Showing posts with label record breakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label record breakers. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2011

MAN GUTTED BY FISH BLUNDER

KURT Price was delighted with the huge fish he caught and ate – until he realised it would have been a record-breaker.

Kurt, 25, reeled in the monster sea bass on a weekend trip to Tenby, south-west Wales.

It was only after he had cooked and eaten it that he researched the record books and realised his catch would have been the biggest of its kind.

The record for a shore-caught sea bass is 19lb 11oz. Angling experts who have seen a picture of Kurt’s catch believe it was bigger than 20lb.

But Kurt, of Cwmbran, Monmouthshire, cannot claim the record because he failed to weigh the fish – and has eaten the evidence.

Kurt said the fish was very tasty but added: “I’m gutted.”

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

New bee discovered with largest tongue in world

Monday, 13 June 2011 12:32 Jim Glade

Scientists at Colombia's National University (UN) have discovered a new species of bee in the southern Colombian department of Nariño that has a tongue twice the size of its body, according to monthly university publication UNPeriodico.

Euglossa natesi n. sp., also known as the "orchid bee" or "jewel bee," is a species recognized by scientists for its luminescent mix of blue, green, bronze and gold, as well as its abnormally large tongue. This new type of jewel bee found near the Ecuadorian border in southern Nariño, has what scientists at the National University are calling the largest tongue discovered thus far.

"This insect is unusual, because it has the largest tongue found thus far and measures two times the size of its body," said professor Rudolfo Ospina, the director of the biology department at UN.

Ospina said that the large tongue is used to reach nectar in orchids that other species of bees cannot and allows for more pollination of different types of orchids.

The orchid bee is abundant in the lowland areas of the Neotropics -- an area of similar flora and fauna that stretches from Mexico and covers most of Central and South America -- although Ospina said "it is possible that some species also live in dry and open habitats."

Euglossa natesi n. sp. is part of the Euglossa genus and was named in honor of UN professor Guiomar Nates for her contribution to the research of bees.

http://colombiareports.com/colombia-news-lite/news/16937-new-bee-discovered-with-largest-tongue-in-world.html

Original report (in Spanish):
http://www.unperiodico.unal.edu.co/dper/article/nueva-especie-de-abeja-con-lengua-descomunal.html

Sunday, April 10, 2011

2011 Big Cat Quest: Winning team catches 42-pound catfish from Chattahoochee River


Sunday, Apr. 10, 2011

FROM STAFF REPORTS

The 2011 Big Cat Quest fishing contest sponsored by Bass Pro Shops brought 23 teams to the Chattahoochee River Saturday morning. Each team, comprising two or three people, started at 6 a.m. and were given until 3 p.m. for their final catfish weigh-in. Here, Larry Muse and Dino Meador of Corinth, Miss., pose with a the biggest catfish of the day, weighing 42 pounds. The team was the overall weight winner with five catfish weighing a total of 145.8 pounds. The team won $2,000 for the total weight prize and $500 for the biggest individual catch.

http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/2011/04/10/1533324/2011-big-cat-quest-winning-team.html

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Cat with thunderous purr makes record attempt in UK

In this handout photo released by Northampton College,
Smokey, a gray and white tabby cat prepares to receive a treat
from owner Ruth Adams, in Northampton , England. A British
community college says it has a recorded a house cat whose
lawnmower-like purr hit 73 decibels, 16 times louder than the
average feline. Northampton College in central England said
Wednesday, March 30, 2011, that it had dispatched a music
team with specialist sound equipment to record 12-year-old
Smokey. The recording has been submitted to the Guinness
World Records. (AP Photo, Alisdair Tait, Northampton College)
March 30, 2011
LONDON (AP) -- A British community college has recorded a house cat named Smokey whose lawnmower-like purr hit 73 decibels, which is 16 times louder than the average feline.

Northampton College in central England said Wednesday it received a request from Smokey's owner, Ruth Adams, to provide the equipment needed to file a world record application.

