Sea Eagles Were Reintroduced Into Scotland In The 1970s And 80s After Being Driven To Extinction By Persecution

Sea Eagles Were Reintroduced Into Scotland In The 1970s And 80s After Being Driven To Extinction By Persecution

Sea eagles were reintroduced into Scotland in the 1970s and 80s after being driven to extinction by persecution from farmers and gamekeepers. Today in Scotland there are around 152 pairs of sea eagles. That number is not, "artificially high"

A recent study (2023) found that lambs are not a major part of a sea eagles diet

The main causes of death for lambs in Scotland is dystocia (obstructed birth) which leads to complications such as hyperthermia, starvation and hypoxia. Infection, bad weather and poor husbandry are also major factors. Predation from wild predators causes very few lamb deaths and most of the time lambs eaten by wild predators, including sea eagles, were already dead or dying.

Sea eagles continue to suffer illegal persecution across the UK due to intolerance from farmers and gamekeepers, usually being poisoned. People like this who demonise these animals make the problem worse. We should be focusing on coexistence between farmers and wildlife.

More Posts from Glitches25 and Others

1 month ago
Black Panther Poster. Just As Relevant Today

Black panther poster. Just as relevant today

1 month ago

Tewkensuchus: King of Punta Peligro

Last month we got our fourth croc of the year and our second notosuchian: Tewkensuchus salamanquensis (Forehead crocodile from the Salamanca Formation), a large-bodied sebecoid from the earliest Paleocene of Argentina. And GODDAMN is it a cool one.

Below some of the fossil material of Tewkensuchus, it doesn't look like much but stay with me for this post.

Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro

Starting with the fossil material, Tewkensuchus is admittedly not the most complete sebecid, hell Dentaneosuchus from two years ago is significantly better preserved. Essentially, Tewkensuchus preserves a bit of the skull and a few vertebrae. But the material we do have is exceptional in other ways. Like some European sebecoids, it had a high and broad sagittal crest that extends over its forehead flanked by two broad depressions. Remember the similarity to European sebecoids, thats gonna come back later. Theres also some interesting stuff in how the bony eyebrows, the palpebrals, articulate with the rest of the skull.

What is REALLY weird however is the shape of the postorbitals. Quick anatomy lesson, in crocs the postorbitals form the front corners of the skull table thats located just behind the eyes. They tend to be flat, but in the case of Tewkensuchus they are inclined so that they rise upwards behind the eyes. Now we have plenty of examples of crocodylomorphs with raised squamosals, giving them a somewhat ear-like appearance, but raised postorbitals are a new one.

Below: An artistic interpretation of Tewkensuchus featuring its unique cranial morphology by Manusuchus (give them a follow) from different angles.

Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro
Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro
Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro

One last thing on its anatomy, it was BIG. And I mean big. The team that described Tewkensuchus estimate that its complete skull might have been just over half a meter long, so some 20 inches. This might correspond to a weight of perhaps 300 kg (660 lb), larger than even the largest Cretaceous Baurusuchids.

Now, I hope you remember the part where I said that theres similarities to European sebecoids. Well that sentence has two key points the paper deals with. First of all, the connection to European forms itself. Phylogenetic analysis seems to indicate that despite being found in Patagonia, all its closest relatives are from the Eocene of Europe. These are the recently named giant Dentaneosuchus from France, Bergisuchus from Germany and Iberosuchus (I'll let you figure that one out for yourselves). So after Tewkensuchus disappears South America is inhabited by only distant cousins while its closest relatives show up some 20 million years later on the other side of the Atlantic.

The other noteworthy part of the statement is the use of "Sebecoid" rather than sebecid. That's because of taxonomic back and forth. Essentially, a few previous studies have not included European sebecoids (Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus) within the family Sebecidae, instead featuring them as a separate branch that split off beforehand. In some studies that branch is known as Bergisuchidae, in others they are two branches, you get the idea. Now the description of Dentaneosuchus for instance did away with Bergisuchidae and simply include these European forms within Sebecidae itself. Still as the basalmost members, but given the honor of being at least included. Same goes for Ogresuchus. Well, in the description of Tewkensuchus, we go back to the separate model. So Bergisuchus, Iberosuchus, Dentaneosuchus and Tewkensuchus all form a single not officially named group simply referred to as the "Eurogondwanan clade". This group was placed as the sister family to Sebecidae and together with Ogresuchus the two form the newly named Sebecoidea.

Europe's sebecoids, Dentaneosuchus (art by Joschua Knüppe), Bergisuchus (by Scott Reid) and Iberosuchus (once again Manusuchus)

Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro
Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro
Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro

And this is where we need to address the fact that Tewkensuchus creates a bunch of new problems and makes old ones worse. For starters, it's size. By all accounts its way too big. Keep in mind, this animal appeared some 2 to 3 million years after the extinction of the dinosaurs, an extinction event that is generally thought to have killed everything on land heavier than 10 kilos. And then you get Tewkensuchus with an estimated weight of 300. Well, there's two possible explanations for that. Explanation 1 hinges on the known fact that these rules don't quite apply to semi-aquatic animals. Sure, anything large on land got whiped out, but eusuchian crocodiles managed to survive quite well despite their large size in part because they were partially aquatic. So perhaps Tewkensuchus and sebecoids as a whole underwent an aquatic phase? Well, this would work quite well with what is known as the Sebecia-hypothesis. Essentially, there is some debate on the relationship between sebecids and other notosuchians. Some studies draw a link between them and the similarily terrestrial baurusuchids, placing them in the group Sebecosuchia. Other studies meanwhile believe that sebecids are most closely related to peirosaurids, which in turn are close kin to itasuchids and mahajangasuchids, with both of the latter being more semi-aquatic than other notosuchians. The problem with this is twofold. On the one hand, to my knowledge there has never been any indication that sebecids underwent an aquatic phase and even Cretaceous sebecoids like Ogresuchus from before the impact were clearly terrestrial. The other issue, as nice as this would fit with the Sebecia-hypothesis, this particular study actually recovers the Sebecosuchia model. So there's that.

