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Anonymous March 18, 2004
12:19 am
test
caleb March 18, 2004
7:41 am
hey, where did you get this template? Shit, I hate my green template.
Mandrake March 18, 2004
10:16 am
Do a search for it around.
caleb March 18, 2004
10:50 am
you got the best looking template you wangker. The rest suck.
Mandrake March 18, 2004
11:27 am
heh.. of course.. of course.. got to it first.
caleb March 18, 2004
1:28 pm
European eel - Anguilla anguilla is a snakelike fish. They are generally believed to spawn in the Sargasso Sea and the larvae (Leptocephalus) migrate towards Europe in a three years migration. They enter freshwater, where they spent their lives. The slimy coating of the eel is though to protect the fish against changes in salinity.
Since the 1970s the numbers of eels reaching Europe is thought to have declined by around 90% (possibly even 98%). It is unclear whether this is part of a normal long term cycle, or whether this reflects a decline in eel numbers generally. Potential causes include Pollution, parasites such as Anguillicola crassus, river barriers such as hydroelectric plants, and natural changes in the North Atlantic oscillation, Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic drift.
The life history of the eels is one of the most fascinating stories in oceanography, still enigmatic: Eel story
Mandrake March 18, 2004
4:26 pm
Amazing but true!!
caleb March 18, 2004
5:08 pm
wait, there’s more!
Bull sharks are common in warm, shallow waters along coasts throughout the world. These sharks are responsible for many of the shark attacks on humans. Although bull sharks can frequently be found some distance inland by swimming up rivers, and as such are sometimes considered freshwater sharks, they are not truly freshwater unlike the river sharks of the genus Glyphis.
Description
The males of this species can reach 2.1 m long and weigh 90 kg. The females can be much larger, 3.5 m long and 230 kg. The name “bull shark” comes from the fact that its snout is short and wide compared to other sharks.
Behavior
Bull sharks are solitary animals. They eat a wide variety of things: fish, sharks, rays, turtles, birds, mollusks, dolphins, and sometimes even humans. They are common in shallow coastal water (usually less than 30 meters deep) and some rivers and lakes. Unusually for sharks, they can live and breed in freshwater, such as Lake Nicaragua and the Amazon.
Reproduction
Breeding takes place in the summer, often in brackish water of river mouths. After a gestation of about a year, bull sharks give birth to as many as 13 live young (they are ovoviviparous). The young are about 70 cm long at birth and take as long as 10 years to reach maturity, if they are not eaten by other sharks first.
Hi, this is a comment.
To delete a comment, just log in, and view the posts’ comments, there you will have the option to edit or delete them.
test
hey, where did you get this template? Shit, I hate my green template.
Do a search for it around.
you got the best looking template you wangker. The rest suck.
heh.. of course.. of course.. got to it first.
European eel - Anguilla anguilla is a snakelike fish. They are generally believed to spawn in the Sargasso Sea and the larvae (Leptocephalus) migrate towards Europe in a three years migration. They enter freshwater, where they spent their lives. The slimy coating of the eel is though to protect the fish against changes in salinity.
Since the 1970s the numbers of eels reaching Europe is thought to have declined by around 90% (possibly even 98%). It is unclear whether this is part of a normal long term cycle, or whether this reflects a decline in eel numbers generally. Potential causes include Pollution, parasites such as Anguillicola crassus, river barriers such as hydroelectric plants, and natural changes in the North Atlantic oscillation, Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic drift.
The life history of the eels is one of the most fascinating stories in oceanography, still enigmatic: Eel story
Amazing but true!!
wait, there’s more!
Bull sharks are common in warm, shallow waters along coasts throughout the world. These sharks are responsible for many of the shark attacks on humans. Although bull sharks can frequently be found some distance inland by swimming up rivers, and as such are sometimes considered freshwater sharks, they are not truly freshwater unlike the river sharks of the genus Glyphis.
Description
The males of this species can reach 2.1 m long and weigh 90 kg. The females can be much larger, 3.5 m long and 230 kg. The name “bull shark” comes from the fact that its snout is short and wide compared to other sharks.
Behavior
Bull sharks are solitary animals. They eat a wide variety of things: fish, sharks, rays, turtles, birds, mollusks, dolphins, and sometimes even humans. They are common in shallow coastal water (usually less than 30 meters deep) and some rivers and lakes. Unusually for sharks, they can live and breed in freshwater, such as Lake Nicaragua and the Amazon.
Reproduction
Breeding takes place in the summer, often in brackish water of river mouths. After a gestation of about a year, bull sharks give birth to as many as 13 live young (they are ovoviviparous). The young are about 70 cm long at birth and take as long as 10 years to reach maturity, if they are not eaten by other sharks first.
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