Misidentification of an ivasive fish-species in Florida :
Fish switch: Identity of mystery invader in Florida waters corrected after 20 years
Fish switch: Identity of mystery invader in Florida waters corrected after 20 years
Crestview man captures video of mysterious creature in back yard (VIDEO)
This may be a jaguarundi, my humble opinion says it is.
The cat is visible so briefly in the video that you really can't tell anything other than that it is small (i.e. not a "black panther") and that the guineafowl were so not frightened by it that they started chasing it.Possibly, but I think Felis catus is the culprit there.
Insane numbers!I know that introduced Green iguanas are a problen on many Caribbean islands but on Grand Cayman it seems to be realy bad. A culling programm is active and the numbers catched are realy unbelieveble :
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Was browsing through pages on the IUCN and saw something that made me do a double-take. The lowland paca is listed as having an extant and introduced population in Algeria. I couldn't find any other information about this apparent introduction on any other sources.
The IUCN page is included below; curiously only the Cuban introduced range is included on the distribution map:
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
I'm not sure if this is true or not - I hear this refrenced all the time, but eBird actually has an accepted record:Mandarins can't produce hybrids because of a chromosome incompatibility with all other waterfowl, even the closely related Wood Duck.
Accepted or not, it is extremely unlikely. 'Looked more phenotypically Mandarin' -- hardly surprising if it was 100% Mandarin! Mandarin have been bred in captivity in large numbers for two centuries, during which there has been no acceptable record of the species producing a hybrid. All the photographs have shown hormonally compromised Mandarins exhibiting incomplete male plumage. Thus ebird record is likely to refer to such a bird. The suggestion that it might be a back cross is particularly unlikely, given that all Wood Duck hybrids are likely to be infertile.The congeric Carolina Wood Duck has hybridised with many species of both surface feeding and diving ducks.I'm not sure if this is true or not - I hear this refrenced all the time, but eBird actually has an accepted record:
https://ebird.org/checklist/S62423052
I would think that if this hybrid was impossible Cornell wouldn't bother creating the option.
This will be a typo. The text says the introduced populations are in Cuba and the Lesser Antilles.Was browsing through pages on the IUCN and saw something that made me do a double-take. The lowland paca is listed as having an extant and introduced population in Algeria. I couldn't find any other information about this apparent introduction on any other sources.
The IUCN page is included below; curiously only the Cuban introduced range is included on the distribution map:
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
I would think that if this hybrid was impossible Cornell wouldn't bother creating the option.
Yes, I've heard of this. They are actually most common in and around the zoo (according to my field guide).Common wall lizards in Cincinnati and surrounding areas according to Ohio DNR
I was looking to see if I could find out about any established populations of Feral Chickens in the US (outside of the well-known ones in Florida and Hawaii) and found they are common in one town in Alabama and another in Texas.
Just looked into these some more - apparently the population I thought was in Alabama is actually Fitzgerald, Georgia. And also, they aren't Feral Chickens, they are legitimate wild-type Red Junglefowl.I know earlier on this thread the Chestnut-fronted Macaw was mentioned as being basically gone in Florida - I did some digging and this does not seem to be the case.
I was looking to see if I could find out about any established populations of Feral Chickens in the US (outside of the well-known ones in Florida and Hawaii) and found they are common in one town in Alabama and another in Texas.