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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 22, 2024, 06:23:38 am
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Gicx As Economy Drags, Will Pets Suffer
SALT LAKE CITY - A Salt Lake City man faces drug and abuse charges in the death of his 72-year-old father s death after authorities say he was selling the man s pain pills.A complaint filed Thursday in 3rd District Court says Alfonso Patrick Moya Jr. was primary caregiver for Alfonso Patricio Moya Sr., when he was admitted to a Veteran s Affairs hospital July 15.Court records show the man died the following day from dehydration, malnutrition and bedsores resulting from inadequate care.Police say Moya Jr. stanley mug (https://www.stanley-cups.uk) had been filling his father s monthly Lortab prescriptions and was selling the pain pills.Hospital officials told the Salt Lake Tribune that the elderly man s bed sores were so severe that one the size of a fist would have required surgery, and he also had an open sore on his foot. His feet and ankles were swollen to twice their normal size. As recent as December 2010, doctors claim Moya Sr. was able to walk and stanley canada (https://www.stanleymugs.ca) speak. When police entered Moya Jr. s home, they say they were overwhelmed with a a very strong odor of bleach, feces and decomposing tissue. Although the bedding had been thrown away or put in the laundry, th stanley termos (https://www.stanleycups.pl) e mattress where the father had been lying on was saturated with urine and feces. Moya Jr. admitted his father hadn t been bathed for two weeks, but blamed his estranged wife for not cleaning off fecal matter of Moya Sr. s body before calling 911.Moya Jr. s attorney was not immediately available for comment. Cegp Dawn of the Planet of the Apes Reveals The Human Behind the Ape
Ants are incredible little creatures, known especially for their complex societies and teamwork, but we ;ve never quite seen them work together like this. In this video, the speed of the internet meets the deliberateness of the scientific enterprise and reveals the limitations of each. Earlier this week, a viral video on the site LiveLeak revealed an unexpected sort of teamwork among ants. In or stanley taza (https://www.cup-stanley.es) der to haul their millipede prey back to the nest, a group of ants formed a daisy chain, with each ant biting onto the rear of the ant in front of it. When ant expert Alex Wild came across the video, he did what any good scientist would do: turn to stanley becher (https://www.stanley-cups.at) the literature to see if the curious behavior had ever been documented. It hadn ;t: 8230;the clip appears to show an Asian Leptogenys daisy-chaining their bodies in parallel lines to haul away a large millipede. I have spent the morning searching the technical literature for mention of this unusual behavior, and am coming up empty. Some Leptogenys species, including L. diminuta, L. nitida, and L. processionalis, are known to forage in groups and transport prey cooperatively source, source . What is meant by cooperative is often vague. For more, see this excellent recent review of cooperative transport by Helen McCreery . Yet I didn ;t find any explicit description of workers linking up, mandible to stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.us) abdomen, to pull together. What Wild did find, however, was another video of a similar be