Wolfram87 wrote:
dragonsanddemons wrote:
Those things that look like giant mosquitos are actually crane flies, which eat mosquitos.
Adult craneflies, if they have the capacity to eat at all (some of them don't), feed on liquids like nectar and othe rplant juices. They have neither capacity nor inclination to prey on mosquitoes.
I fully admit I may be wrong, I don’t remember where I got that information, could easily not be a credible source.
I found out from personal experience that whatever species of toad we commonly find around here will play dead, tucking their limbs up under themselves and not moving. I learned this when my dog found a toad, and I was afraid he’d killed it, but it hopped off not long after I put it on the ground away from the dog.
True bugs are a subset of insects that are easy to identify by the triangle shape they have on their backs. These include cicadas, stinkbugs, and boxelder bugs. (Learned in an entomology class in college)
Only one species of rabbit can swim, the swamp rabbit. This gives them an advantage in finding habitat that a lot of other animals can’t get to. (Learned from some show on TV that was about rabbits, don’t remember what it was called)
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Yet in my new wildness and freedom I almost welcome the bitterness of alienage. For although nepenthe has calmed me, I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men.
-H. P. Lovecraft, "The Outsider"