Sunday, 7 December 2014

ANIMALS AND THERE NATURE?SOME..

Japanese Macaque



Originally encouraged to enter the hot springs in around 1965 by locals throwing peanuts into the pools, now the monkeys enter of their own accord and have formed a “hot tub culture”. Which monkeys are allowed to enter the pools is decided by the social hierarchy, with females and their young taking priority.

Honey bees


 Most bees either die or hibernate during the colder months, honey bees are able to keep active all winter long. It was recently shown that they can decouple their wings from their muscles, allowing them to vibrate  muscles without moving their wings, bringing  temperature of their bodies up to 44 degrree centigrade.

Emperor penguins



In groups of thousands allow Emperor penguins to keep warm even when the temperature drops to -40 degrree centigrade. During particularly  periods, they’ll rock back onto the heels of their feet with their toes pointing up and using their stiff tail as  support, reducing the surface area in contact with the ice, and thus minimising heat loss.

American bison 



A big animal covered in a thick winter coat, with a coarse guard hairs protecting a downy undercoat, is not the only way Yellowstone’s bison keep warm. The geo-thermal springs might be too hot for the bison to take a dip, but they can still take advantages of the warm steam and rocks surrounding the geysers   when winter sets in.




Alpine marmot:




Some of the are  animals simply bunker down and sit out the coldest months without moving. The “alpine marmot “takes this to the extreme, and after lining their burrow with new bedding, seal off the entrance with a mixture of soil and their own faces, then bed down with the rest of the group and enter a form of torpor for the next eight months.WOW AMAZING!

Arctic wooly bear caterpillars:





One of the most extreme survivors of the Arctic, these caterpillars spend about 90 perecnt of their life frozen(amazed), and can take around 14 years to grow big enough to finally pupate. As the temperature drops, the insects produce crypto-protective compounds – such as glycerol – in their cells. These molecules act like antifreeze, allowing them to survive to temperatures below -60C(too very cold season)



SOME ANIMALS NATURE ARE DISCUSSED!




DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ANIMAL AND HUMAN NATURE?

Both animals and the humans are communicate among themselves according to their needs in the lifestyle. The forms of communication  similar in both animals and humans but, the scenario  are different. Although, the forms  are classified and explained and  similar in animals and humans, the humans are developed a very complex and rapidly expanding means of communication. Humans have been trying to understand the animal behaviours  and their means of communication through the scientific method, which is another form of communication in human.


SPIRITUALITY OF THE    “NATURE”


According to the “Sitting Bull”
“Every seed is awakened and so is all animal life. It is through this mysterious power that we too have our being and we therefore yield to our animal neighbours the same right as ourselves, to inhabit this land.”








                      EXPLANATION ABOUT ANIMAL AND  HUMAN NATURE:
  Q:  Some people say, if a man fell he was lower than an animal. Where exactly is the station of man and the station of the animal on this world?
 Q: They are from the same species or they are entirely distinct?”


SO,  About these questions




Humans are the animals. If aliens came to Earth today and used to same species/genus classification system that we do, they would classify us along-side two other species chimps . We  would be the third chimpanzee (there is the book by that name by a prominent evolutionary biologist if you are interested). Most of the traits that we think of as being specific to humans are shared by at least one other species (tool use, planning for the future, mourning/burying dead, recreational sex, language capacity, etc.). Obviously, our brains make us vastly different from our closest living relatives, but there are far more similarities [between us and primates] than differences overall.