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Order Rodentia


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44 percent of all mammalian species currently surviving on Earth are "Rodents" (2050/4660). 

 

"Rodents have lived on the planet for at least 56 million years and modern humans for less than one million, but the consequences of their interactions during that short overlap of evolutionary time have been profound. For rodents, early humans were just another predator to avoid, but with Homo sapiens’ transition from nomadic hunting and gathering to sedentary agricultural practices, humans became a reliable source of shelter and food for those species having the innate genetic and behavioral abilities to adapt to man-made habitats. The impact of these species upon human populations ranges from inconvenient to deadly. Crops are damaged before harvest; stored food is contaminated by rodent waste; water-impounding structures leak from burrowing; and objects are damaged by gnawing. Certain species are reservoirs for diseases such as plaguemurine typhusscrub typhustularemiarat-bite feverRocky Mountain spotted fever, and Lassa fever, among others. Only a few species are serious pests or vectors of disease (see house mouseand rat), but it is these rodents that are most closely associated with people."

 

https://www.britannica.com/animal/rodent

 

 

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Living in the middle of a hardwood forest we have an abundance of Gray Squirrels far in excess of what can be predated by hawks, cats, dogs, raccoons, and possibly fox*.  I harbor a personal hatred of Gray Squirrels bordering on psychopathic and will shoot or run over one at the first opportunity.  I shot one from the bathroom window about a half hour ago that looked to be about 2 pounds.  Not my photo.

 

800px-Fat_squirrel_enjoying_a_snack.jpg

 

* I have seen what looks like fox footprints down by the creek, but I have yet to see one.

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Me so horny, me love you long time...

index-3.jpg

 

The babirusas are a genus, Babyrousa, in the pig family (Suidae) found in Wallacea, or specifically the Indonesian islands of Sulawesi, Togian, Sula and Buru. All members of this genus were considered part of a single species until recently, B. babyrussa, but following the split into several species, this scientific name is restricted to the Buru babirusa from Buru and Sula, whereas the best-known species, the north Sulawesi babirusa, is named B. celebensis. The name “pig-deer” has sometimes also been used in English, and is a direct translation of the Indonesian babi-rusa.

 

https://oddanimals.com/babirusa/

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Posted Yesterday, 12:25 PM

"Living in the middle of a hardwood forest we have an abundance of Gray Squirrels far in excess of what can be predated by hawks, cats, dogs, raccoons, and possibly fox*.  I harbor a personal hatred of Gray Squirrels bordering on psychopathic and will shoot or run over one at the first opportunity.  I shot one from the bathroom window about a half hour ago that looked to be about 2 pounds."

  

The squirrel I shot yesterday afternoon was gone this morning as expected.  Somebody got a nice little snack and I didn't have to sling the carcass into the woods at the end of a shovel. Life is good.   :slingshot:

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