Showing posts with label 'invisible animal'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'invisible animal'. Show all posts

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Chủ đề: Russian fisherman posts terrifying creatures of the deep sea.

 

Chủ đề:  Russian fisherman posts terrifying creatures of the deep sea.


Russian fisherman posts

terrifying creatures of the deep sea. 

 


#1 "I'm So Ugly, But That's Okay”:

I'm So Ugly, But That's Okay
They only look like that when you bring them up to the surface. In their natural habitat the pressure holds their bodies together.

#2 "The Underwater Space Is Impressive”:

The Underwater Space Is Impressive
...galaxy airplane

#3 "Looks Like Cartoon Dragon. No Photoshop”:

Looks Like Cartoon Dragon. No Photoshop
I love those giant yellow eyes!

#4 "Scary Beauty In My Hands”:

Scary Beauty In My Hands
the cyclopshark?

#5 It's Beautiful:

It's Beautiful
This is just a puffer fish that has been dried out in the sun and therefore his skin has been pulled back revealing his teeth more. They are really harmless. They eat coral so they have those crazy teeth.
The Beauty From The Sea Bottom
so much we don't know about The Sea Bottom. wow.
Anybody Home?

#8 "Total Recall. Sea Edition”:

Total Recall. Sea Edition

#9 "These Fishes Remind Me Of Dwarfs From 'Lord Of The Rings’":

These Fishes Remind Me Of Dwarfs From 'Lord Of The Rings'
Fish which have evolved mustaches, Nice.

#10 "Teeth. Terrible Teeth”:

Teeth. Terrible Teeth
                                                                                                                        The  End.


__._,_.___

Posted by: van tran 

Friday, April 26, 2013

Bọ Ngựa Phong Lan có ở Việt Nam - Hymenopus coronatus ! ( DM )


Tìm Hoa Hút Mật chết vì

   Bọ Ngựa Phong Lan.

Cảm ơn chị Lang đã chia xẻ.

TTKh.

 

From: HO Lang
To: "
Subject: Bọ Ngựa Phong Lan có ở Việt Nam - Hymenopus coronatus ! ( DM )

 
 

  

 

Con côn trùng ngây thơ tiến lại gần đóa hoa xinh xắn. Bất ngờ đóa hoa chuyển động và chỉ trong tích tắc nạn nhân xấu số đã mất mạng…

 

“Đóa hoa” đó chính là một loài bọ ngựa kỳ lạ có tên là bọ ngựa phong lan, tên khoa học là Hymenopus coronatus.
“Đóa hoa” đó chính là một loài bọ ngựa kỳ lạ có tên là bọ ngựa phong lan, tên khoa học là Hymenopus coronatus.


Chúng sinh sống trong các khu rừng nhiệt đới của khu vực Đông Nam Á, trong đó có Việt Nam.


Chúng được gọi là bọ ngựa phong lan bởi màu sắc và hình dạng cơ thể rất giống với một đóa phong lan.


Bốn chân của chúng giống hệt như những cánh hoa lan, trong khi các cặp chi trước có răng cưa giống như các loài bọ ngựa khác được sử dụng trong việc nắm bắt con mồi.


Đây là một chiến thuật ngụy trang tuyệt vời, khiến bọ ngựa phong lan trở nên “tàng hình” khi lẩn vào những đóa phong lan.


Thay vì đi tìm mồi, loài bọ ngựa này bất động hàng giờ trên đóa hoa, chờ con mồi bay đến để tóm gọn bằng đôi càng sắc bén và tốc độ nhanh như chớp.


Bọ ngựa phong lan là loài rất hiếu sát, chúng sẵn sàng tấn công tất cả các đối tượng chuyển động lọt vào tầm nhìn của mình.


Thức ăn của chúng là các loài côn trùng, đặc biệt là ong, bướm, những đối tượng thường tìm đến hoa để hút mật.


Một điều đặc biệt khác của bọ ngựa phong lan là chúng còn có khả năng thay đổi màu sắc cho phù hợp với đóa hoa mà mình trú ẩn.


Theo các nghiên cứu, chúng có thể thay đổi được 90 màu sắc, giữa sắc hồng và nâu.