The college agreed, dispatching a team with specialist sound equipment to record Smokey purring in the comfort of Adams' home in the nearby village of Pitsford, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) northwest of London.

The recording has now been submitted to Guinness World Records for vetting.

The 12-year-old gray-and-white tabby has already made several media appearances, with journalists comparing the purr to the sound of a Boeing 747 from a mile away. A video posted to the cat's website made it sound more like the cooing of an angry dove.

"Sometimes she purrs so loudly it makes her cough and splutter," the site said. "She even manages to purr while she eats."

Smokey is camera-shy, according to Adams, who said in a statement that the recording session had to be kept quiet and low key to keep the cat from getting upset.

All the attention may have made the Adams household media-shy as well.

"Oh God," said a man who answered the phone at the Adams' home Wednesday. "You're not the only caller." He then hung up.

Guinness World Records spokeswoman Amarilis Whitty said that she was "anxiously waiting" for the recording to see if it meets the group's standards.

http://newsok.com/cat-with-thunderous-purr-makes-record-attempt-in-uk/article/3553850

Friday, January 14, 2011

Monster Cat-Killer Fox Caught in England

Jan 3, 2011 – 4:16 PM
Theunis Bates
Contributor

LONDON -- A supersized fox has been caught and killed in southeast England, raising fears that the red-furred critters could be getting bigger and bolder as they gorge themselves on urban leftovers.

The colossal canine weighed in at 26.5 pounds and measured 4 feet from the end of its nose to the tip of its tail -- twice the size of a normal fox. Veterinarian Keith Talbot caught the creature at his parents' suburban house in Maidstone on Dec. 26, after they told him a fox had gobbled up their 19-year-old pet cat, Amber.

"[Amber] was on the front doormat when [my parents] went to bed and they heard some commotion," he told Sky News. "They saw a fox going up the drive later on that night but didn't think anything of it. Later that morning they came out and there was fur and bits of the cat everywhere."

He set a trap at the property and on Christmas Day caught a regular 14-pound fox. The next night, he snared the bigger beast. Both animals were destroyed.

It was only when Talbot's friend Roy Lupton -- a veteran fox shooter -- turned up and weighed the animal that he realized he might have caught Britain's biggest fox. "I'm not against foxes; I think everything in nature has a place," he said, according to The Daily Mail. "But there is a limit, and when something like that happens and they start eating cats, it probably tells you that the balance of nature has been upset by humans feeding them and that it's time for controls to come in."

It's thought that the animal could have bulked up by dining on tasty scraps of food found in trashcans or left out by fox lovers.

"Foxes have a social system in which the alpha animal gets the food and the rest gets what's left over, so if there was a very big, dominant animal, the rest would get very little," Pat Morris, a zoologist formerly of Royal Holloway, University of London, told the London Times. "It might be that this was a particularly dominant animal which monopolized the food locally."

Some pro-hunting groups have claimed that the number of urban foxes has soared in recent years and that a cull is desperately needed. Their campaign received a boost in June, when a fox is believed to have attacked 9-month-old twin girls in their cots in east London.

Fox experts insist that unfortunate incident was a one off, and that most of the creatures are shy scavengers. And the University of Bristol's Mammal Group says that urban fox numbers are in fact stable at around 33,000. They note that foxes have simply become more visible and confident over the past decade, as the amount of scraps and trash left lying in the streets has increased.

If Brits want to see fewer big bad foxes strutting though their towns and cities, it seems they'll have to start tidying up after themselves.

http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/03/monster-cat-killer-fox-caught-in-england/
(Submitted by Richard Freeman)

Monster Cat-Killer Fox Caught in England

Jan 3, 2011 – 4:16 PM
Theunis Bates
Contributor

LONDON -- A supersized fox has been caught and killed in southeast England, raising fears that the red-furred critters could be getting bigger and bolder as they gorge themselves on urban leftovers.

The colossal canine weighed in at 26.5 pounds and measured 4 feet from the end of its nose to the tip of its tail -- twice the size of a normal fox. Veterinarian Keith Talbot caught the creature at his parents' suburban house in Maidstone on Dec. 26, after they told him a fox had gobbled up their 19-year-old pet cat, Amber.

