RIP - white dolphin
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- Last post
- 59 Responses
- conroy0
Come on!!!
This thread is killing the other thread 41 - 30.
I know what I'm doing.
- CALLES0
Come on!!!
This thread is killing the other thread 41 - 30.
I know what I'm doing.
conroy
(Dec 13 06, 10:50)THREAD-OFF!!!
- k0na_an0k0
thought you left dobs?
guess not.
k0na_an0k
(Dec 13 06, 10:37)case.
rest.
lemmys_wart
(Dec 13 06, 10:46)k.
dobs.
- harlequino0
And it's not an action figure! It's a collectible!! A valuable collectible!
TheBlueOne
(Dec 13 06, 09:27)
:D
- conroy0
THREAD-OFF!!!
CALLES
(Dec 13 06, 10:54)My lack of thread researching is just bringing more awareness to the cause!
- 305artist0
lol
+1
- PonyBoy0
conroy... you deserve to be caught in a Tuna net, you noooob!!!
hehe... j/k!!
Everyone else was time lining and ripping you... I felt a need to join in. :)
- conroy0
RIP - white dolphin
Vs.
Just Got Lonelier...
---------------------My shit gets right to the f**kin' point. I know what I'm looking at... DEAD DOLPHINS!!!
None of this fancy wording mystery jargon bullcrap.
xoxo
- TheBlueOne0
Conroy you noob..you asked for a thread war, and a thread war you will get...
- mpfree0
conrack
teach me numba's
- conroy0
I ain't no n00b!!!!
I've been here since '02
I've just been stripped of my title for QBN abuse.
gfro (2002-2006)
Fuck the fish, R.I.P. gfro
- mpfree0
Scientists began discovering dead harbor porpoises washing up on Scottish shores eight years ago. In many instances, the little porpoises´ bodies looked relatively unscathed but postmortem work found that the animals´ internal organs were shattered. In subsequent years, dozens of the dead, battered creatures surfaced in Scottish waters.
"The cause of their internal injuries was a mystery for several years," says Ben Wilson, a dolphin expert at the University of Aberdeen who was part of a team that eventually solved the puzzle with the aid of a videotape shot by an amateur dolphin watcher. The deaths, Wilson discovered, are caused by beatings delivered by the harbor porpoise´s larger relative, the bottlenose dolphin, a creature familiar to television watchers from the series Flipper. The bottlenose, it seems, can deliver devastating, quick blows with its beak and tail. The discovery is just one of several recent findings that are changing the way we look at one of the ocean´s most fascinating creatures.
Behind the dolphin´s fixed, smilelike gaze and remarkable intelligence lurks a creature that sometimes indulges in acts of violence against both other species and its own kin. That fact is being substantiated by dolphin-behavior expert Richard Conner, whose research reveals that male Indian Ocean bottlenose dolphins form groups that function much like roving gangs of human hoodlums. They clash with other groups and rob one another of the great prize of the dolphin realm: mates. Sometimes, Connor notes, two groups of males will form an alliance to fight another group or alliance of groups. His work is preliminary, a scant hint at the secrets still to be wrested from dolphin society.
mpfree
(Nov 16 06, 07:39)
- drgs0
they were ugly anyway
- conroy0
they were ugly anyway
drgs
(Dec 13 06, 12:40)Haaaa
Beauty is what really counts. No one would care if the spider crab was extinct.
- mpfree0
I love cockroaches
that's why I hang out in this walkie talkie typie thing
- conroy0
If only this guy was around more:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061…
- CALLES0
problem solved