nanonaturalist:

nanonaturalist:

I wanted to introduce y’all to a Texas-sized mosquito, the gallinipper. I do a “finger for scale” thing frequently, but in this case somebody thought I was offering a free meal. Haaaaaaa NOPE!

Getting bit by one of these ladies feels about as painful as getting stuck with a hypodermic needle. Not too pleasant!

August 18, 2018

Good question! I have the answer in both metric and imperial units!

Left: cm scale / Right: inch scale

Note: above mosquito is not the same individual in the original post, and may be a little smaller or larger.

This one is by far not the largest one I’ve seen. There was a male so large I thought he was a crane fly at first.

Wanna know how I collect these? I go outside in a tshirt with an empty pill bottle. When they land on me, I pop the bottle over them and quickly cap them. Some of them are so big their legs don’t all fit 😱

August 23, 2018

That’s almost cute. “ooh, dinner??” 

These guys can bite clean through thin T-shirts. They fortunately aren’t too common where I am. Terrible little beasties. 

Something I think about a lot is that if they have a Batman show in your Bat-verse, they would have to have their own origin story and secret identities… any thoughts on what they might be? Like, would it be wildly off the mark, like Were-Batman, or would it be spookily similar to how it actually happened? (Sorry if you’ve already talked about it and I missed it)

unpretty:

All of the blinds and curtains had been closed. Finn tried to turn on his living room light, and frowned when it didn’t work. He rocked the switch back and forth to no avail, squinting up at the ceiling.

Eyes started to glow in the far corner of the room.

He screeched and dropped his bag on the floor.

“… Bat… man…?” he asked finally. His answer was silence. “Are you… here about the show…? You’re here about the show. We’re — this is all above-the-board, legally speaking.”

Batman stood. At least, that was what Finn assumed happened. The eyes moved from eye level to significantly above that.

“Also legalities aside I think we’ve done a good job of being as respectful as we can within a satirical context,” he added hastily, backing toward the door. “And at this point it’s out of my hands so I couldn’t put a stop to production even if I wanted to. Which isn’t to say that you couldn’t find a way, because you’re Batman, it would just be really nice if you didn’t do that.”

“Convince me.”

It took him a minute to realize that Batman had spoken, to register that they were words in a specific order with a specific meaning. “… convince…? You want the elevator pitch?” Finn wasn’t getting a lot of useful feedback and he was trying really hard not to burst into fear tears and he didn’t understand how anyone could possibly jaywalk in Gotham.

He took a deep breath. “Right. The elevator pitch. I can do that, no problem, not a problem.” He clapped his hands together. “So it’s a show about, uh, Batman — it’s a show about you — not the real you, obviously, it’s — I’m just going to say ‘Batman’, I think you probably get that I mean Batman as an idea and not — anyway.” Finn cleared his throat, tried to swallow the lump in his way.

“The core of the idea is, uh, what if — what if Batman was just a guy. Some guy. No powers, none of, uh—” He flailed his arms into the darkness in an attempt to gesture at whichever part of it was Batman. “Just, you know, a guy. So our story is about, uh, he’s a guy named Johnny Butler — we wanted to name him Johann, you know, for Die Fledermaus, but that seemed a little on-the-nose so we went with Johnny — and he’s this blind guy, and he’s an inventor! He invents, uh, this thing, and it lets him echolocate and he can see all this stuff other people can’t see, and he makes this thing so he can fly, and, you know, other stuff. He lives in Gotham with all these crazy villains, so he decides he’s going to use his inventions to fight them! Because, uh. He can? And Robin is this child prodigy who can talk to birds, he’s sort of, he’s the Marty and Johnny is Doc, or like Penny to Inspector Gadget. That’s. That’s the basics, basically. Is that okay so far?”

“Johnny Butler.”

“Yeah! Yeah. It’s, uh, because of Johann? I already told you that. And how, you know, a batman was like a kind of valet, like a butler, so we were trying to do sort of a pun thing? There’s going to be a lot of puns. I mean, you probably saw the fake intro we made on YouTube? With the theme song? It’s all going to be like that, with the retro aesthetic and camp and the cheesy effects, we’re keeping all of that for the real show. I have this brother, my little brother, he’s really into Batman, uh, you, he collects articles and stuff, and he’s eight, and I wanted to make something that he could watch. So it’s going to be kind of a show for kids, like a funny show — not making fun of you! I can show you a script, if you want.”

