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1. Crows can remember the faces of individual humans. They can also hold a grudge.
2. In Texas, according to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department it is legal to kill Bigfoot. Bigfoot is considered a non-protected nongame animal.
3. Sunflowers can help clean radioactive soil. Japan is using this to rehabilitate Fukashima. Almost 10,000 packets of sunflower seeds have been sold to the people of the city.
4. Reindeer are one of the only mammals that can see UV light.
5. Vanilla flavoring is sometimes made with the urine of beavers.
6. Clinomania is the excessive desire to lay in bed all day.
7. 1912 was the last time Olympic gold medals were made entirely of gold.
8. A bottle of Coca-Cola has a PH scale of 2.8, and could dissolve a nail in just 4 days.
9. Humans cannot walk in a straight line without a visual point – When blindfolded, we will gradually walk in a circle.
10. If you ate nothing but rabbit meat, you would die from protein poisoning. This would be a mixture of too much protein and an absence of fat in the diet.
11. The loudness of a monkey is relative to the size of its testicles. Researchers found that the smaller the testicles, the louder the monkey.
12. A study from Harvard University finds that having no friends can be just as deadly as smoking. Both effect levels of a blood-clotting protein.
13. If you heat up a magnet, it will lose its magnetism.
14. If you keep a goldfish in a dark room, it will become pale.
15. While shedding, geckos will eat their skin in order to prevent predators from finding and eating them more easily.
16. It’s not just humans who are right or left-handed. Most female cats prefer using their right paw and males are more likely to be left-pawed.
17. Intentionally farting on a California prison guard can get you an additional 11 years in prison.
July 8, 2021: For two months, a mysterious bird disease had been rippling across parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern United States. Now, it had apparently reared its head in Kentucky. Casey quickly asked for samples to ship to the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS) in Athens, Georgia.
In April, scores of birds in the greater Washington, D.C., area began displaying strange symptoms. Their eyes were swollen and crusty; some became disoriented, started twitching, and died. “They were having a hard time seeing,” says Nicole Nemeth of the SCWDS. “Sometimes they don’t seem to be able to use their hind legs.”
By the end of May, similar reports were rolling in from across Maryland, West Virginia and Virginia. By June, sick birds had turned up in Delaware, New Jersey, Ohio, Tennessee, Florida, Indiana, and Pennsylvania, according to the U.S. Geological Survey Wildlife Health Information Sharing Partnership. To date, thousands of sick and dying birds have been reported to SCWDS and other wildlife disease centers in nearby states. Casey’s department alone has gotten more than 1,200 calls since that first sample.
Read article here.
Read article here.
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