Friday, June 28, 2013
The Frog Eater
This guy sits in the reeds next to ponds and waits for unsuspecting frogs to stumble into reach. When they do he'll use his long arms to grab them and his smaller front arms to pick them apart and eat them. He can be seen here with his latest catch.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
The Stick Insect Mimic
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
The Catcher
"The Catcher" |
From beneath a fallen tree three small
figures emerge. They move slowly and
methodically, they are hunting.
One is slender and timid. He imitates a stick insect, rocking back and forth;
he pretends to be a piece of vegetation swaying in the breeze. The second has a hide of very wrinkled skin
that looks remarkably like the bark on an old branch. He moves very little and for extended periods
of time he will stop, tuck his arms and legs in to his body and remain very
still. The last of them is the
Catcher. He is old and wrinkled and his
hands and feet are sore and arthritic from many years of catching. He was once like the Stick Insect Mimic but
over the years he has proven himself amongst his peers and so has risen up the
ranks (the position of the Mimic is almost always given to the young or
insolent of the community as it has a high mortality rate!). Although he has bulked up a bit and lost most
of his insect-like features, he still shows remnants of his old life as a Mimic
in the design of his arms where they are spiny and armor plated not to mention
his long antennae.
Our trio of hunters has a unique hunting
style. They use a trapping technique to
catch their prey, which consist almost solely of foraging birds.
First the Branchlike will move into
position (this position is usually determined after a few days of watching and
noting various causeways or feeding spots where birds can be found foraging). Once the Branchlike is in position the Mimic
will crawl on top of him and begin to imitate an insect. He will begin swaying back and forth like a
stick insect – a very tempting meal for an unsuspecting bird.
Once the prey has come close enough to the
Mimic, the Branchlike will begin to secrete a glue-like substance from the
pores of his thick, bark-like skin. This
will ensnare the prey but not the Mimic (he has developed a special layer if
skin on his hands and feet that act as a release from the glue). Once the prey has become stuck it is all but
done for. The Catcher makes his
move. Despite his sore arthritic hands
and feet he moves with deceptive quickness to snatch up the poor creature,
ripping its body away and leaving only its feet to remain stuck to the back of
the Branchlike. The Branchlike will wear
these feet like medals for days after the hunt.
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