The left-wing is crazy and the right-wing scares the shit out of me!

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Tuesday 18 August 2015

Animal tales! Or, put a tiger in your tank?

I've heard it said that Detroit is a dangerous place, but THIS is ridiculous!

An Actual Tiger Was Caught Roaming Detroit’s Abandoned Packard Plant
The deserted Packard Plant in Detroit, where the now defunct automaker used to operate out of until the mid 1950s, had an unexpected guest roaming its crumbling halls — a real life, actual tiger.
How on earth did it get there? 
As the Detroit Free Press reports, British photographer David Yarrow was using the abandoned ruins for a two day photoshoot, only he hadn’t told anyone he was bringing with him wild animals — which is strictly prohibited. Along with the tiger, Yarrow had a pair of wolves and a bobcat.


https://www.yahoo.com/autos/an-actual-tiger-was-found-roaming-126933617687.html

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MEANWHILE:
The Canadian Press  
FREDERICTON -- Police are on the hunt for a boa constrictor that went missing from a home in Fredericton, but they say the snake is not considered a threat to people.
The Fredericton Police Force says it's believed the red-tailed boa constrictor escaped from its cage at a residence in the area of Hanson and Beckwith streets around 7 p.m. Sunday.
They say the snake is about two metres long and weighs about 30 pounds.
Police believe the snake is likely hiding in the home where it was reported missing or not far from it.


Boa constrictor   
http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/boa-constrictor-on-the-loose-in-new-brunswick-1.2521548
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Dario Balca, CTVNews.ca
A bear in British Columbia found the perfect way to beat the province’s record-breaking heat by taking a dip in a North Vancouver resident’s swimming pool.
“It’s just amazing,” said homeowner Tony Diering. “You see funny things on YouTube, but to have it happening in your own backyard...”
Video captured by Diering shows the bear relaxing in the pool on Monday before casually rolling over into the attached hot tub.


The animal, Diering said, got into the backyard by breaking down part of a wooden fence surrounding the property.
Even with B.C.’s high bear population, direct encounters with the animals are rare. But Diering said this is his second experience with a bear in just over a month.
“About a month ago, the bear came and he was helping himself to the bird seed,” he said.
Diering and his wife aren’t sure if it was the same bear that entered their yard on Monday.
Bear lounges in pool, hot tub in Vancouver While Diering said the animals are “amazing” to see up close, he is concerned about the safety of nearby residents and the property damage caused by bear break-ins.
“I hope that he’ll just go eat some berries in the mountains instead,” he said.
With a report from CTV Vancouver’s Alex Turner 

 http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/north-vancouver-homeowners-catch-bear-taking-a-dip-in-swimming-pool-1.2521761

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AND FINALLY: If you're a harbour seal that wants to get away from some killer whales, THIS is what you do!



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GEE FOLKS, THESE ANIMALS LOOK SO CUTE!

“The koala bloody chased me tonight!” wrote 31-year-old Ebony Churchill on Facebook, adding, “Shit me self.”
Churchill says she was herding cows by ATV when she first spotted the scare bear, which she assumed was climbing a tree. From The Adelaide Advertiser:
“He was close but then he started running towards me and I thought I better speed up (on the quad bike),” she said.
“But the more I sped up, the faster he got.
“I thought if I got further down the track, he would lose interest. I got to the end of the cows and couldn’t go any further so that’s when I bailed off the bike.”
Explaining her animated commentary during the pursuit, Churchill told News.com.au “they’ve got really sharp claws.”

 On Friday, an Australian woman uploaded a chilling 43-second video showing her narrow escape from a relentless, seemingly unstoppable beast.



(IT LOOKS LIKE THE KOALA WANTED NOTHING MORE THAN TO HITCH A RIDE! -Ed.)

