Monday, 31 October 2011

Funny Lemur Photos


Lemur  The lemurs is a primate native to the island of Madagascar, a large island off the south east coast of Africa. There are approximately 10 different species of lemur inhabiting the island where the lemurs spend most of their time in the trees. Lemurs are best known for their large, round reflective eyes and their wailing screams. Lemurs also have furry, pointed ears and long tails, with lemurs often being compared to both monkeys and squirrels. The lemur will eat most small things from berries, nuts and leaves to insects and spiders and therefore the lemur has an omnivorous diet. Lemurs get most of their food from the surrounding trees but lemurs will occasionally forage for grub on the forest floor if they have no luck in the branches.

The black and white ruffed lemur, the russet mouse lemur, the woolly lemur, the aye aye and the ring tail lemur are among the most common species of lemur found in Madagascar, although the Aye Aye is considered to be a species of lemur very different from the rest, mainly due to the long middle fingers of the aye aye which it uses to get food out of holes. There are four main types of lemur containing nearly 100 different lemur subspecies between them. The biggest threat to the lemur is deforestation, with around 90% of the Madagascan jungle having been destroyed. This means that the lemur populations are declining rapidly as the lemur has fewer trees to make its home in.

 Funny Lemur
 Funny Lemur
 Funny Lemur
 Funny Lemur
 Funny Lemur
Funny Lemur

Funny Aye Aye


Aye Aye  The aye aye is a subspecies of lemur found on the south eastern African island of Madagascar. The aye aye are the biggest nocturnal primates in the world with some aye aye weighing more than 3kg! The aye aye is also one of the few solitary species of primate and therefore hunts alone for grubs and insects.

The aye aye has rodent-like teeth and a long, thin middle finger that fills the same ecological niche as a woodpecker. The aye aye taps on trees to find grubs, then gnaws holes in the wood and inserts its long middle finger into the hole to pull the grubs out. The aye aye is considered to be a near threatened species, possibly even endangered with very few aye aye left in the wild . The second subspecies of aye aye is thought to have become extinct at some point in the past 1,000 years.

The aye aye inhabits the forested and jungle areas of the east side of Madagascar, but the aye aye is also commonly found in bamboo thickets and are occasionally found hunting on the ground.

 Funny Aye Aye
 Funny Aye Aye
 Funny Aye Aye
 Funny Aye Aye
 Funny Aye Aye

Funny Dolphin Pictures

 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
 Funny Dolphin
Funny Dolphin

Saturday, 29 October 2011

Funny Jackal Pictures

Jackal  The jackal is a medium sized member of the dog family, originally found in Africa, Asia and southeast Europe. There are four main species of jackal with these jackal species being the golden jackal, the side-striped jackal, the black-backed jackal and the Ethiopian wolf jackal. The golden jackal is the most northernly species of jackal and can be found as far east as Burma in Southeast Asia. Jackals are generally found in packs of roughly between 10 and 30 jackal individuals. Jackals use their large group numbers to their advantage and work together in a similar way to a wolf pack to both occasionally hunt for food but more so that the jackals can protect one another.

Jackals are small canines that have adapted to hunting small mammals, birds and reptiles. Some species of jackal have even been known to eat poisonous snakes. Jackals are carnivorous mammals and jackals will often scavenge the remains of kills made by other larger predators. The jackal is a nocturnal mammal that can easily maintain speeds of 16km an hour for long periods of time. Although the jackal belongs to a jackal pack, jackals often prefer to hunt alone or with only one other jackal. This means that the jackals tend to have a higher chance of ambushing their prey as if the jackals regularly hunted in large groups, the jackals would have less success in being stealthy and silent.

 Funny Jackal
 Funny Jackal
 Funny Jackal
Funny Jackal
Funny Jackal

Funny Komodo Dragon

Komodo Dragon  The komodo dragon, also known as the giant monitor lizard, is the largest species of lizard in the world.The komodo dragon inhabits the rainforests of Southeast Asia, and the komodo dragon is native to just a few islands in Indonesia that are part of the Komodo Island National Park. Fossil evidence however, suggests that the komodo dragon once had a much larger habitat but this has been severely decreased due to deforestation. Komodo dragons are completely dominant predators in their environment, and are named by the locals as the land crocodile due to their large size and habit of eating seemingly anything that the komodo dragons can find.

The komodo dragon has an exceptional sense of smell meaning that the komodo dragon is able to hunt out its prey up to 8 km away, when aided by the wind blowing in the right direction. Recent discoveries have revealed that the komodo dragon is indeed venomous, and does not kill its prey through lethal bacteria, as previously thought. However, once the damage the komodo dragon can do coupled with the fact that the saliva of the komodo dragon is known to carry more than 50 different strains of bacteria, means that any animal that manages to survive the attack of a komodo dragon, is extremely likely to die of infection.

 Funny Komodo Dragon
 Funny Komodo Dragon
 Funny Komodo Dragon
 Funny Komodo Dragon
 Funny Komodo Dragon
 Funny Komodo Dragon
Funny Komodo Dragon

Monday, 24 October 2011

Funny Cheetah Photos

 Funny Cheetah
 Funny Cheetah
 Funny Cheetah
 Funny Cheetah
 Funny Cheetah
 Funny Cheetah
Funny Cheetah

Funny Badger

Badgers that had been evicted from their sett two months ago after burrowing beneath a road have managed to find their way back to it. Despite having being drugged, caught and rehomed in another area, the badgers had returned yesterday to their network of tunnels stretching under a road and footpath in Cumnor Hill, west Oxford.

The animals were evicted in October after Oxfordshire county council obtained a licence to remove the protected species. The relocation took place after it was discovered that a section of the footpath and carriageway had been undermined when the badgers extended their network of tunnels.

Oxfordshire Highways, the county council department responsible for the work, applied for a licence from Natural England to close the sett throughout September and October. But, now the animals have reoccupied the land around their original home, Natural England.

 Funny Badger
 Funny Badger
 Funny Badger
 Funny Badger
 Funny Badger
 Funny Badger

Funny Bison Pictures

 Funny Bison
 Funny Bison
 Funny Bison
 Funny Bison
 Funny Bison
 Funny Bison
Funny Bison