"[Amber] was on the front doormat when [my parents] went to bed and they heard some commotion," he told Sky News. "They saw a fox going up the drive later on that night but didn't think anything of it. Later that morning they came out and there was fur and bits of the cat everywhere."

He set a trap at the property and on Christmas Day caught a regular 14-pound fox. The next night, he snared the bigger beast. Both animals were destroyed.

It was only when Talbot's friend Roy Lupton -- a veteran fox shooter -- turned up and weighed the animal that he realized he might have caught Britain's biggest fox. "I'm not against foxes; I think everything in nature has a place," he said, according to The Daily Mail. "But there is a limit, and when something like that happens and they start eating cats, it probably tells you that the balance of nature has been upset by humans feeding them and that it's time for controls to come in."

It's thought that the animal could have bulked up by dining on tasty scraps of food found in trashcans or left out by fox lovers.

"Foxes have a social system in which the alpha animal gets the food and the rest gets what's left over, so if there was a very big, dominant animal, the rest would get very little," Pat Morris, a zoologist formerly of Royal Holloway, University of London, told the London Times. "It might be that this was a particularly dominant animal which monopolized the food locally."

Some pro-hunting groups have claimed that the number of urban foxes has soared in recent years and that a cull is desperately needed. Their campaign received a boost in June, when a fox is believed to have attacked 9-month-old twin girls in their cots in east London.

Fox experts insist that unfortunate incident was a one off, and that most of the creatures are shy scavengers. And the University of Bristol's Mammal Group says that urban fox numbers are in fact stable at around 33,000. They note that foxes have simply become more visible and confident over the past decade, as the amount of scraps and trash left lying in the streets has increased.

If Brits want to see fewer big bad foxes strutting though their towns and cities, it seems they'll have to start tidying up after themselves.

http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/03/monster-cat-killer-fox-caught-in-england/
(Submitted by Richard Freeman)

Friday, January 7, 2011

Monster chub hands angler John Leyland a Bradford Number One hit on River Nidd

Angler John Leyland shows off a huge chub of 7lb 4oz,
which helped him win the Bradford Number One contest
on the River Nidd at Cowthorpe
9:38am Friday 7th January 2011

A brace of chub weighing in at over a stone provided John Leyland with the match of a lifetime.

Drawn below the gauging hut, he topped the 30-peg Bradford Number One contest on the Nidd at Cowthorpe with a seven-fish haul of 32lb 3oz.

Offering waggler to the far-bank willow cover, he picked the monsters off on a double maggot offering.

A fish of 6lb 11oz is one to remember, but his amazing bag was topped off by a huge chub of 7lb 4oz.

The beast is possibly the largest chub ever landed in a match and equals the biggest ever banked in Yorkshire.

Runner-up Fred Prudham (Medlock Bridge) also had seven chub from two below the foot bridge.

His fish, which fell to stick and maggot, were of a more standard stamp and scaled 13lb 6oz.

http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/sport/8777307.Monster_chub_hands_angler_John_Leyland_a_Bradford_Number_One_hit_on_River_Nidd/

Monster chub hands angler John Leyland a Bradford Number One hit on River Nidd

Angler John Leyland shows off a huge chub of 7lb 4oz,
which helped him win the Bradford Number One contest
on the River Nidd at Cowthorpe
9:38am Friday 7th January 2011

A brace of chub weighing in at over a stone provided John Leyland with the match of a lifetime.

Drawn below the gauging hut, he topped the 30-peg Bradford Number One contest on the Nidd at Cowthorpe with a seven-fish haul of 32lb 3oz.

Offering waggler to the far-bank willow cover, he picked the monsters off on a double maggot offering.

A fish of 6lb 11oz is one to remember, but his amazing bag was topped off by a huge chub of 7lb 4oz.

The beast is possibly the largest chub ever landed in a match and equals the biggest ever banked in Yorkshire.

