Animals
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Wolf

Toddler dies after family pit bull terrier attack in South Africa

Dog attack
A one-year-old girl has died after a pit bull attacked her in Hermanus.

Police say the family dog, a power breed, attacked the child and her grandmother for no apparent reason yesterday.

The girl suffered severe bite marks on her head and body.

Her grandmother is recovering in hospital.

The police's Frederick Van Wyk says, "The pit bull, a family dog, was taken to Hermanus' animal welfare and put down. The grandmother was transferred to a nearby hospital for medical treatment. We've opened an inquest docket for further investigation."

Cloud Lightning

323 reindeer killed by lightning in Norway

reindeer killed by lightning norway
The reindeer were found dead in an area of 50m radius
If the chances of getting struck by lightning are slim, the chances of 323 reindeer getting struck by lightning must be miniscule, but that's exactly what seems to have happened on a mountain plateau in Norway.

When Knut Nylend, an official from the Norwegian Nature Inspectorate (Statens naturoppsyn - NNI) went out on a routine inspection near Hardangervidda National Park on Friday, he wasn't expecting to see hundreds of dead reindeer lying across a field.

"They were lying there dead in a fairly concentrated area. Reindeer are pack animals and are often close together. During a heavy thunderstorm, they may have gathered even closer together out of fear," NNI spokesman Knut Nylend told Norwegian news outlet NTB, as cited by The Local.


Attention

Dead humpback whale removed in Montevideo, Uruguay

A whale is moved on a truck in Montevideo after being removed from the water (Photo: PABLO PORCIUNCULA/AFP/Getty Images)  Read more at: https://inews.co.uk/essentials/news/environment/dead-humpback-whale-loaded-truck-uruguay/
© PABLO PORCIUNCULAA whale is moved on a truck in Montevideo after being removed from the water
A six-metre humpback whale has been loaded onto a truck after dying when it became stranded in a port in Uruguay.

The huge whale was removed from the water in Montevideo on Friday after being in the throes of death for three days in Buceo port. Inquisitive locals looked on as the carcass was lifted out of the port with the help of a crane and loaded onto a truck.

It will be taken to the Montevideo dump for disposal, provincial emergency services chief Jorge Cuello said.

Health risk

A decomposing whale can be a public health risk and because of a build up of natural gases dead whales can explode. First a postmortem will be carried out to determine why it died. A necropsy allows scientific researchers access to tissues and material that would otherwise be extremely difficult or impossible to obtain.

Attention

Bull elephant kills mahout in Thailand

Charging elephant
© GettyCharging elephant
A mahout has been attacked and killed by a male elephant at an elephant camp in Kapong district.

The attack occurred at Win Elephant Camp in tambon Rommanee, said Pol Col Wasant Banluephuet, a deputy investigation chief at Kapong police station. The incident was reported at around 5.30pm on Thursday.

The elephant, Plai Seedor Mongkhol, flew into a rage and attacked mahout Sornchai Kerdsommart, 38, when he went to unchain him from a wooden post he was tethered to at the camp.

The animal then fled into the nearby jungle, camp staff told police.

Sornchai received major injuries to his right arm and face and his skull was fractured. He died on the spot, Thai media reported.

Livestock officials joined other mahouts in the jungle hunt for the escaped elephant, which was tracked down last night, tranquilised and recaptured.

Question

Freaky barnacle with 'tongues' discovered by crab fisherman in California

freaky creature california
© Mathew Wallace/CaterAn alien-like sea creature has been discovered in California and it's baffling experts.
This is the moment a fisherman is shocked by the weird creature he came across while crab netting at Port Hueneme Pier, near Oxnard in California, USA.

On the outside, the skin has a slippery and spiky shell with six massive openings dotted around its surface.

From the various holes, organs similar to mussels and sporting what appear to be teeth shoot out from behind rainbow-coloured flaps.

Despite being viewed more than 600,000 times on social media, nobody has been able to identify the sea monster.

Mathew Wallace, from Palmdale, California, said: "I have never seen anything like this creature in 40 years of sport fishing.