“Show me.”

“Yes! Yes sir, absolutely, not a problem, sure.” He bent, and tried to dig through his bag in the dark. “I, uh — here, I think this is it.” He offered a thick stack of paper to the darkness, which took it.

Rowsdower’s Revenge,” the shadow read.

“Wrong script!” Finn said, snatching the script back. “Sorry, sorry, ignore that, sorry. Here, this one, I think this is the one.” He handed off the other script. “I would turn on the light, but…”

Finn squinted, trying to make out a face in the dark. He would have thought that the light from those weird white eyes would have had more of an impact. But while there was definitely the pale lower half of a face, everything else was just a shape, darker than the rest of the room.

He could make out the sound of pages flipping. And another, different sound. A pen?

“Holy homicide, Batman.” It wasn’t quite a question.

“Yeah, it’s, uh, kind of like a catchphrase? Thing?”

“Batcomputer.”

“Yeah.”

“Bat-o-vision.”

“Y… yeah. It’s like — I mean, you have the batmobile and those batarangs — I don’t know if you actually call them that, but, uh. We thought, you know, wouldn’t it be funny if Batman just puts ‘bat’ in front of everything? As a joke.”

“Batman and Robin consult the giant lighted lucite map of Gotham City, parentheses, labeled.”

“Obviously you don’t actually go around putting labels on everything, it just, uh.” Trying to explain jokes to Batman was the most painful thing he had ever done in his entire life and he wanted to die.

“Johnny Butler is blind.”

“Right.”

“The actor isn’t blind.”

“He… is not.”

“Why.”

“He’s — casting is — that’s not really how we—”

“Fix it.”

“I. Okay.”

“King Tut.”

“We’re trying to get Rami Malek but he’s been pretty busy but I’ll make sure we get someone Egyptian because I can tell it’s important to you.”

“The theme song.”

“We can get a new one!”

“No.” Batman handed the script back, and Finn took it, hands shaking. “Robin likes it.”

“He does? The, the na-na-na-na-na—”

“Stop.”

Finn shut his mouth so fast his teeth clicked.

“I said Robin likes it.”

“Right.” He looked down at the script in his hands, or tried to. His eyes were adjusting, but still not enough. He brought the paper close to his face, squinting. Had Batman written notes on his script? It smelled like permanent marker. He could barely make out a few crossed out words. “You know, if Robin ever wanted to come by set after we start shooting, we could—”

The lights came on.

“Augh!” Finn shut his eyes, then blinked furiously. His apartment was empty and the window was open. He looked back down at the script, and flipped through it. The notes looked like they’d been left by a monk, taking a break from illuminating Bibles. They sat next to words crossed out and sometimes replaced, saying things like ‘mental illness is not a joke’ and ‘don’t use this word’ and ‘words with more plosives are inherently more humorous’. A note beside the description of Batman’s lair mentioned a carefully labeled ‘Historically Inaccurate But Well-Meaning Tyrannosaurus Rex’.

Finn hit the speed dial on his phone.

“Marco. Dude. You are not going to believe the notes I just got on this — okay, wait, first of all, we need to recast Batman. We need a blind guy. No, like a real blind guy. A tall one. Really tall. And Robin needs more screentime, we’ve got to curry favor with Robin. No, the real Robin. I have never been more serious. Making sure Robin likes this is going to be vital to not getting our asses kicked.”

raisel-the-riveter:

raisel-the-riveter:

addie has been sending me pictures of the newspaper in her part of florida and it has me questioning the reality of the entire region. are you sure you’ve moved to a real place, I have texted her several times now. she is not sure.

