injunjane: (music)


I have discovered something incredibly beautiful (just watch this video).

This guy says that he went to the countryside and was spending time at his grandma's farm playing guitar and singing for cows. He found out in a book (and then in the field) that cows are real melomans who even give more milk after listening to classical music.

Overwhelmed by the result, the musician stopped eating meat (I understand him quite well, trying to do the same) and started to play for animals in farms, refugees and zoos.

I've seen some videos of people playing for animals before, but never so profoundly touching.
In the middle of the clip there is an orangutan family listening and one of them starts clapping to the song.
This is the most heartwarming thing I've seen in a long, long time.

Music is indeed a universal language, and animals are much closer to us in terms of emotions that some might think.
injunjane: (science)
Another one is out under our rotifer project: https://www.gbif.org/dataset/36c840bb-6a98-4c8c-bd29-0b84b426b95c

I truly put my soul into this work, because behind every sample lies a story — and people I hold dear, including those who have already departed from this world.

Dear Dr. Eleonora Ovander-Sedysheva, the work of your entire scientific career is no longer lost; it will now serve hundreds of people for many years to come.
injunjane: (it's personal)
"Feral pigeons can compete with other birds for food and nesting sites in cities, and they can also be aggressive, potentially displacing other species from feeding areas or resources. Their ability to thrive in urban environments makes them successful competitors, particularly when they have access to readily available food sources from humans."

"Feral pigeons can transmit diseases like cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, and psittacosis through their droppings. They can also carry bacteria that cause illnesses such as salmonellosis and campylobacteriosis."

When I see fb postings cherishing people who feed pigeons in the cities, I'm literally full of rage.

They are raising flying rats and banish other bird species gradually adapting to city life after destruction of their natural habitats. These ignorant individuals are helping spread dangerous infections in highly populated areas. They don't know how the world around them functions, and apparently don't even want to know.

False brainless kindness kills.

ROTISFERA

Jul. 25th, 2025 12:20 pm
injunjane: (science)
This month the first public outcome of our project is ready, a huge GBIF database on rotifers that live in soil, moss and lichens:

https://www.gbif.org/dataset/0190c60e-e4fe-444d-b0f3-3be8368c2e0a

GBIF server liked it so much that their Secretariat sent us a message saying they'll make a special announce about it on Twitter.
injunjane: (Default)
Some R code for mapping collection points from the table of coordinates:

Read more... )
injunjane: (Default)
I'm working with Darwin Core tables for submission to GBIF this week.
Here is some R code for data mapping from csv tables in R.

https://trias-project.github.io/alien-birds-checklist/dwc_mapping.html

https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rgbif/index.html

https://techdocs.gbif.org/en/openapi/
injunjane: (science)
"...A wild male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus was observed applying sap and chewed leaves from a medicinal plant to his facial wound. This is believed to be the first documented case of a wild animal actively using a medicinal plant to treat an injury."

The paper published last year in Nature:

Active self-treatment of a facial wound with a biologically active plant by a male Sumatran orangutan
injunjane: (science)
In Poland a cow run away from a village and lived for 3 months with a heard of zubrs

Zubr (Bison bonasus) is smaller than the famous American bison, although these two species belong to the same genus. Both can create hybrids with domestic cattle.
injunjane: (science)
I've just found out that beavers, who are second largest rodents after capybaras, can weigh up to 50 kg.

On the scale of human weight in beavers, I'm 1 up to 1.08 :)
injunjane: (science)
Science in times of war.

Somehow the first person I remember when I think of it is Karl Wulfert, a German naturalist who was living and working near Leipzig right from the start of WWII (1939) and through the whole war till the end of it.

For example, here's one of his papers "Die Rädertiere der deutschen Thermen" (Rotifers of German Thermal Springs) https://www.zobodat.at/pdf/Lotos_88_0246-0262.pdf

Breslau (Wrocław, Poland) and Karlsbad (Karlovy Vary, Czechia) are yet German territory. On the map in the paper there aren't any borders (only German, Czech and Polish toponyms). The war however is at its top - ongoing Leningrad blockade, The Battle of Stalingrad (a turning point) is about to happen. More than a million people are being killed in Auschwitz, a complex of German concentration camps near the Polish town Oświęcim.