Bug

Blood-sucking insects form 'mosquito tornadoes' in Yekaterinburg, Russia

'Mosquito tornadoes'
'Mosquito tornadoes'
Massive numbers of blood-sucking insects swarmed together in a Russian city to create a series of "mosquito tornadoes" on the horizon.

The video, filmed Aug. 13 in Yekaterinburg, shows the mosquitoes gathered into huge groups around sunset.

The swarms form into spiral-like clouds that resemble tornadoes spinning in the evening sky.

The filmer said each "mosquito tornado" is composed of millions of the insects.


Attention

Discovery of dead harbor seals alarms beachgoers in New Hampshire

Harbor seals like this one have been showing up on New Hampshire beaches
© Seacoast Science CenterHarbor seals like this one have been showing up on New Hampshire beaches.
The discovery of several dead harbor seals on New Hampshire beaches has alarmed beachgoers, but experts say this is the time of year when young seals that have struggled to survive on their own are likely to die.

Members of the Seacoast Science Center's Marine Mammal Rescue Team have responded to as many as seven dead harbor seals found on beaches in Hampton, North Hampton, Rye and Seabrook over the past week. Three other seals were found alive.

According to Sarah Toupin, assistant Marine Mammal Rescue Team coordinator, the period from late August into October is a time when seal weanlings often wash up on the beaches. Some are deceased while others may be weak and fighting to live.

Most of the seals found within the past week were young.

Attention

Dead pygmy whale washes up on Killarney Beach, Australia

The dead pygmy right whale calf washed up on Killarney Beach
The dead pygmy right whale calf washed up on Killarney Beach
The legacy of a whale washed up on Killarney Beach on Friday morning will live on.

The dead pygmy right whale calf that washed up on a section of the beach near The Cutting will go to Museum Victoria for research purposes.

Department of environment, land, water and planning (DELWP) senior biodiversity officer Mandy Watson said the two-metre whale was identified from photos as a juvenile male.

"This is a very valuable specimen that Museum Victoria is keen to study and add to its collection for research on the evolution of whales," Ms Watson said.

Beaker

BPA disrupts male turtle's brain development to show behaviour common in females

Turtle
© StrangerView / FotoliaCheryl Rosenfeld and her team found that BPA can induce behavioral changes in turtles, reprogramming male turtle brains to show behavior common in females. Researchers worry this could lead to population declines in painted turtles.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical used in many consumer products including water bottles, metal food storage products and certain resins. Often, aquatic environments such as rivers and streams become reservoirs for BPA, affecting turtle habitats. Last year, a team of researchers led by the University of Missouri determined that BPA can disrupt sexual function in painted turtles, causing males to develop female sex organs. Now, the team has shown that BPA also can induce behavioral changes in turtles, reprogramming male turtle brains to show behavior common in females. Researchers worry this could lead to population declines in painted turtles.

"Previously, our research team found that BPA and ethinyl estradiol (EE2), a hormone found in birth control pills, could 'sex-reverse' turtles from males to females," said Cheryl Rosenfeld, an associate professor of biomedical sciences in the MU College of Veterinary Medicine and an investigator in the Bond Life Sciences Center. "Painted turtles and other reptiles lack sex chromosomes. The gender of painted turtles and other reptiles is determined by the incubation temperature of the egg during development. Studies have shown that exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), such as BPA, can override incubation temperature and switch the sex of males to females. In our latest study, we found that BPA also affects how the male brain is 'wired,' potentially inducing males to show female type behavioral patterns."

Comment: Turtles are not the only species that are being affected by BPA because similar effects have also been found to occur in humans.


Attention

Aggressive deer killed after attacking four people in Geneva, Switzerland

Red deer
Authorities in Geneva have put down a rutting deer that attacked four people over the course of 48 hours, according to reports.

The buck went on the rampage at the end of July in a residential area in the Collonge-Bellerive area of Geneva, newspaper 24 Heures said on Thursday.

Describing his experience to the paper, one of the animal's victims, José Taboada, said he was driving his van through the area on July 25th when he saw it leap out of a sunflower field a few metres from his vehicle.

Taboada got out of the van to take a photo of the buck with his phone when it attacked.