Wildlife
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Join us as we explore the wilderness and share the beautiful scenery of nature!


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Eurasian (Asian) Flying Squirrels Pteromys (from Ancient Greek πτερόεις μῦς "winged mouse") - a genus of rodents in the squirrel family, including two species - the common flying squirrel and the Japanese dwarf flying squirrel.

Japanese Dwarf Flying Squirrel habitat: evergreen mountain forests of the islands of Kyushu and Honshu. Body size: 15-20 cm, tail: 10-14 cm, weight: around 200 g.

Fun Fact: These tiny gliders can cover distances of up to 50 meters in a single glide, using a membrane called a patagium that stretches between their limbs!

Active Year-Round: Flying squirrels are active throughout the year. They are primarily nocturnal and crepuscular, but nursing females and young may appear during the day. They spend most of their time foraging for food.

Nesting: They build nests in tree hollows, woodpecker nests, old nests of squirrels and magpies, or sometimes in rock crevices. They choose hollows at heights of 3‒12 m.
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Occasionally, they settle near human dwellings, in birdhouses. Their nests are round, made of soft lichens, mosses, and dry grass. Flying squirrels often share nests in pairs. 🦊🐿️🌿
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Red Bird-of-Paradise (Paradisaea rubra)

The Red Bird-of-Paradise is an endemic species of the rainforests of Western New Guinea, Indonesia.

Its body length is about 30 cm, and its tail is 12 cm long—excluding the decorative, corkscrew-like red tail feathers that can extend its total length to 72 cm. It takes at least six years for these feathers to fully develop.

Unlike other birds-of-paradise, it has a distinctive golden-green, raised crest on the back of its head. Its back is dull gray-yellow, and its throat is dark green. Its chest and wings are reddish-brown, and its legs are red. As expected, the male is more vibrant than the female.

These birds primarily feed on fruits, berries, and insects. The Red Bird-of-Paradise is featured on the front of the 20,000 Indonesian rupiah banknote issued in 1992.

Fun Fact: The elaborate courtship dance of the male Red Bird-of-Paradise is truly a sight to behold! 💃🕺
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Canadian Jay (Gray Jay) - Perisoreus canadensis

The smallest bird in the crow family, with a body length of up to 30 cm. It has a long tail, fluffy plumage, and a short beak.

Unlike magpies, the Canadian Jay stores food, not shiny trinkets. With cold winters in Canada and Alaska, food stashes last a long time. If the bird eats until it's full and food remains, it tears off pieces and hides them in secret spots like tree bark cavities or lichen. An average Canadian Jay has nearly 1000 hiding places—and remembers them all!

To stock up, it uses any forest gifts: mice, carrion, seeds, and berries. But there's another important food source—campers! Canadians nicknamed our heroine the "camp robber" for a reason. This thief loves visiting campsites and stealing anything not nailed down that remotely resembles food.

Fun Fact: The Canadian Jay is also known as the "whiskey jack," a name derived from its habit of stealing food from campsites, including whiskey! 🥃🐦
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The Indian rock agama (Sitana ponticeriana) stands out with its striking throat "fan," colored in three hues—blue, black, and red—but this effect only appears during the mating season. The rest of the time, the throat pouch is a matte white.

When calm, the Indian rock agama looks like an ordinary iguana, but its three-colored skin fold under the neck inflates in special cases. For example, when the lizard is scared, communicating with neighbors, or trying to impress a potential mate during the mating season.

Indian rock agamas inhabit not-too-dense forests and open spaces, often rocky or stony, with sparse vegetation. Their homeland is India, Sri Lanka, and eastern regions of Pakistan.

Interesting Fact:
The Indian rock agama is known for its unique courtship display, where the male inflates its colorful throat fan to attract females and deter rival males. This behavior is a fascinating example of sexual selection in the animal kingdom. 🦎💙🖤🔴
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Great Curassow (Pauxi rubra) – The Largest Bird in the Curassow Family

The Great Curassow is the largest bird in the curassow family, with some males weighing up to 7 kg and measuring 80-90 cm in length.

They are typically black, though some may have a brownish hue. Males have a small black crest of backward-curving feathers on their heads and a yellow fleshy growth at the base of their beak, which is absent in females and young males. Females are dressed in a pale brown plumage, with a white, black-spotted head and a light-colored neck. Their bodies are slightly slimmer than males', and their head crests are less prominent.