And a nice quiet German gentleman is traveling around the ponds and springs with a sampler and hydrobiological net, catching microscopic life and describing new species of animals.

I wonder how much thought he was giving to other things around him.
injunjane: (science)
https://www.facebook.com/reel/382279837893475

Amazing. There is scientific proof that border collies among all dogs enjoy the process of learning as itself?
They don't need special treats for performing tasks, only verbal praise for the job correctly done.

I could not find the paper that the guy's citing, instead I found one in which it is proven these dogs can comprehend that human words mean certain object names.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0376635710002925

In the same time, they get bored very quickly. It's like having a smart toddler with ADHD, apparently :)
injunjane: (science)
As a professional zoologist of course I've always had a scientific answer to that question.

Biologically speaking, we are nothing more than just another species of animals inhabiting Earth. We are not even the only species of the genus Homo (actually, a crossbreed between at least two species of that genus), but the only one remaining because the rest were either extinct or exterminated. We are a species with the biggest (relative to the rest of the body) and the most complex brain among animals, and to that, we have highly developed forelimbs adapted to perform complex work, and a vocal apparatus capable of making a wide range of sounds to successfully communicate the skills and other knowledge to each other.

We are also the only species who invented alphabet to communicate with each other in writing, the ability that enormously accelerated our mental, although not so much physical, evolution.

Our children, unlike those of other animals, are born with an incredible brain in which most instincts (apart of two or three in the early infancy) are virtually non-existent. That's one of the reasons why it takes so long for a human baby to grow into a fully independent individual. Animals don't have that luxury, not all but a large amount of their behavior is genetically predisposed, an animal baby being born with plenty predefined neural paths. That's why when we work, participate in leisure activities, choose a partner - it's very much not an instinct but a result of free and often unpredictable brain activity. Hormonal factors seem to play a great role in our mood, thus shaping our motivation to do (or not) anything, but that is much less strict than truly instinctive behavior.

Still...what do we mean when saying 'we have to be humane', 'humanism', 'humane actions'?

I grew up in a society where the general opinion was that the 'humane' qualities were empathy, kindness, tenderness, nobleness (clever, educated but still kind comportment), capability of self-sacrifice for others, forgiveness and mutual support.

Same people considered 'animals in general' and 'animalistic' all the opposite. Also adding to that examples of hyper-sexuality - which is not really an animal thing, since they are having hormonal pleasure from sex but eventually use it, not much for their own choice, for reproduction. And also very much for BONDING, forming amazing life-lasting couples.

As far as I'm concerned, modern humans are using sex as much to be free from any bonds as for everything else. And so many of them hate cuddles without sex - although animals can be quite the opposite.

Later, when I graduated and started working with actual animals, I was astonished by how often they demonstrate what we considered specifically humane. They can be aggressive but also extremely friendly and gentle - both to their species and the others (I wish racists would learn from them, they can't even stand other populations of their own species). Animals can be very much altruistic and self-sacrificing. The astonishing thing is that their self-sacrifice is born from emotions (and instincts and hormonal bonds, yes) but not from the IDEOLOGY produced by the rational mind.

What seems to be exclusively human (and not at all 'humane') is abusing their very large brain for inventing means of climbing to the top of the social food chain. Weaponry, state apparatus, bureaucracy, social statuses and of course, MONEY.

Humans are the only hoarders of these damn pieces of metal and paper on the planet. Many of them are following the urge of hoarding it as if it would be a true blind instinct and not a matter of choice. Because they don't want to make that choice, and being creatures with a gigantic brain, seem not to be using it for the right purposes.

A new trend is to collect not money but points - in computer games, in ratings etc etc. Same useless habit that was meant to demonstrate swift intellect but instead demonstrates nothing.

From that point of view, I prefer to be an animal. Having my emotions, tenderness, my bonds and quiet admiration of the beauty of the nature outside the human anthills.

Because without it a human is not a person but a BIOROBOT. An organic AI with the glitching software.

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