Thursday, May 5, 2016

All about me...


Hi my name is Chea Sokhom. I am Cambodian.
02-02-1990.

I've generally adored creatures more than I cherished people. I know, bunches of individuals say that (many individuals I know, at any rate, yet perhaps that is on the grounds that all the general population I know are dying heart lefty creature cherishing sorts). For my situation, however, I truly mean it (in any event more often than not).

I've been an enormous creature significant other since birth, fundamentally. When I was a child, we had a feline named Trouble, whom I delighted in pursuing, hassling, and driving to cuddle with me; she appreciated routinely scratching my face when she wasn't murmuring and being a lovebug. She lived to be 16, and not long after she kicked the bucket, we quickly embraced 2 little cats.

Aside from my first year of school, I've actually never NOT had a feline. These days, I have 2 kitties (Joon, 14, and Batman, 10-ish) and a puppy (Henny, 8-ish), all salvages. They are one of my essential purposes behind living - I cherish them so much I can barely bargain here and there.

My reverence for creatures at times shows itself in bizarre ways, similar to how I can't drive past street kill without needing to screech and toss myself from the vehicle. Gracious, and I need to physically turn away amid those dreadful Sarah McLachlan ads - you know the ones. (I uncertainty only i'm there; those promotions are traumatic!)

Anyway, here are my five reasons why creatures are superior to anything individuals. Fill me in as to whether you concur with my assessments.1. THEY'RE COVERED IN FUR!!1!

They're similar to living, breathing squishy toys. How might anyone be able to NOT go immediately mush-spout and begin automatically discharging squeaky sharp clamors when stood up to with fluffy critters? (I'm equivalent open door - my most grounded energy is for felines and puppies, yet bunnies and gerbils and ferrets and a wide range of other little textured creatures are awesome, as well). How would anyone be able to NOT have any desire to take an adoptable hide face home for their own special? There's nothing I like more than viewing frightful TV like "The Bachelorette" with a murmuring feline sprawled over my mid-section. Ideally while scooping solidified yogurt into my throat. 2. THEY CAN'T TALK.

This implies they can't shout at you, or battle with you, or put down you, or attempt to make you desirous, or affront your insight, or heckle at you (heh), or approach you for things you aren't set up to give, or let you know how to carry on with your life. This likewise implies they (unfortunately) can't propose marriage, or thank you for supper, or give you life counsel, or request that you change their feline litter. Be that as it may, who cares. Sitting peacefully with a creature is amazing. Furthermore, they discuss viably with howls, barks, looks, glares, and odd non-verbal communication (my undisputed top choice: lift butt, when a feline pushes his can noticeable all around to demonstrate that he needs you to scratch his back).3. THEY'RE HONEST: IT'S ALL ABOUT INSTINCT, MAN.

They have no ulterior intentions. They don't plot to take your beau, or make vapid remarks about your roots beginning to go dark, or answer imperative inquiries with baffled moans. They're all heart and gut. They do what they feel, and they can tell in case you're tragic. When they cherish you, it's reasonable. On the off chance that they aren't that into you, it's additionally clear. There are no speculating recreations with creatures, no human-scale nuances, subtleties or shades of dim. Indeed, there can be some blended signs when you initially meet them - when they're not certain about you, when you're first beginning to fabricate a bond. Be that as it may, once they've figured out how to trust you, they have a tendency to end up wholeheartedly fixated on you - and they have zero enthusiasm for "playing it cool," pretending impassion, or not getting back to you back. They have more essential things to eat.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Short-Tailed River Stingray..

Greatest Diameter:

Up to 4.9 feet 

Greatest Weight: 

More than 450 pounds 

Cuts Like a Knife: 

Round fit as a fiddle, the short-tailed waterway stingray may look safe, yet it has a mystery weapon: a venomous stinger. These individuals from the shark family don't regularly assault, yet they will in the event that they need to. With a specific end goal to secure themselves, when they feel debilitated, they'll lash their stingers out, leaving cuts on their foes. The lion's share of stingray wounds in people happen when individuals inadvertently venture on beams while they're strolling along the ground underneath waterways. Stingrays shield themselves from predators by covering their bodies in sand, making it simple for individuals to venture on them coincidentally. 

Bunches of Little Ones: 

These stingrays are the biggest of the Potamotrygon species, achieving 4.9 feet (1.5 meters) in measurement and weighing 459 pounds (208 kilograms). The biggest recorded short-tailed waterway stingray find included one weighing 661 pounds (300 kilograms). The female stingray doesn't lay eggs. Rather, it brings forth full grown, youthful stingrays and can convey upwards of 19 pups at one time. These pups eat microscopic fish, little creatures that float along in the water, after they're conceived, until they get somewhat more seasoned and begin expending little mollusks, shellfish, the hatchlings of oceanic bugs and fish. 

