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Red Back At It

@no-me-it-you-red

I accidentally logged myself out of a blog I had for 6 years and no longer have the email of.
They/It herpetologist

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Hello everyone, I’m Ace, Demi romantic and a lesbian . (pronouns they/it). My name is Wilder or Moss along w/ a plethora of others. I want to be a Herpetologist when I grow up(if you even need a job title to call urself one, it’s not like it’s a specific degree you can obtain and I already have been field herping for my whole life). I am also an Artist but I don’t post that much . Big Supernatural fan If you have any questions at all, please ask.

So yeah there’s a shit ton more and I will edit when I have something to add Also! I am a minor. I go by Red. I’m Autistic with ADHD. I’m an Aries. I’m an INFP-T.

I have an Aesthetic blog (the name is because I decided to make it after going on an aesthetic hunt at Michael’s craft store) @michaels-aestetic-hunt

I enjoy folk punk, punk, goth, and emo music! I sculpt, paint, draw, and occasionally write songs!

This was my old blog. I needed to update this anyways. I don’t write songs and am going to eventually not be a minor anymore. Thought I could handle not having Tumblr anymore but I can’t stand Reddit so that lands me right back here. I tried to get rid of my side-blog and signed myself out

The fact that animals that care for their young will sometimes adopt others' lost or orphaned young to raise along their own is just funny to me. I know that it's all hormonal and there's no conscious thought involved in it, but the internal logic of it is so funny.

"Baby = success. More baby = more success. I have one baby and I found four other baby. I have five baby. I am being so fucking successful right now."

This is a very interesting article which highlights not only the existential threat that chytrid fungus poses to amphibians (it has wiped out 90 species already), but also the ethical dilemma around synthetic biology, in which organisms have genetic material introduced or deleted, for example in the hope of increasing disease resistance.

Also, I would be remiss if I did not say that there is an incredibly cute picture of two frogs sharing one of the 'mini-saunas', an intervention which has already helped Australian green and golden bell frogs face off the chytrid fungus threat.

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