WEIRD NEWS: Odd looking creature discovered in Panama is likely a sloth

In the image, the animal is clearly a sloth missing most of its fur and note the visible sloth-like claw on its forefoot. However, it’s still an eerie image. Read more at HuffingtonPost

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VIDEOS: Humboldt squid wash up on La Jolla coast after earthquake

A sudden Humboldt squid stranding, after an earthquake, perplexes residents and visitors to La Jolla shores, and “biologists said they’re seeing more of these off Southern California in recent years like the ones that washed up on La Jolla beaches.”


Squid utilize a hard parrot-like chitinous beak which can be dangerous

A Humboldt squid grabs and subsequently spooks a diver


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ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS PICKS

Environmental News Picks presents a summary of news regarding the environment, conservation, science, politics, and other interesting subject matter. The Conservation Report does not endorse any content found in these news picks, but the information is provided to put readers on notice of the various different beliefs and viewpoints. Comments, corrections, and suggestions are very much welcomed. Send your news tips and picks: .

oak-treeANIMALS: Meet the world’s only immortal animal

AUTO INDUSTRY: Report: Toyota developing solar powered green car, Take a test ride — inside: ‘Green’ cars will go for a spin in basement ‘forest’

BIOFUELS: Continental Airlines to Make Algae Biofuel Test Flight

BIRDS: Google Sightseeing: Flocking

CARBON: New Cement Absorbs More CO2 Than Production Emits

CLIMATE CHANGE: Climate Change Forcing Penguins North?: Warm ocean currents may have confused some 2,500 penguins from Argentina’s Patagonia region that washed up — dead and alive — on Brazil’s northern coast.

COAL: Billion-gallon sludge flood could change utility: Storage reviewed after retention pond for coal waste burst

DEFORESTATION: Malaysia Uses Satellite To Fight Illegal Logging: Report

ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT: Federal Government Sued by California over Gutting of Endangered Species Act

ENERGY: Flat-screen TVs to face energy-efficiency rules in California

EVOLUTION: How did turtles get their shells?

FISHERIES: Seattle group fined nearly $450,000 by NOAA for fisheries violations

GREEN CONSTRUCTION: 10 best ideas for greening your home that you’ve never heard of

HEALTH: Mouthwash linked to cancer

HYBRID TECHNOLOGY: New Honda Hybrid Contender Challenges Champ Prius

INVASIVE SPECIES: Great Lakes Facing Wide Alien Species Invasion

LEGAL NEWS: Woman sues for 10M for being denied subway rides with dog

MARINE MAMMALS: Can dolphins survive winter in NJ rivers?, Hungry seal hits bonanza at fish hatchery

NEW SPECIES: New species found in Chattahoochee, Flint river systems

NUCLEARIZATION OF ENERGY SOURCES: Hyperion mini nuclear reactors to supply enough cheap power for a small town

POLITICS: The trouble with Sanjay Gupta

SARAH PALIN: VIDEO: Sarah Palin attacks bloggers, media in new interview

“Environmental News Picks” are made possible with help from Kevin.


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

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REEL BIG FISH: Giant catfish in India turn to preying on humans (updated)

These images illustrate some of the largest species of freshwater catfish in the world. The first image shows the Mekong giant catfish (Pangasianodon gigas) of Asia. The second and third images are of the wels catfish (Silurus glanis), which is found in Europe. Both species of catfish grow exceptionally large. The Mekong giant catfish, in the first image, weighed 646 pounds. The first wels catfish tipped the scales at about 187 pounds, and the second giant weighed 226 pounds.

The Mekong giant catfish is critically endangered, but the wels catfish isn’t considered endangered or threatened. The wels catfish has been blamed for attacking animals as large as swans, and there are recorded attacks on humans as well. Furthermore, according to Animal Planet, “these fish have been caught in Russia with human remains in their stomachs, but most experts suspect the victims were already drowned before being swallowed.”

The goonch (Bagarius sp.), which is shown in the fourth image, is another species of giant freshwater catfish. It has been blamed for capturing and consuming humans. Jeremy Wade, of “River Monsters,” is pictured with a 161-pound goonch catfish that he caught, and it “measured 5 feet, 7 inches from head to tail with a 41-inch girth and 44-inch ‘wingspan.’” More via Animal Planet:

The goonch catfish, much like its other catfish relatives, can grow to an enormous size and weight. But unlike others, this river monster makes its home in the Great Kali River running between India and Nepal, a stretch of water that is often used to dispose of funeral pyres after Hindu funeral rites. Theory contends that the goonch has long scavenged the half-burned human corpses from these funeral pyres. This diet may have helped the goonch — or at least a few members of the species — grow to unusually huge proportions. It may also have led the goonch to develop a taste for human flesh, which may now be fueling frightening attacks on live humans.

