• MummifiedClient5000@feddit.dk
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    1 hour ago

    I petted and fed hay to the last male northern white rhino in Kenya some years ago.

    He’s dead now and the remaining two females will likely die without giving birth and the species will go extinct :-(

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    Polar Bear on the Hudson Bay coast in northern Ontario.

    I’m Indigenous and I’ve gone hunting and trapping with my relatives a few times in my life. On one of those trips we happened on a polar bear on the mud flats of the bay during the late autumn. We drove by in our freighter canoe (a very large oversized canoe with a 60 HP outboard motor) and the bear swam near us and then walked by a few hundred feet away. It wasn’t afraid but we were. We watched for a while and then fired rifle shot into the mud next to it to scare it away. From the moment it started to run to the point it disappeared as a speck on the horizon was about a minute or two. I went up later to look at the prints and the clay mud looked like a tractor had driven over it. I couldn’t believe how fast it could move on the mud. I quickly sank in my boots and could barely walk around.

    One paw print was about the size of my head. I never left camp without someone nearby or a rifle in my hands.

    • SGforce@lemmy.ca
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      7 hours ago

      I guess nobody can tell how big they are from photos. There’s never someone standing next to them for comparison.

  • tpyoman@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I saw a lynx cat in th3 backyard of a place I was staying at in Washington it was very cool.

  • skizzles@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Panay monitor lizard.

    My buddy was trapping monitor lizards for us to eat and we caught one of those. He recognized it and told me that they were endangered.

    We did NOT eat it. It went back into the forest, unharmed.

  • SGforce@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    Saw a fishercat in an industrial area not far from a large swath of floodplain and high voltage transmission lines. So there was a lot of territory for it nearby. Looks like a tall badger. Apparently pretty rare. Was walking around 18 wheeler trucks in motion like it owned the place, peeking around the dumpsters most likely looking for the young raccoons that hang around.

  • socsa@piefed.social
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    12 hours ago

    I traveled to one of the most remote places on the planet, drove hours on dirt roads, hiked another hour through deafening wind, and then crawled on my stomach to the edge of a a 1300’ cliff, and hung off of it it just to take a picture of a puffin with my cell phone.

    • skizzles@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Coulda just flew to Oregon for that one lol. You can catch them up on haystack rock.

      I bet it was still an awesome experience you had none the less.

  • Platypus@sh.itjust.works
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    13 hours ago

    Probably Hercules the Liger. Terrifyingly enormous animal–pictures do not do justice to how intimidating a predator of that mass is.

  • AZERTY@feddit.nl
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    12 hours ago

    A wild beaver like a few miles from my house, and not a nutria, a real life flat-tailed beaver toothed fucking beaver. I was going to an artificial dam I use as a fishing spot and there he was. It was way bigger than I thought but I didn’t want to disturb it so I turned around and went home.

    In captivity? An Okapi? A rhino? Idk man I’ve been to many zoos and exotic zoos where you drive through and idk about the rarest.

    • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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      7 hours ago

      In the wild I’ve seen kiwi, kea, Kākā. I took a trip to mana island in the late 90’s, the kiwi were just wandering around during the day…

      I’ve never seen the takahē.

  • Nakoichi [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    12 hours ago

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Cruz_long-toed_salamander

    So rare I don’t even know if they still exist.

    I did some field biology work back in the mid 2000s and this is the only reason I know this.

    There is also the California Condor and a species of kangaroo rat in the Mojave. The former is less rare now due to an immense amount of work we did to save the species to the point where they actually got removed from the endangered list at one point.

    Look at this little guy though

    As for the Condors:

    The condor population (wild and captive) has steadily increased, reaching over 460 in 2017 (with 170 wild condors in California). For the most current update check out the Condor Population Status Summary (PDF)

    Back when I was doing field work they were down to only 27 and all had been moved to captivity.

    The situation with the salamander is much more dire

    Its limited range and fragile specialized habitat place severe restrictions to the viability of this species. There is no definitive population estimate for the Santa Cruz long-toed salamander, but the numbers are deemed to be quite small. Further disturbance of its limited habitat could lead to this species’ extinction.