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Science & Technology
How to save an endangered species
2017-01-07
h/t Instapundit
Tequila can be a night saver. If you’re a Lesser Long-nosed Bat, however, it can be a species saver (and congratulations on learning to read if you’re a bat, by the way).

That’s because tequila producers are partly responsible for bringing the Lesser Long-nosed Bat population from less than 1,000 in 1988, to more than 200,000 today, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Posted by:g(r)omgoru

#4  Great Wall

Quick Nick, Manhattan-based urinalist! From previous article:

"The four month old Trump hotel in Washington D.C. is building a great price wall to keep out plebeians and people without expense accounts."

Whehter Punchinello throws this jello-shot in every piece he pours is left as an exercise, etc.
Posted by: Zenobia Floger6220   2017-01-07 22:12  

#3  Extinction, by the way, is a perfectly natural process. When a species becomes too specialized, like the Spotted Owl, or River Smelt, for the Dodo bird for that matter, they *need* to die off and/or evolve into a more general species.

Nor doing so basically *f-ks* everything up.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2017-01-07 21:49  

#2  Ah, the cleverness of the author:

Keep the tequila flowing and it might just make bat history, if a Great Wall doesn’t get in the way.

Anyone tell Mr. Hines that bats can fly?
Posted by: Pappy   2017-01-07 19:29  

#1  Bats are tremendous insect pest removers and pollinators
Posted by: Frank G   2017-01-07 11:49  

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