Do sự độc đáo của mình, bọ ngựa phong lan rất được các nhà sưu tầm côn trùng ưa chuộng.


Nhưng không phải ai cũng có cơ hội sở hữu loài bọ ngựa này do chúng rất hiếm và giá rất cao. Ảnh: Internet.

 

 

 

Monday, December 31, 2012

Can You Spot The 'Invisible Animals'?

Can You Spot The 'Invisible Animals'?
 

Bạn kó thễ tìm thấy kon vật ẫn thân & hòa mình trong các môi trường quanh nơi trú ngụ hay vùng săn mồi, dễ tránh các cặp mắt kũa các kon thú săn mồi khác không?


Can you spot the 'invisible animal'? Incredible images show nature's disappearing act when predators are near


  • These animals are trying their utmost to fool predators by blending into landscapes all over the world
  • They were taken by photographer Art Wolfe over a period of 35 years, for his work 'Vanishing Act'


PUBLISHED: 13:50 GMT, 27 December 2012 | UPDATED: 16:35 GMT, 27 December 2012
photographer Art Wolfe
 Painstaking: Mr Wolfe, says finding and filming animals on location, such as this wandering tattler chick in Wrangell-Saint Ellias National Park, is 'an exhilarating and painstaking process' 

 

Whether they are hunters or the hunted, these cunning animals are all masters of disguise who can fool even the most beady-eyed passer by into believing they are not there.

Some hide under lily pads, some dissolve into the bark of a tree while others slip seamlessly into the snow, either to hide from a hungry predator or silently stalk an unwitting prey.

But the one thing from which they cannot hide is the all-seeing camera lens of photographer Art Wolfe.

He has spent over 35 years roaming the deserts of Africa, the rainforests of South America, the mountains of the United States and snow plains of Canada to capture wildlife at its most invisible.
 
 
A Great Horned Owl uses colour and disruptive patterns in its plumage to disappear in a temperate forest in Oregons Malheur National Wildlife Refuge
 
An American Pika performing a vanishing act in the Cascade Range of Washington
 
Cunning tricks: A Great Horned Owl uses colour in its plumage to disappear in a temperate forest in Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon, while an American Pika performs a vanishing act in the Cascade Range of Washington.
 
Gyrfalcon at their nest built on a cliff
 
A California Ground Squirrel blending in with its rocky environment

Rock and hole: A gyrfalcon at their nest built on a cliff, and a California Ground Squirrel blends in with its rocky environment.

It's white in front of you! A willow ptarmigan in winter plumage, hidden on a brushy slope near Churchill, Manitoba, Canada. The animals are trying their utmost to fool predators but that's not enough to deceive international photographer Art Wolfe

It's white in front of you! A willow ptarmigan in winter plumage, hidden on a brushy slope near Churchill, Manitoba, Canada. The animals are trying their utmost to fool predators but that's not enough to deceive international photographer Art Wolfe

He has travelled through every continent in the world in tireless pursuit of more subjects for his chef-d'oeuvre 'Vanishing Act' that dates back to the 1980s.

Art said: 'Throughout my career as a nature photographer, I have challenged myself to present new perspectives on well-documented subjects.

'Like most of my projects this collection has been a long time in the making.

'Finding and filming animals on location is an exhilarating and painstaking process. I'm still adding to the project even now.

'Conventional wildlife photography calls for isolating the subject by selective focus, this way the animal is clearly defined.

Having a giraffe: A Giraffe in Transvaal, South Africa. Wolfe's 35-year career has spanned every continent as he has followed his passion for the environment

Having a giraffe: A Giraffe in Transvaal, South Africa. Wolfe's 35-year career has spanned every continent as he has followed his passion for the environment

Can't see the wolf from the trees: A wolf peering out from behind a tree trunk in an autumn Montana forest

Can't see the wolf from the trees: A wolf peering out from behind a tree trunk in an autumn Montana forest

Eye spy: A spectacled caiman in Llanos, Venezuela. Wolfe worked to make it visually challenging to the viewer by using depth of field, scale and placement and confusing the subject

Eye spy: A spectacled caiman in Llanos, Venezuela. Wolfe works to make it visually challenging to the viewer by using depth of field, scale and placement and confusing the subject

Leaf me alone: A Mealy or Blue-crowned parrot disappears like just another leaf in the lush Central American rainforest, Chan Chich, Belize

Leaf me alone: A Mealy or Blue-crowned parrot disappears like just another leaf in the lush Central American rainforest, Chan Chich, Belize

'Photographers always want to show off their subject. And yet, is this really the way an animal is viewed by the human eye? Not quite.

