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Anonymous asked:
why are jackals so small?
The true jackals (black-backed jackals and side-striped jackals) evolved in ecosystems where there is a lot of competition among large predators. Their small size allows them to be very nimble and agile so it’s difficult for the larger animals that can and do prey on them to actually catch them. It’s not really worth it for a lion to expend a lot of energy to prey on something so small so their presence around carcasses is often tolerated or ignored. So they’re small as to not be to be viwed as a threat and very difficult for most large predators to catch without wasting a lot of energy. It allows them to scavenge mostly unbothered, while having the ability to escape at a moment’s notice.
Here’s one of my favorite vidoes to show just how quick black-backed jackals are. They are often seen walking up to adult lions and nipping at them. By the time the lion gets up, the jackal is in the next zipcode 😂
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Ken Carlson (b. 1937)
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“The general deculturation of the academic and intellectual world in Western civilisation furnishes the background for the social dominance of opinions that would have been laughed out of court in the late Middle Ages or the Renaissance.”
Eric Voegelin
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“Second hand books are wild books, homeless books; they have come together in vast flocks of variegated feather, and have a charm which the domesticated volumes of the library lack.”
Virginia Woolf, 25th January 1882 – 28th March 1941
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