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AND FINALLY:

Dogs may play catch, obey commands and even share the occasional dessert with their owners, but can they understand simple interactions between people?
A new study says yip-yip-yes.
In a recent experiment, dogs tended to avoid people who had snubbed the animals' owners, the researchers found. This suggests that dogs can read human social situations, an ability known as "social eavesdropping." [Like Dog, Like Owner: What Breeds Say About Personality]
However, not everyone is on board with the study's conclusions.
"So far, it is not clear what dogs understand about human interactions," said Marie Nitzschner, a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, who was not involved in the study. "More research is needed."
Social eavesdropping
dog with man and womanAs many dog owners know, the animals eagerly watch people all the time, said the study's senior author, Kazuo Fujita, a professor of psychology and comparative cognition at Kyoto University in Japan.
But it's not clear whether dogs watch people for the animals' own immediate benefit (such as for a signal that they're getting a treat) or simply to figure out what's happening.
If dogs, or any animals, are able to socially eavesdrop on people, it could help the animals assess people from afar.
"The ability to glean information from a social exchange without having to participate in it themselves would be very useful," said Shannon Kundey, an associate professor of psychology at Hood College in Maryland, who was not involved with the study. "They would be able to gain a lot of information while putting themselves at minimal risk."
Scientists have assessed social eavesdropping in a menagerie of animals, including chimpanzees, tufted capuchin monkeys, common marmosets, domestic dogs and cleaner fish, in which the animals watched human actors interact. But many of these studies involved food.
"[This] raises the possibility that [animal] participants simply preferred actors who were more likely to give them a better chance of getting food," instead of figuring out the human interaction, the researchers said in the study.
For instance, "Typically, one actor generously gives food to a human beggar, and the other refuses to do so," Fujita told Live Science in an email. "And the dogs tended to go to the generous actor. No wonder. Dogs may naturally do so with the expectation that 'this person is more likely to give me food.'"
Doggy deliberation
Image result for HUMAN AND DOG To avoid the complication of food in the new experiment, the researchers created a social interaction using a junk object (a roll of vinyl tape in a container). In all, 54 dogs and their owners completed the test.
In the experiment, the dog watched its owner unsuccessfully try to open a container holding tape. The owner requested the help of an actor sitting nearby. In one condition, the actor helped the owner by supporting the container, allowing the owner to open it and retrieve the tape. In another condition, the actor refused to help, by turning away.
After these interaction sequences, the actor and a neutral bystander simultaneously offered treats to the dog. The researchers noted which person the dog preferred.
When the actor helped the owner, the dogs did not have a preference, meaning they chose treats at an equal rate from both the actor and the bystander. But when the actor snubbed the owner, the dogs tended to avoid the actor and take treats more often from the bystander instead. [5 Animals with a Moral Compass]
"[The] dogs avoided people who behaved negatively to the owner," Fujita said.
It's perplexing that the dogs didn't prefer the helpful actor over the bystander in the first condition, but perhaps helping is a "standard" that dogs have, meaning it's possibly status quo and nothing special, Fujita said.
"Dogs may have hated a violator of this standard," he said. "Similar negativity bias has been reported in human infants."
Lessons learned
Image result for HUMAN AND DOGThe new study supports the idea that dogs can socially eavesdrop on people, Fujita said. The "dogs made a social evaluation in a situation irrelevant to their immediate benefit," he said.
However, the study has several limitations, experts said. The dog owners did not know the purpose of the experiment, but they may have conveyed cues to the dogs that they didn't like the actor who snubbed them, Kundey said.
"Even if the owner did not know the purpose of the experiment or the hypotheses that the authors were testing, it would be important to ensure that they did not guess the hypotheses and that they did not inadvertently cue the dogs," she told Live Science.
It's also unclear whether the actor and the bystander changed positions, or whether one was always on the right-hand side of the owner, and the other on the left. For instance, a dog might choose a side, rather than a person.
"For example, I would doubt that the dogs would still choose the neutral person in the nonhelper condition, if neutral person and nonhelper would change their positions after the interactions and before the dogs chose (at least, this is what I found in one of my studies)," Nitzschner wrote in an email.
In fact, the vinyl-tape interaction is "quite complex, and I'm not sure if the dogs really understand what is going on there," Nitzschner added. If the dogs truly understood the interaction, more of them should have taken the treat from the helper in the helping situation, she said.
Dogs may be experts in reading people — including an owner's gestures, facial expressions and maybe even emotions — but it's unclear how much the animals understand about human interactions.
"The literature on this revealed mixed results," Nitzschner said. "That's why we need more research on this."
The study was published in the August issue of the journal Animal Behavior.

Follow Laura Geggel on Twitter @LauraGeggel. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

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