'We don't have the isolating abilities that a telephoto lens provides. On most occasions an animal remains somewhat concealed by the clutter of its natural habitat-a necessity of survival for both predator and prey.

'I have basically employed three different photographic approaches and purposely worked to enhance the difficulty to find the camouflaged subject-as difficult as it is in the wild to see animals that do not want to be seen.

Snake eyes: A horned adder matches the colour of the sand in the Namib Desert, Namibia, where they bury themselves using a swimming motion to disappear beneath the hot surface

Snake eyes: A horned adder matches the colour of the sand in the Namib Desert, Namibia, where they bury themselves using a swimming motion to disappear beneath the hot surface

Can you spot me? A Leopard conceals herself in vegetation at the base of a tree in Kruger National Park, Transvaal, South Africa

Can you spot me? A Leopard conceals herself in vegetation at the base of a tree in Kruger National Park, Transvaal, South Africa

Bark and hide: A Great Gray Owl positions itself in front of a similar pattern to take advantage of his camouflage in Oregon, United States

Bark and hide: A Great Gray Owl positions itself in front of a similar pattern to take advantage of his camouflage in Oregon, United States

'Since it is impossible to capture all the distractions to the senses of an entire landscape in a photo, I worked to make it visually challenging by using depth of field, scale and placement and confusing the subject.'

Art is also a successful book publisher and television producer. He has published at least one book a year since 1989.

The 61-year-old from Seattle said: 'It is in the wild places, where the edge of the earth meets the corners of the sky, the human spirit is fed.'

Invisible: A male Spotted Deer disappears among sun-dappled vegetation in Ranthambore National Park, Rajasthan, India

Invisible: A male Spotted Deer disappears among sun-dappled vegetation in Ranthambore National Park, Rajasthan, India

Stop monkeying around: A family of Japanese Macaques disappear amid their rocky habitat on Honshu Island, Japan

Stop monkeying around: A family of Japanese Macaques disappear amid their rocky habitat on Honshu Island, Japan

White-tailed Ptarmigan in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada

I'm white over here! White-tailed Ptarmigan in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada

The long grass: An Impala hiding in vegetation in Botswana's Chobe National Park, Africa

The long grass: An Impala hiding in vegetation in Botswana's Chobe National Park, Africa

A sandy place to hide: A cheetah cub disguised against the Kalahari Desert, South Africa

A sandy place to hide: A cheetah cub disguised against the Kalahari Desert, South Africa

Water good place to hide: A Common Snipe, well hidden in the shoreline vegetation of a Minnesota stream

Water good place to hide: A Common Snipe, well hidden in the shoreline vegetation of a Minnesota stream

A Wandering Tattler chick Wrangell-St, Ellias National Park
Painstaking: Mr Wolfe, says finding and filming animals on location, such as this wandering tattler chick in Wrangell-Saint Ellias National Park, is 'an exhilarating and painstaking process'

Out of sight hawk: A nighthawk resting on rocks where it blends into its surroundings in eastern Washington

Out of sight hawk: A nighthawk resting on rocks where it blends into its surroundings in eastern Washington

Snow way I'll be spotted here: A coyote camouflaged in the surrounding brush at the edge of a snow dusted field, Washington State, USA

Snow way I'll be spotted here: A coyote camouflaged in the surrounding brush at the edge of a snow dusted field, Washington State, USA

Precarious perch: Two Klipspringers camouflaged against a rocky outcrop in Chobe, Botswana

Precarious perch: Two Klipspringers camouflaged against a rocky outcrop in Chobe, Botswana

Branching out: A well-concealed blue dacnis takes a rest in foliage in Panama

Branching out: A well-concealed blue dacnis takes a rest in foliage in Panama

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