Zoological inaccuracies & mistakes

In a Soviet book I seen a reference to German zoologist Heinrich Dathe, allegedly he observed porcupine shooting quills in Berlin zoo, with force strong enough for the quills getting stuck in wooden fence.
Also circus trainer that sold porcupines for my friends' petting zoo told that she observed quill shooting too.
 
I’m quite sure that in an episode of one of Steve Backshaw’s expeditions, where he scales the side of a mountain in Borneo, you can hear screaming peeha’s when he’s travelling through the jungle towards the mountain...
 
Screenshot_20210120-222454_Facebook.jpg
The marsupial (crest-tailed mulgara) was thought to be extinct in New South Wales, but not globally extinct.
Screenshot_20210120-224632_Facebook.jpg
The bat (greater horseshoe bat) was seen in Kent for the first time in over a century, but it exists elsewhere in the UK. This article prompted many ignorant comments about COVID-19, by the way.
Screenshot_20210119-225712_Facebook.jpg
Picture should show the common brushtail possum. Also, the location name is Mount Pirongia.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20210120-222454_Facebook.jpg
    Screenshot_20210120-222454_Facebook.jpg
    111 KB · Views: 56
  • Screenshot_20210119-225712_Facebook.jpg
    Screenshot_20210119-225712_Facebook.jpg
    115.9 KB · Views: 57
  • Screenshot_20210120-224632_Facebook.jpg
    Screenshot_20210120-224632_Facebook.jpg
    131.9 KB · Views: 54
Fish exhibit
cOLWIUyRiKA.jpg
 
In a Soviet book I seen a reference to German zoologist Heinrich Dathe, allegedly he observed porcupine shooting quills in Berlin zoo, with force strong enough for the quills getting stuck in wooden fence.
Also circus trainer that sold porcupines for my friends' petting zoo told that she observed quill shooting too.

Reminds me of cow tipping. It’s impossible, but people claim to have done it before.
 
I have been listening to The Snow and The Works on the Northern Line on BBC Radio 4 (BBC Radio 4 - The Snow And The Works On The Northern Line by Ruth Thomas, Episode 1). At one stage, the narrator, who works at the Prehistoric Studies Institute mentions Mary Anning discovering an ichthyosaur, saying that she had discovered a dinosaur before dinosaurs had been heard of. I would have thought she would have known that ichthyosaurs were not dinosaurs.
 
eight_col_eight_col_RATS.jpg
This image is from a recent news article about New Zealand's Predator-Free 2050 goal. Is the mustelid a stoat or a marten?
 

Attachments

  • eight_col_eight_col_RATS.jpg
    eight_col_eight_col_RATS.jpg
    62.8 KB · Views: 53
An otherwise very knowledgeable and interesting professor who taught a part of one of my university courses strongly believed that the European rabbit population in New Zealand had been successfully controlled using myxomatosis, to the extent that he included a question about the subject in that course's exam.

Another university professor who I was taught by thought that one of the pre-human-existence penguin species that was found in New Zealand might have been driven to extinction by humans. I can't remember exactly which penguin species it was, but it was a species that had a very long bill compared to modern penguins.
 
Dragon-winged chinasaur
Pterosaurs and sea reptiles are common in dino books, as well as arachnids in insect books. But not every book explains their taxonomy (this one does)
aW_HgywKKdI.jpg

White rhino labeled as Sumatran, and jaguar among African animals
aTKt-b3PEuA.jpg
 
Last edited:
Back
Top