Runner-up Fred Prudham (Medlock Bridge) also had seven chub from two below the foot bridge.

His fish, which fell to stick and maggot, were of a more standard stamp and scaled 13lb 6oz.

http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/sport/8777307.Monster_chub_hands_angler_John_Leyland_a_Bradford_Number_One_hit_on_River_Nidd/

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Is Lucy, 39, the oldest cat in the world?

She may be deaf and a bit stiff in the morning but when you consider Lucy the moggy has just turned 39, it’s understandable.

At 172 in human years, the tabby, who lives with Bill Thomas, 63, in Llanelli, South Wales, could well be the world’s oldest cat.

‘She’s gone deaf but apart from that she’s in good shape,’ he said. ‘She still looks for mice every day.’

He continued: 'We have researched Lucy's past and found she was born in Thomas Street, Llanelli in 1972.

'We have spoken to other people who can verify seeing her in the fish and chip shop in the early seventies.

'She appears to be the genuine article.'

A spokesman for Guinness World Records said there was no entry for the world's oldest cat.



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/851885-is-lucy-39-the-oldest-cat-in-the-world

See also: http://newsfeed.time.com/2011/01/09/time-worn-tabby-at-39-is-lucy-the-oldest-cat-in-the-world/

Is Lucy, 39, the oldest cat in the world?

She may be deaf and a bit stiff in the morning but when you consider Lucy the moggy has just turned 39, it’s understandable.

At 172 in human years, the tabby, who lives with Bill Thomas, 63, in Llanelli, South Wales, could well be the world’s oldest cat.

‘She’s gone deaf but apart from that she’s in good shape,’ he said. ‘She still looks for mice every day.’

He continued: 'We have researched Lucy's past and found she was born in Thomas Street, Llanelli in 1972.

'We have spoken to other people who can verify seeing her in the fish and chip shop in the early seventies.

'She appears to be the genuine article.'

A spokesman for Guinness World Records said there was no entry for the world's oldest cat.



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/851885-is-lucy-39-the-oldest-cat-in-the-world

See also: http://newsfeed.time.com/2011/01/09/time-worn-tabby-at-39-is-lucy-the-oldest-cat-in-the-world/

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Novice angler catches monster halibut worth £25,000


Hansel took more than two hours to reel in the 2.5m (8ft 2in) monster of the deep off Bolungarvik, in Iceland’s Western Fjords, where it took five men to eventually haul the 970-portion fish on board.

‘This is the fish I have been fishing for all my life,’ said the 70-year-old German.

He used a 30lb line and a plastic lure to snare the halibut. Once he got it alongside their boat, a rope was tied around its tail so it could be hoisted on to the deck.

Herbert Loechel, managing director of the fishing tour operator, said: ‘After the bite, we had to worry that Gunther would land the fish. It took him 135 minutes.

‘But the boat’s crew helped hoist the giant fish, with more anglers on board to help, on to the boat.

‘Back at port, the giant fish was celebrated vigorously.’

The mighty fish has broken all records – beating the previous best by 8.2kg (18lb). The earlier record was held by anglers Bosse Carlsson and Hans-Olov Nilsson, weighing 210kg (464lb), caught off Norway in July 2009.

Atlantic halibut are native to the northern Atlantic ocean, from Greenland to the Barents Sea and as far south as the Bay of Biscay.

They can reach up to 5m (15ft) in length, weigh up to 320kg (700lb) and can live for 50 years.


Commercial fishing of the Atlantic variety has largely collapsed since overfishing led to it being registered as endangered in 1996


http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000#ixzz16JOSCa9g

Novice angler catches monster halibut worth £25,000


Hansel took more than two hours to reel in the 2.5m (8ft 2in) monster of the deep off Bolungarvik, in Iceland’s Western Fjords, where it took five men to eventually haul the 970-portion fish on board.

‘This is the fish I have been fishing for all my life,’ said the 70-year-old German.

He used a 30lb line and a plastic lure to snare the halibut. Once he got it alongside their boat, a rope was tied around its tail so it could be hoisted on to the deck.

