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1 October, 2005 at 9:50 pm #1454
:o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o :o
Two-headed turtle found in Cuba
A policeman has made an unusual discovery near a river in Cuba – a turtle with two heads.
The tiny turtle is thought to be around a week old and was found near one of the country’s most contaminated rivers.Had it not been noticed in a pile of leaves by Officer Alexander Napoles the turtle may have died, but now it has been taken to a local aquarium.
At the moment it is healthy and being looked after, and experts are keeping a close eye on its progress.
Click here to find out more about endangered animals
Alexis Fernandez, a biologist from the National Aquarium of Cuba, said: “It is an animal that is at a disadvantage or that has certain anomalies.“The probability of its survival will be very limited in the natural world or in captivity.”
1 October, 2005 at 10:34 pm #149456WOW
thats amazing
Emma xx
1 October, 2005 at 10:58 pm #149457@dizzybrunette wrote:
WOW
thats amazing
Emma xx
:lol:
i got a story from may this year on a calf born with 5 legs and 6 hooves if you wanna see it :lol:
i will understand if you pass :lol:
1 October, 2005 at 11:00 pm #149458ermmmm
would you mind hun if i passed on that lol
saw a video the other week where i work about mice who were used in experiments to grow human ears. they had them growing on their back, it didnt half make me feel ill
Emma xx
1 October, 2005 at 11:02 pm #149459no problem :lol:
it’s like k.f.c breeding chickens with 6 wings and stuff :-… not so finger licking good :lol:
1 October, 2005 at 11:03 pm #149460i couldnt go in there anyhow, their chickens are always really greasy
Emma xx
1 October, 2005 at 11:07 pm #149461i always make my own fried chicken if i want it …. it’s nicer home made.
how have we got from a 2 headed turtle to kfc ??
ok look away im gonna post the calf story 8)
1 October, 2005 at 11:08 pm #149462god knows hun
u mentioned chickens i think lol
Emma xx
1 October, 2005 at 11:09 pm #149463Calf Born in NM With 5 Legs, 6 Hooves
By MELANIE DABOVICH, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 39 minutes agoALBUQUERQUE, NM – One of Orlando Romero’s calves has a leg up on the other 25 calves born within the last two weeks on his ranch east of Tucumcari. The calf was born with an extra leg, with two hooves, growing from its back.
Ranchers in the area aren’t quite sure what to make of the little Limousin heifer. That is, if they can catch her.
“She moves like a d**n deer. I had a heck of a time trying to catch her,” said Jess Weaks, the ranch caretaker. “She’s pretty ornery, that’s for sure.”
The week-old calf’s extra leg does not touch the ground. It is attached to the calf’s back between the shoulder blades, and hangs to its right side.
The branch-like growth is the only major difference between the copper-colored calf and the rest of the herd, said Shane Jennings, a neighbor who first spotted the heifer.
“It’s just cosmetic. She’s out there in the pasture right now, like any other cow. The little booger’s doing good. It’s in real good health,” Jennings said.
Jennings was in the field checking on yearlings last week when he saw that one cow was close to giving birth. He left to tend to other work, and when he returned he saw the cow with her new calf.
But he was startled by what he saw when he approached the hours-old calf.
“I thought, ‘What in the world is that?’ and as I got a closer look and saw the extra leg I said ‘Oh boy, what am I gonna come up with next?'” Jennings said.
Jennings said he’s seen deformities in calves before and that Tucumcari’s ranch supply store used to have a stuffed two-headed, stillborn calf.
“But I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said.
Neither have most people, said Milton Thomas, professor of beef cattle physiology and genetics at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. He said extra body parts are a freak occurrence.
“It’s very, very rare,” Thomas said. “Generally, a lot of these don’t do well.”
Thomas said extra appendages result of a cellular mix up during the replication of genetic material in early embryo development. Certain cells will develop into tissues such as muscles or organs, but some receive skewed signals and grow into unnecessary parts.
“This calf wasn’t exposed to anything in the environment or anything like that. This happens to all mammalian species,” Thomas said.
Weaks said Romero has talked with veterinarians about removing the leg, and will likely transport the calf to his other ranch in Sapello, where it will become an ordinary cow.
“All (Romero) did was laugh when I told him about the calf,” Weaks said. “I think he’s gonna keep her. She’s so cute. Women would die for eyelashes like hers.”
1 October, 2005 at 11:11 pm #149464Awwwwwwww
what a shame ffs ….
a freak of nature :(
Emma xxx
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