Great Curassows inhabit Central and South American tropical rainforests, which are sadly shrinking rapidly. Additionally, their meat is considered delicious, leading to intensive hunting by local populations.

Fun Fact: Great Curassows are known for their unique courtship displays, where males perform elaborate dances to attract females. 💃🕺
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Lauriea siagiani - The Fairy Shrimp

Meet the beautiful yet delicate and shy Lauriea siagiani, also known as the "anomura crab" or "pink squatting lobster." Despite its name, this creature is not a true lobster but is closely related to porcelain crabs and hermit crabs.

This enchanting shrimp is a sight to behold with its vibrant colors—rich pink hues adorned with purple-pink spots and yellow hairs. These shy fairies prefer to hide their beauty, taking refuge in the porous body of the giant sponge Xestospongia among the coral reefs off the coasts of Indonesia, the Philippines, and Japan.

Fun Fact: The Lauriea siagiani's vibrant colors serve as a warning to potential predators about its toxicity, making it a fascinating example of nature's defense mechanisms. 🌈🐚
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Blakiston's Fish Owl (Bubo blakistoni) 🦉

This majestic bird boasts an impressive wingspan of nearly 2 meters (180-190 cm) and a body length of up to 70 cm. The female is significantly larger than the male, with some weighing up to 4 kg.

Primarily, the fish owl feeds on salmonid fish during their spawning runs. It also preys on crabs, muskrats, mink, and amphibians. Typically, the owl hunts by spotting swimming fish from a rock, steep bank, or tree overhanging the water, then diving in to catch it with its talons. However, it never fully submerges itself. This method allows it to catch fish weighing up to 1 kg.

While primarily nocturnal, the fish owl may hunt during the day (except in summer, when it hunts only at dusk and night). In the lean winter months, it preys on other birds, rodents, and even scavenges carrion or steals bait from traps.
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Fun Fact: The fish owl is one of the largest owl species in the world and is known for its unique fishing technique, making it a fascinating subject for bird enthusiasts. 🌊🐟
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White-faced Saki (Pithecia pithecia)

The White-faced Saki inhabits northeastern South America, including eastern Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, and northeastern Brazil north of the Amazon.

These primates reach lengths of 30 to 48 cm, with a bushy tail as long as their body. They weigh approximately 1.5 to 1.8 kg. Their hind legs are significantly longer than their front legs, and their tail is not prehensile.

Their fur is long and shaggy. Males are black with a contrasting white or reddish face and throat. Females have black-gray or gray-brown fur, resembling other saki species, and have two white stripes extending from their nostrils down and outward along the lines of their mouth folds.

White-faced Sakis are active during the day, rarely descending to the ground, and typically dwell in the middle or lower canopy levels.

Fun Fact: White-faced Sakis have a unique way of moving through the trees.
They use their powerful hind legs to make impressive leaps, covering distances of up to 6 meters (20 feet) in a single bound! 🌳🐒
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House Centipede: A Helpful Creature!

The house centipede (Scutigera coleoptrata) is completely harmless to humans. Yet, many kill this beneficial insect at first sight, fearing its speed and appearance. Interestingly, in some southern countries, these centipedes are cherished and protected.

An adult house centipede grows to 35—60 mm in length. Its body is yellowish-gray or brown with three reddish-violet or bluish stripes along its length, and its legs are also striped.

Like all arthropods, the house centipede has an external skeleton made of chitin and sclerotin. Its body is flattened and divided into 15 segments, each bearing a pair of legs.

Why are house centipedes beneficial? You guessed it! They hunt flies, cockroaches, termites, spiders, silverfish, fleas, moths, and other small arthropods. House centipedes kill their prey by injecting venom and then consume them.
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Honey Possum (Tarsipes rostratus) - the only fully nectar-feeding mammal (except for some bats).

Its snout is elongated into a trunk-like structure, making up about two-thirds of its head length. The tongue, long and thin, can extend 2.5 cm from the mouth, acting like a brush to collect pollen, while the elongated snout serves as a tube to suck up nectar. The genus name "rostratus" translates from Latin to "beak-like".

Honey possums are smaller than mice: body length is 7-8 cm, tail length is 10 cm, and weight is only 13-17 g.

Fun Fact: Honey possums are active year-round, but their activity peaks during the flowering season of their favorite plants, typically from July to November.

They are found only in the southwestern coastal region of Western Australia, but are quite common in this small range. 🌺🐾
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