My
attention has been drawn to
the fact that the Texas Christian University ‘Horned Frog’ is not
actually a frog but a lizard.
Reminds
me of Ogden Nash –
“ The
one-L lama
he’s a priest,
The
two-L llama he’s a beast,
But I
will bet a silk pajama
That
there is no
Three-L
lllama.
[The
author’s attention
has been drawn to a type of conflagration known as a three-alarmer]”
That
Steve is uncanny.
Correct on all counts, and Denis got the half-point. This ex-tadpole
has
teeth and can swallow a grown rat, even if Gerald Durrell was a shade
large. Whether for that reason or not, it is the emblem of Texas
Christian University.
This
worrying development is
enough to make me spend a few keystrokes on a letter to the Canberra
Times. What are our animal quarantine laws for if these chaps can just
hop into a sewage pond in the nation’s capital and grab ducks at will?
Blue-billed Duck? And
a Horned Frog (Ceratophrys sp) from Sth America – I seem to recollect
Gerald Durrell being bitten by one of these in one of his books on his
animal
collecting days. From memory, it hurt a lot! Sadly, we had no such luck
when we
were in Sth America.
Steve
Over several years, speculation has continued
about the
periodic disappearance of ducks from some Canberra ponds. Some experts
attribute
this to an aquatic creature referred to for want of a better label as
‘the Duck-grabbing Frog’. ( It should be mentioned that there are
others, called by some ‘Duck-grabbing Frog deniers’, who do not
share this theory.) Now this unusual photograph provides convincing
evidence to support the position of those who have believed in the frog.
To help the Canberra Times Environmental
Reporter produce an
accurate story can anyone name the frog and duck species shown here?