which would grow slower, reach larger sizes and live longer. But of course more material would go a long way to confirm these suggestions.
Two subadult male Atlasaurus, whose herds have crossed paths multiple times before, reunite.
They coddle and touch necks, feeling the rhythmic rise and fall of their cervical air sacs as they sing low and guttural "songs", identifying each other and their herds of origin.
Brachiosaurus bull and subadults checking each other out. drew this a few months ago in response to this SV-POW article and some ideas being explored in the comments: svpow.com/2023/08/04/did-dinosaurs-become-more-or-less-colourful-through-their-lives/
Yutyrannus is the largest dinosaur discovered with direct evidence of feathers. It is a large basal tyrannosauroid, growing to about 9 m in length, and weighing around 1.5 t. Yutyrannus is known from three nearly complete individuals: an adult, subadult, and a juvenile. Because they were found together, it is theorized that they may have hunted in packs. Adults sported a high midline crest on the snout, as well as one above each eye. Unlike more derived tyrannosaurs, Yutyrannus had long forearms with three fingers on each hand. Feathers in the fossil specimens are present on various parts of the bodies of all three individuals, implying total coverage.