Herbert Loechel, managing director of the fishing tour operator, said: ‘After the bite, we had to worry that Gunther would land the fish. It took him 135 minutes.

‘But the boat’s crew helped hoist the giant fish, with more anglers on board to help, on to the boat.

‘Back at port, the giant fish was celebrated vigorously.’

The mighty fish has broken all records – beating the previous best by 8.2kg (18lb). The earlier record was held by anglers Bosse Carlsson and Hans-Olov Nilsson, weighing 210kg (464lb), caught off Norway in July 2009.

Atlantic halibut are native to the northern Atlantic ocean, from Greenland to the Barents Sea and as far south as the Bay of Biscay.

They can reach up to 5m (15ft) in length, weigh up to 320kg (700lb) and can live for 50 years.


Commercial fishing of the Atlantic variety has largely collapsed since overfishing led to it being registered as endangered in 1996


http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000#ixzz16JOSCa9g

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Toothy bird had a record-breaking 17ft wingspan

September 17, 2010 1:00 PM

Researchers have discovered the fossil of a scary-looking bird which had a monster 17ft wingspan and was the biggest bird to ever fly.

The winged giant - which lived 5-10 million years ago in Chile - was twice the size of the biggest modern-day birds like the albatross.

Experts say the Pelagornis chilensis also had bony-teeth which would have been useful for catching slippery prey in the open ocean such as fish and squid.

The newly discovered and largely complete Pelagornis chilensis skeleton now said to be important for understanding the physics behind how birds fly.

However, given the bird could have coexisted with the earliest humans it may also explain why some people always paranoid about being attacked by birds.

Dr Gerald Mayr of the Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg in Germany said: "Bird watching in Chile would be thrilling if birds with more than five meter wingspans and huge pseudoteeth were still alive.

"Although these animals would have looked like creatures from Jurassic Park, they are true birds, and their last representatives may have coexisted with the earliest humans in North Africa."

LINKS
Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg

http://newslite.tv/2010/09/17/toothy-bird-had-a-recordbreaki.html

Toothy bird had a record-breaking 17ft wingspan

September 17, 2010 1:00 PM

Researchers have discovered the fossil of a scary-looking bird which had a monster 17ft wingspan and was the biggest bird to ever fly.

The winged giant - which lived 5-10 million years ago in Chile - was twice the size of the biggest modern-day birds like the albatross.

Experts say the Pelagornis chilensis also had bony-teeth which would have been useful for catching slippery prey in the open ocean such as fish and squid.

The newly discovered and largely complete Pelagornis chilensis skeleton now said to be important for understanding the physics behind how birds fly.

However, given the bird could have coexisted with the earliest humans it may also explain why some people always paranoid about being attacked by birds.

Dr Gerald Mayr of the Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg in Germany said: "Bird watching in Chile would be thrilling if birds with more than five meter wingspans and huge pseudoteeth were still alive.

"Although these animals would have looked like creatures from Jurassic Park, they are true birds, and their last representatives may have coexisted with the earliest humans in North Africa."

LINKS
Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg

http://newslite.tv/2010/09/17/toothy-bird-had-a-recordbreaki.html

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Snake charmer from Sussex attempts world record

Published: 8:48AM BST 08 Jul 2010

Sussex carpenter David Jones is trying to break a world record in South Africa by living for four months with 40 venomous snakes.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Giant herring found in Sweden

Posted Wed May 12, 2010 12:33pm AEST

A giant herring measuring 3.5 metres has been discovered off Sweden's western coast - the first such fish found in the Scandinavian country in more than 130 years, a maritime museum says.

The regalecus glesne, known as the king of herrings or giant oarfish, was found dead in the small fishing village of Bovallstrand on Sweden's west coast, about 90 kilometres from the Norwegian border.

Kurt Ove Eriksson, the passer-by who found the specimen, said he saw something floating down by the water.

"At first we thought it was a big piece of plastic. But then we saw an eye," he said.

"I went down to check and saw that it was this extremely strange fish."

