Apr 11, 2021 11:59 PM EDT
(Photo : Karen Alchin)
(Photo : Pixabay)
After it was discovered that diclofenac killed vultures that consumed cattle carcasses treated with the drug, it was outlawed in India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh. Hundreds of millions of vultures are thought to have died due to this, with some birds dwindling by 99.9% in areas of South Asia.
Despite this, diclofenac was accepted in Spain and other European countries because producers, drug makers, and regulators claimed that cattle carcasses in Europe were handled differently than in India. Vultures will be unable to consume meat contaminated with diclofenac as a result of this.
Mar 08, 2021 01:07 PM EST
Real-life is frequently bizarre than fiction, so we re frankly not certain why people resort to these myths. To celebrate March 3rd (World Wildlife Day), here is some widely-clenched but easily disagreeable theories about animals you can quite acknowledging today.
(Photo : Pixabay)
Myth 1: Bulls Dislike Red
Cattle are partly color-blind, not only do bulls not dislike red, but they can hardly even see it and the color red does not fall in their range. You have likely seen pictures of bullfighters enticing their prey with red flags, but it s believed to be the clatter of the crowd, the spears of the comic, and the antagonistic actions of the matador that infuriate the animals, not the specific color of the fabric.