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The goonch stands accused of a number of human attacks, including the death of an 18-year-old Nepali in 2008, who was dragged down into the river by what witnesses described as an “elongated pig.” Two similar attacks were reported in 1988.

WEIRD NEWS: Creature known as “Montauk Monster” discovered on Montauk Beach

UPDATE: 20 Sept. 2009: A Montauk monster-like creature was discovered in Panama. However, this creature is clearly a sloth. More at the Mail Online.

Panama Creature

UPDATE: 14 May 2009: The Montauk monster washes up again. More about the Montauk Monster can be found at Snopes.com and Wikipedia.

Image by Jenna Hewitt

This image of a poor creature that met its end at sea is going around the Internet. The creature washed up onto a Montauk beach. I must say it isn’t a basking shark, beluga, or beaked whale. These creatures are often confused for sea monsters when they wash up dead and decomposing. Supposedly, this image is not photoshopped. Do you have any ideas of what it could be: a fake, the New Jersey Devil, the spawn of a nearby government animal-testing facility, a pug/sea turtle hybrid, or simply a raccoon gone wrong? I have my bets on a raccoon or viral media.

There is more at Gawker and the East Hampton Star.  The Hamptons Plum looks at photoshopping, and the New York Magazine seems to case doubt on the image’s validity as being real, so it may be a “viral-marketing campaign.”

More on the Montauk monster:

Jeff Corwin on Faux News discusses the Montauk Monster:

From the Scientific American Blog: Mystery of the “Montauk Monster”:

But we may never know for sure. It seems, you see, that the body has been moved. And nobody (at least nobody talking) knows by whom—or where it was taken.

From Hamptons.com, NY: Experts Confirm Montauk Monster Is Relative Of Rocky Raccoon:

Larry Penny, director of Natural Resources for the Town of East Hampton, believes the creature is a raccoon in the beginning stages of a watery decay.

From The Huffington Post: Montauk Monster: “It” Object Of The Week:

The good people of East Hampton animal control adopted a (justifiably) skeptical eye towards the media’s fascination with the beast, passing around Daily Intel’s reporters until finally someone three phone calls later said that it was a raccoon, we imagine noncommittally.

Still, some denounced the photograph as (quel horreur!) a work of a twisted Photoshopper or worse: viral marketing. Gawker, which has now for whatever reason assumed expertise about the matter, has insisted on the Montauk Monster’s legitimacy.

From chicagotribune.com: Montauk Monster:

But William Wise, director of Stony Brook University’s Living Marine Resources Institute, after looking at the photo and consulting with a fellow biologist (who knows land creatures), disagrees.

He knows what it isn’t.

A raccoon. (“The legs appear to be too long in proportion to the body.”)

A sea turtle. (“Sea turtles do not have teeth.”)

A rodent. (“Rodents have two huge, curved incisor teeth in front of their mouths.”)

He said the general body shape looks like a dog or other canine (“Coyote?”). But that the “prominent eye ridge and the feet” don’t match.

He said the feet and face look “somewhat ovine” — that would be like a sheep — but sheep don’t have sharp teeth.

Wise’s best, educated guess: “A talented someone who got very creative with latex.”

In other words, a fake — which would place Wise with the skeptics. (Many of whom believe the image could have been manipulated with computer software.)

From the New York News Blog | New York Magazine: East Hampton Bureaucrats Deny Montauk Monster Is Beast From Hell:

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“Larry Penny said it’s a raccoon,” said Carry-Smyth, speaking of the environmental-protection director, who was out of the office today. “If you look at it, that little bug on the shoulder area is actually a fly, and that gives you an idea of what size it is,” she said. “He said the jaw was broken, and that’s why it looks like a beak. With long fingers…it’s more like a raccoon.” Wait a second: like a raccoon or actually a raccoon? After we hung up, we took her advice. We’re looking at it again now, and we’re pretty sure what we see is a fly on the shoulder of a smallish monster.