The House of the Sea museum in Lysekil, where the fish was taken, says the rarely seen regalecus can grow up to 12 metres.

"The last time we saw a king of herrings in Sweden was in 1879," the museum said.

"We don't know much about the species... but believe it lives in deep waters, at least one kilometre deep, and many believe it's at the origin of the sea serpent myth."

The dead fish, which was frozen at the museum, had a deep cut through its body and was missing its beautiful, typical back fin, the museum said, adding the fish might be added to an exhibit on sea monsters planned later this year.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/05/12/2897292.htm

Friday, April 30, 2010

Gentle Jake is the world's tallest horse

30 April 2010, 13:45

Big Jake is officially the Guinness World Record holder for the world's tallest living horse, but his owner says the 6ft 11in Belgian gelding is really just a gentle giant.

The nine-year-old is almost three inches taller than the previous record-holder, a Clydesdale from Texas named Remington, reports The Metro.

Big Jake's owner Jerry Gilbert, the owner of Smokey Hollow Farm near Poynette in Wisconsin, often takes the animal to horse shows, where he pulls hefty stuff around in a team of four or six draught horses.

And he uses his size for a good cause, helping to raise money for a Ronald McDonald House, supported by the fast food chain, where parents of hospitalised children can stay to be close to their kids.

Mr Gilbert says Big Jake, who weighs about 2,600lb, is good with people, who are astonished when they see just how big he is.

http://web.orange.co.uk/article/quirkies/gentle_jake_is_the_worlds_tallest_horse

Monday, April 26, 2010

Is Einstein the world's smallest horse?

Tom Phillips - 26th April, 2010

He was just 14 inches tall and only weighed six pounds when he was born - is Einstein the pinto stallion the smallest foal in the world?

Einstein is just three days old, after being born on Friday at a farm in Barnstead, New Hampshire.

It's thought that Einstein could lay a claim to the title of the world's lightest foal - his 6lb weight at birth being normal for a human baby, but not a horse, even a miniature breed like Einstein.

Unlike other miniature horses - notably the current claimant of the world's smallest horse title, Thumbelina - Einstein doesn't show any signs of dawrfism.

Judy Smith, the owner of the Tiz A Miniature Horse Farm where he was born, at first feared that he was dead when his mother, Tiz Fenisse, gave birth.

'I have been at this for 20 years plus but I have never seen one this tiny or even close to it,' she said.

Dr Rachel Wagner, Einstein's co-owner, told Sky News: 'Most of the ones that are really tiny are what we call dwarves and they have some sort of dysmorphic features, or features that aren't really normal or healthy. This little guy is like all horses - he's almost all leg.'

http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/823406-is-einstein-the-worlds-smallest-horse

See also: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100426/ts_ynews/ynews_ts1796

Thursday, April 22, 2010

World's Longest Bug And 'Ninja' Slug Discovered in Borneo

RIGHT: This WWF Malaysia photo shows the "Phobaeticus chani", the world's longest stick insect
Jeanna Bryner
livescience.com – Wed Apr 21, 8:10 pm ET

An eccentric bunch of species have recently come out of hiding in the rainforests of Borneo, including the world's longest known stick insect - think two skinny pencils end-to-end, a slug that shoots "love darts," and a color-changing frog, scientists announce today.

The new WWF report details the 123 newly identified species that have been discovered since February 2007 when the three countries that make up Borneo agreed to conserve 85,000 square miles (220,000 square kilometers) of tropical rainforest, designated as the Heart of Borneo (HoB).

That's a rate of discovery of three species per month. Previously, scientists have estimated that there are about 2 million known species of life on Earth, and anywhere from 5 million to 100 million species that remain undiscovered.

"As the past three years of independent scientific discovery have proven, new forms of life are constantly being discovered in the Heart of Borneo," said Adam Tomasek, who leads the WWF project.

Here's an introduction to the new gang:

Longest insect - Measuring more than 1.6 feet (0.5 meters) in length, the world's longest stick insect, called Phobaeticus chani, was found near Gunung Kinabalu Park, Sabah. So far, only three specimens of the species have been found, all in the Heart of Borneo.