Personally I don't really buy into this explanation, which takes us to the second possibility. Sebecoids got really jacked really fast. I mean, that's it really. If sebecoids didn't undergo some weird little phase that somehow excempts them from the 10 kilo rule then the only logical answer is that they must have grown to a ridiculous degree the second the dust settled. Do we have evidence for that? Well....kinda but not really no. The closest we have is the fact that Dentaneosuchus from the Eocene clearly reached an enormous size on its own, but that was over 20 million years after the impact. We do at least know that sebecoids were small prior to the KPG thanks to Ogresuchus from Spain, which grew to only a meter in length. But a sample size of one isn't exactly exact proof that all sebecoids were small prior to the impact, especially with shifting phylogenies. The paper itself argues that its most parsimonious that whatever sebecoid crossed the boundry was already fairly large, but time will tell if this holds up. Whatever the case, with a skull half a meter in length it was certainly a formidable predator and a terrifying sight to any unfortunate mammal to cross its path.

Tewkensuchus attacking a startled Monotrematum, a South American monotreme, art by Joschua Knüppe

Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro

Finally the last thing to address, paleogeography. It sucks. Moving on. Jokes aside, sebecoid geography was already a pain in the ass. Assuming the sebecosuchian model, sebecoids likely split off from baurusuchids during the Santonian. Mind you this is purely based in the first appearance of baurusuchids, since sebecoids didn't appear for quite a while. Ignoring the problematic Doratodon, the first sebecoid to appear in the fossil record is Ogresuchus in the Maastrichtian of Spain. In the Paleocene we then obviously get Tewkensuchus representing the Eurogondwana clade in Argentina as well as sebecids proper, which seem to be constrained to South America. But then in the Eocene we suddenly have sebecoids in Europe and Africa (for simplicity I'm assuming that Eremosuchus was a sebecoid rather than a sebecid as is traditional). So, how does any of this work? We don't know. I've been breaking my head over how to best explain this without just repeating the paper itself, so let me just say this. Maybe sebecoids originated in South America with baurusuchids, they managed to enter Europe at the very least once giving rise to Ogresuchus, probably via Africa given that its very much undersampled. From there who fucking knows. Maybe Ogresuchus was just one random branch and the two main groups both actually originate in South America. Maybe the Eurogondwana group emmigrating to Europe as well while sebecids proper remained. Maybe the Eurogondwana group originated in Europe and Tewkensuchus simply returned to South America, or maybe they originated in Africa and had members travel west to South America and north to Europe. Or maybe....you get the idea, we don't know. We don't know if they rafted or took land bridges (tho the latter seems more likely), we don't know where certain groups first originated in actuality, we do not know a lot and Tewkensuchus being such a blatant link between Paleocene South America and Europe, which were well separated by that point, raises so many questions.

I imagine this is what this entire last section reads like....

Tewkensuchus: King Of Punta Peligro

I wish that last segment wasn't as chaotic as it is, but like I said, its a big old confusing mess and it gives me a headachse just thinking about it. So for the time being, its simplest to assume that they split from baurusuchids in South America and then some stuff happened we don't understand. Personally, I'm very much putting my trust in Africa here, I am 100% convinced that some very important stuff went down that we just haven't found yet. But thats just me.

5 months ago

Hidden Code???

Hidden Code???

SO in the new episode of The Amazing Digital Circus there is a code behind Caine when he is talking to Gangle. I think this relates to the new thewackywatch.com update that has Spudsy's advertisements. Particularly the application section here:

Hidden Code???

I think the sticky saying POS LOGIN relates to Position Login. I believe the sticky says

POS LOGIN

USER: SPUD

CODE: some numbers that resemble 464624? The problem is that I have been trying to enter them into the application and I keep getting rejected. I'm not sure what to put for the position (Fry Cook for the wording next to it? CEO to relate to the C&A stuff next to the sticky or the fact that Caine is in the "higher up's" like Gangle said, Burger because it is in the responsibilities?) and I'm not sure I have the numbers right? Any help would be awesome if you guys know anything! This could be a wild Gooseworx chase but it might lead to something interesting.

3 months ago
A Story To Boost The Morale Of A Broken Country.
A Story To Boost The Morale Of A Broken Country.
A Story To Boost The Morale Of A Broken Country.

A story to boost the morale of a broken country.

1 month ago
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe
Suddenly I Have This Au Where Everyone Involved In The League Got Turned Into A Beastie... (or Maybe

suddenly i have this au where everyone involved in the league got turned into a Beastie... (or maybe they always were and it's a different AU?) details tbd i just wanted to design the coaches as beasties lol

4 weeks ago

Cnetizens: What's with the two busy clams? Other Cnetizens: to add some flavor (Shantou汕头 have leveled up from lion dance to lobster dance)

2 weeks ago
Did Everyone Consent To Being There, Did The Dancers Know Their Audience, Were They Paid (looking At

Did everyone consent to being there, did the dancers know their audience, were they paid (looking at the yesses) what the fuck is the problem

I don't know what it will take to break this into your gooey young hearts, but you don't stop having fun -- all forms: physical, mental, sexual, social, literarily, culturally -- as you age

You should be seeking joy and pleasure until the very instant you exhale your last mortal breath

Renounce pleasure at your own loss, I will spend none of my life force or temporal passage grieving for you or remembering you

1 month ago
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum
I Really Enjoyed The Big Bug Statues Exhibit At The Science Museum

I really enjoyed the Big Bug Statues exhibit at the science museum

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