- Aug 9, 2016
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Only one?Dunno why you guys are bothering, we have one on the Carlton board.
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Only one?Dunno why you guys are bothering, we have one on the Carlton board.
Go to the amazon and see McDonalds led company's chopping down millions of trees to support cattle feed lots.One thing that always bothered me about endangered animals is this.
Cows htf do we maintain their numbers?
We have a fast food joint on every corner attended by millions of people every day.
How do we maintain their numbers? Now I get it's farmed and bred but given how much is consumed on a daily basis and the world's population, it just doesn't add up in my mind.
One thing that always bothered me about endangered animals is this.
Cows htf do we maintain their numbers?
We have a fast food joint on every corner attended by millions of people every day.
How do we maintain their numbers? Now I get it's farmed and bred but given how much is consumed on a daily basis and the world's population, it just doesn't add up in my mind.
By clearing out four Tasmanias a week from the Amazon rainforest for cattle.One thing that always bothered me about endangered animals is this.
Cows htf do we maintain their numbers?
We have a fast food joint on every corner attended by millions of people every day.
How do we maintain their numbers? Now I get it's farmed and bred but given how much is consumed on a daily basis and the world's population, it just doesn't add up in my mind.
Lighthouse keepers at Wilsons Prom also logged in the daily charts the sightings of the occasional "tiger".Just after ash Wednesday (Feb 1983) my aunt and cousin were driving from Lorne to aireys inlet and they claim to have seen a thylacine on the road at Cathedral Rock. They still swear that's what they saw. Apparently some other guy saw it about the same time and wrote to the sun about it where the experts shut him down.
Obviously it's just a rumour nowadays but that's what the say they saw.
Most Devils don't live more than 5 years in the wild.Quite a short life span for a mammal of that size isn't it? Interesting.
No doubt. Would be interesting to find data on how old Thylacines were capable of reaching but I've yet to come across any.Most Devils don't live more than 5 years in the wild.
Tasmania must be a harsh climate for carnivorous mammals.
Certainly they survived post 1936, there are enough reliable sightings to indicate a few were kicking around for another fifty years or so. Hydro Tasmania employees used to see one at a power station in the southwest (note: not in the national park and not in typical Tiger territory, to be fair) but I think sightings for that specimen stopped in the 1970s or 1980s.
Now? Sadly, the odds are less than 1%. My dreams that one day they'll clone them and bring them back have been shattered in recent years by the news that the remaining DNA is pretty useless.
No Dingoes never made it to Tasmania.Both Tiger and Devil fossils have been found in South West Western Australian caves. They weren't hunted out by white man.
Maybe they were out competed by dingoes? Were there Dingoes in Tasmania?
Both Tiger and Devil fossils have been found in South West Western Australian caves. They weren't hunted out by white man.
Maybe they were out competed by dingoes? Were there Dingoes in Tasmania?
Firstly - cows aren't an endangered animal.One thing that always bothered me about endangered animals is this.
Cows htf do we maintain their numbers?
We have a fast food joint on every corner attended by millions of people every day.
How do we maintain their numbers? Now I get it's farmed and bred but given how much is consumed on a daily basis and the world's population, it just doesn't add up in my mind.
I don't believe this extinction nonsense.Funny... I was talking to Dad the other day and a bloke he knew swore that he saw one a few years ago in country Victoria...
Tasmanian tiger spotters tell of stripes and animals the 'size of kelpies'
Reports from people convinced they have seen Tasmanian tigers in the wild are released, with observers describing encounters with "cat-like creatures" they were "100 per cent certain" were thylacines.www.abc.net.au