[images: 1) a headline reading, “Colombia’s former anti-corruption chief pleads guilty to bribery scheme at Dolphin Mall”
2) an advertisement with the heading “IGUANAS TAKING OVER?” It features several pictures of iguanas and a list of places on one’s property that this company can get iguanas out of, which includes something called a SEA WALL. people out there need help to fight the IGUANAS in the SEA WALL like this is fucking pacific rim]

me: does the lake near your school have alligators in it
addie:
they shoo the alligatos away if they show up
me: …….. they what
addie:
oh, animal control will come and catch giant reptiles/release elsewhere
me: OH
me:
when you said “they” shoo the alligators I was absolutely picturing school maintenance personnel chasing them with brooms

at this point I’m just like, SURE, heroic janitors steve irwin-ing their way across campus, that probably happens??? I legit have lost my sense of what the scale of realistic occurrences is when it comes to the alleged south florida area

etherealeunoia8:

bettsplendens:

etherealeunoia8:

bettsplendens:

amazingpetenclosures:

etherealeunoia8:

I upgraded my Lightly Salted Shrimp and Snail Soup (aka my Opae Ula (

Halocaridina rubra) brackish water tank). They were in a 1 gallon tank (the first two pictures) and they will now be in a 3.5 gallon tank that just finished cycling (last three pictures). The new tank has a lava rock, much more crushed coral, and a large shell for hiding. It looks pretty bare without plants but they naturally live in anchialine pools in Hawaii so not many plants thrive there. Thinking about buying some macroalgae though.

The tank will hold my 9 shrimp and my snails, though the snails recently had offspring so I will have to wait for them to be larger in order to transfer them. Hopefully soon the shrimp will berry! (Both the shrimp and snails are captive-bred so that none came directly from Hawaii). Hopefully they all thrive in their new home.

@amazingpetenclosures 

Thank you for tagging me! Brackish tanks are always so interesting to me

Hey, my Opae Ula are in that exact aquarium! They have white sand and some coral rock that I found in Hawaii. Also a big ole clump of macroalgae. 

That’s awesome! Do you have any snails

No snails, I wanted to keep the tank no-feeding for as long as possible so they’ll do well while I’m away at college. I have 10, since January this year. One berried up for a little while but I haven’t seen babies yet. There’s algae all over the place, so they don’t need any food. I found the rock for their aquarium washed up on a beach, and I think there must have been algae spores or something of the sort on the rock, because it only took a couple weeks for ~5 different kinds to grow. I haven’t fed them once and don’t think I’ll need to until the colony at least triples in size. All I have to do is top off the water once a week. 

They’re such great little pets! I like watching them doot around the tank. Cute round guys. Hopefully mine will breed soonish. I’d eventually like to upgrade them to at least a 5 gallon, preferably more, and add snails. 

Did you get yours from petshrimp.com? That’s where I got mine. I suggest ordering the macroalgae from them if you decide to get some, it’s a neat algae and has been doing well under just the little LED that came with the tank. The bundle has about quadrupled in size since January. 

Yep! From Petshrimp.com. That’s where I got my snails too, though I kind of wish I hadn’t since they won’t stop reproducing so I have way more snails than anticipated and no sign of slowing down their growth so far and I feel too responsible to kill any of them or sell them for fish food. Sadly one of my shrimp has died but the rest (9) are loving their new tank. I think that is where I’ll get my macroalgae when I get some more money. Just spent it all on their new tank

Good to know the snails do that, I wasn’t sure if they’d breed like crazy. It’s too bad assassin snails (very slow-breeding snails that eat other snails) are only freshwater, or they’d make great control. Might have to avoid the snails. Those, at least, I’d definitely consider a couple of nerites in a 10gal tank. Nerite snail eggs hatch in brackish water, I think, but there’s a market for those.

I’m only about 80% sure I still have 10 shrimp, actually. They have lots of nooks, and I’ve never counted all 10 at once since putting them in. I haven’t seen any dead ones, though, and it’s entirely reasonable that a tank with about 15 different good hiding spots wouldn’t show me all 10 shrimp at the same time. 

What kind of color variation do you have? Mine range all the way from one that’s just about clear to one that’s as deep red as they ever get. Most are more or less in the middle- red, but transparentish red. I suppose it’d be possible to selectively breed just the brightest red ones, though tricky given that they don’t like being moved.