Fiery snake - Kopstein's Bronzeback snake (Dendrelaphis kopsteini) is about 5 feet (1.5 meters) long. Its neck is colored a bright orange, which fuses into an iridescent and vivid blue, green and brown pattern that extends the entire length of its body.

Color-changing frog - Called Rhacophorus penanorum, this small frog species, whose males grow to just 1.4 inches (3.5 centimeters), was discovered in Gunung Mulu National Park, Sarawak, in the Heart of Borneo. Also called the Mulu flying frog, the amphibian has a small pointed snout and is unusual in that the species has bright green skin at night but changes color to display a brown hue during the day. Its eyes follow suit to change color as well. And while the minute animal may not fly with the birds, it uses its webbed feet and aerodynamic flaps of skin on the arms and legs to glide from tree to tree.

Spectacled bird - Named because of its prominent eye-rings, the spectacled flowerpecker has a grey body with bright white arcs above and below its eyes, a white throat and white tufts at the breast sides. Scientists think the flowerpecker is a canopy specialist, feeding off fruits high in tree canopies.

Ninja slug - This green and yellow slug (Ibycus rachelae) was discovered on leaves in a mountain forest at altitudes up to 6,233 feet (1,900 meters) in Sabah, Malaysia. The slug sports a tail that's three times the length of its head, which it wraps around its 1.6-inch-long (4 cm) body as if a pet cat. In fact, its discoverers initially planned to name the slug Ibycus felis, after its feline inspiration. Instead, they named it after the girlfriend of one of its discoverers, Menno Schilthuizen of the Netherlands Centre for Biodiversity 'Naturalis.'

Maybe there's more to the name than meets the eye: The slug species makes use of so-called love darts. Made of calcium carbonate, the love dart is a harpoon-like structure that pierces and injects a hormone into a potential mate. The dart could increase the slug's chances of reproduction.

"The distinction between slugs and snails is not so strict in that part of the tropics, because most of the slugs, including the new one we described, are semi-slugs meaning they still have a shell but the shell is so small that it can't retract its body into it," Schilthuizen told LiveScience.

And though they've found several new slug and snail species, Schilthuizen said this rainforest environment isn't ideal for the animals. That's because the soil is highly acidic, which dissolves the animals' limestone shells.

Overall, the Heart of Borneo is now called home by 10 primate species, more than 350 birds, 150 reptiles and amphibians and a staggering 10,000 plants that are found nowhere else in the world, according to the new report.

To keep these species and their lush home safe from demise, under the 2007 agreement, the three governments have committed to conserve and sustainably manage the area.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100422/sc_livescience/worldslongestbugandninjaslugdiscoveredinborneo

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Giant Crab May Have Pinched Record Title

2:57pm UK, Wednesday April 21, 2010
James Davies, Sky News Online

A giant deep-sea crab snared by a Cornish fisherman could be the largest ever found in British waters, experts have said.

The rare box crab, normally found at depths of up to two miles, was caught 80 miles west of the Isles of Scilly by skipper Matthew Keast who was fishing for turbot.

The creature has been nicknamed Spud because of its potato-like body.

At more than 3ft 3in long, it is believed to be only the eighth of its kind to be brought up from the depths since 1900.

The species is the largest found in the UK, and can reach lengths of up to 6ft 6ins.

The Blue Reef Aquarium, in Newquay, Cornwall, is now looking after the crab in a specially chilled tank, where staff are feeding him on a diet of rotten starfish.

The aquarium's manager, David Waines told Sky News: "It's one of the oddest crabs I've ever seen.

"It looks like something from another planet.

"It has weird eyes on stalks which look like bicycle handlebars and a strange pair of backward facing pincers."

He explained: "A crab like this would normally be found very deep on the edge of the continental shelf which runs from Morocco to Ireland at depths of 3,000 metres."

Due to the great depths at which they lurk, relatively little is known about giant box crabs but it is thought they feed on dead fish they find on the seabed.

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