On the Hunt: 


In the freshwaters of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay is the place you'll locate these jeopardized creatures. Anglers frequently chase them for nourishment by finding the stingrays napping while the animals are resting in shallow waters. The lovely shades of the youthful short-tailed waterway stingrays place them among the numerous amphibian creatures caught and sold for aquariums. In any case, man isn't the main risk to this species. Water contamination, hydroelectric plants and environment corruption additionally assume a part in their reducing numbers. 


Jeremy Wade's Tips for Catching a Short-Tailed River Stingray: 

"A couple times I felt something that felt like the tail hitting the line. One thing that always stressed me was the way that, this being a stingray with an unpleasant tail, it may very well sliced through the line at any minute."

Electric Eel


Most extreme Length: 

More than 8 feet 

Most extreme Weight: 

Up to 44 pounds 

Sudden stunning exhibition: 

The electric eel is one waterway beast that could actually give you a jar on the off chance that you go over it. That is on account of this eel is what's known as an electric fish, which essentially implies that it can deliver and sense electric fields. The electric eel utilizes these fields to shock its prey and help it connect with different eels. It can develop to 8.2 feet (2.5 meters) long and release more than 600 volts of power. Getting stunned by an eel can bring about respiratory loss of motion and heart disappointment. 

Waterboys: 

Electric eels swim around in the waters of Guatemala, Argentina and the Caribbean island of Trinidad. They are basically oceanic animals, in spite of the fact that they can get by for a few hours out of the water the length of their skin stays clammy. Electric cells line up like little batteries and summary the length of these eels' bodies, giving their heads a positive charge and their tails a negative one. The more drawn out the eel, the all the more effective a stun it gives. Since they don't have teeth, electric eels swallow their suppers — which incorporate fish and little warm blooded creatures for grown-ups and spineless creatures for more youthful eels — entirety. This species has been known not its prey by framing a C shape around creatures and rendering them oblivious with a solid electric heartbeat. 



Night Riders: 

Electric eels are nighttime animals that don't see exceptionally well. Their bodies make up for their poor vision by creating beats of low-voltage power that help them to move in dull streams and lakes. Fundamentally, the eels discharge electric signs from their tails into the water, making electric fields that are like attractive fields. At the point when a fish or other creature goes into an eel's electric field, the signs change, cautioning the eel and telling it the area, size, shape, separate, and even the sexual orientation and age of the interloper. Electric eels can tell if animals moving in their electric fields are appropriate mates or predators. This field likewise helps eels chase for nourishment stowing away in dinky waters.

CAT FISH


Heterobranchus longifilis, referred to in quite a bit of Africa as the vundu additionally called the dog, lenda, certa, sampa and different names, is the greatest freshwater species in southern Africa. The vundu loves profound water and by and large comes up during the evening to feast upon fish, little vertebrates, and remains and offal that villagers toss in the water. In any case, it’s sufficiently unquenchable to intensely scrounge around huge game angling water crafts in Egypt's Lake Nasser. Its length makes it a noteworthy searching catch for game anglers. 


Long and Lean 

The vundu catfish is long and solid, however not a heavyweight like the kamba. (In case you're an expert ball fan, consider Pau Gasol or Yao Ming, instead of Shaquille O'Neal.) It has a long, wide head, an extensively adjusted nose, and superolateral (high and to the side) eyes, with wide tooth plates and a very much created suprabranchial organ for breathing air. Allegedly, it can make due out of water for drawn out stretches of time. Its body is olive cocoa on the dorsal surface, with a light-chestnut or grayish underbelly. The Vundu can live for up to 12 years. 

The most effective method to Catch One 

As per the African Angler Web website, vundu on Lake Nasser frequently search near shore during the evening, so that is the point at which you ought to be out there after them. It's a truly solid fish that sets up a decent battle, so utilize tough apparatus. Canned meat is a decent trap, since it's slick and emits a charming scent to the fish. Thrown your goad 6 to 10 feet from the shoreline in the shallower water. Avoid the more profound water where your trap may lose all sense of direction in the weeds. 

Why You Should Return it to the River 

Fishbase.org puts this species in the "high to high powerlessness" classification as far as survival in nature. By utilizing catch-and-discharge, you can keep the greatest, hardiest examples alive, so they can continue duplicating.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

FOX


Foxes belong to the family of Canada and they are usually a little smaller than your everyday domestic dog. There are about 37 different species that can be referred to as a fox. They usually have a narrow snout and a bushy tail. Of the 37 species only 12 actually belong to the original line of foxes. The most common species of foxes is the red fox. Foxes are usually thought to be very cunning. All in all they are magnificent animals; they are wild but absolutely beautiful.