
Say hello to the peacock spider (Maratus volans). You'll find him festooned with all sorts of colors--colors the ladies can't get enough of. Here he is, courting one such lucky lady.
You haven't seen the best of it. Not only does he flash his colors peacock-style, but he also does an irresistible dance, capering from side to side and shaking those extended legs. What lady could possibly say no?



This is what he looks like in his full courtship posture. Note the third set of legs held high with pride. His abdomen is also looming, complete with twin, colorful flaps fully deployed.



Although he is very very small but it's beautiful huh!

Look at this giant Bat , it was discover at the mountain of Indonesia. We all know that bat are dangerous they even killed people, blood sucker
. But this one is different from the others because people can feed them some fruits.


It's a male bat and his private part looks totally like human hahaha .





Video after the jump


In Afghanistan, dog fighting is a popular sport. Dog fighting often results in leaving dogs scarred, maimed, paralyzed, or dead.
The Taliban banned traditional Afghan past-times like animal and bird fighting to stamp out betting, which is prohibited in Islam. Animal fighting is also banned across much of the West but ethical questions about the welfare of animal fighters hardly raise an eyebrow in Afghanistan now.






A man groomed his dog for five years hoping that Saturday mornings like this would one day return. For this dirt poor country, dog fighting is big business. Most dogs are brought from neighbouring Turkmenistan, hundreds of miles to the north. A well-groomed and trained animal can cost anything up to 180 million afghanis (US$3,800).

However, in the end of the fight only human being gain benefit, and the dogs .......see more and put your thinking in comments




This is the end of the fighting, 1 death, 1 got injuries

Rising demand for pangolins, mostly from mainland China, compounded by lax laws is wiping out the unique toothless anteaters from their native habitats in Southeast Asia
China has a long history of consuming pangolin as meat and in traditional medicine. Due to continual demand and the decreasing Chinese wild population, in the past few years pangolin smuggling from Southeast Asia has resulted in great declines in these producing countries' People are a kind of very careful meticulous spirit, but only confined to eat. They clean it carefully and scale can be sued as medicine.










At first glance, it looks like just another autumn leaf - but look closer at the picture and suddenly tiny feet and the shape of a lizard's head will begin to emerge from above the branch
For this remarkable image shows not just brown leaves, but a carefully camouflaged leaf-tailed gecko blending in to its environment.
Here, it has taken on - with astounding accuracy - the shape and shading of the foliage in its native Madagascar after evolving to look like the natural surroundings in which it exists, right down to having notches on its tail that resemble a decaying leaf.


Unlike chameleons, which change colour to communicate and convey emotions, some geckos alter their appearance to make them hard to spot - partly as a means of defence, but also to allow them to catch prey. Chameleons want to be conspicuous; geckos want to hide.
The slow change in the body colour occurs when cells bearing differently coloured pigments beneath the lizard's transparent skin either expand or shrink.







