Wednesday, December 22, 2010

ang propesiya

isasalin ng mapag mahal na ina ang kanyang proteksyon aban sa kasamaan...

Friday, December 17, 2010

ipapanganak ang ongs

nakikita ko ang bagong bantay ng mga ongs, nakikita ko sa kanya ang potensyal na hindi ko nakita sa kasalukuyang bantay, gayon pa man sya ang naging daan upang matuntun ang bagong bantay, gayon pa man hindi pa din ligtas ang mga tao, at ang mga ongs, dadating ang itim na ongs, mag papalaganap ng kasamaan sa mundo.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

pag titipon tipon ng mga ongs

nababalaha na ang consejo ng mga ongs, sapagkat lalabas na ang bagong bantay ng mga ongs, sa di malamang dahilan ay d pa pala nasusupil ang mga itim na ongs, ipapapatawag ko kayo sa darataing na pulang buwan upang tayoy mag tipon tipon upang pag planuhan ang pag supil sa mga itim na ongs.

HISTORY OF MONKEY JUNGLE

Since primates are becoming increasingly scarce in the wild, Monkey Jungle devotes considerable effort to breeding them. One important program concerns the Golden Lion Tamarin. This is one of the world’s rarest primates, as less than 500 exist in the wild. Frank DuMond helped outline a breeding program for this delicate monkey, which defined the dietary, environmental, and social requirements of the animal. Monkey Jungle is a participant in the international collaborative breeding program, which has begun to reintroduce captive born animals into protected habitats in the wild. A female born at Monkey Jungle was released into the wild in 1985.

Monkey Jungle is a family owned and operated Wildlife Park founded in 1933 by Joseph and Grace DuMond. It was Joe’s dream as a young man to establish North America’s first colony of free-ranging monkeys so that he and other researchers could study primate behavior and ecology as it occurs in the wild. While the DuMond family still lived in Connecticut, Joe and Grace purchased a few monkeys, let them roam in and out of their house at will, and found that the monkeys always returned home. They concluded from this observation that the monkeys are territorial and would probably colonize the right environment. After reading about South Florida, the DuMonds purchased 10 acres of Florida hardwood hammock because its climate and ecology were so similar to the monkeys home in Southeast Asia. The family built a small wood frame house for themselves and released six Crab-eating Macaques into the forest to begin Joe’s project. During these depression years, funding for DuMonds scientific studies were scarce, so in 1935 he began charging 10 cents admission to curious visitors who had heard stories of the wild monkeys.

Originally, there were no screened walkways separating the public and the monkeys. However, the Java monkeys, territorial by nature, viewed the public’s presence as an intrusion and aggressively defended their jungle homes against the human intruders. Joe DuMond couldn’t cage his wild monkeys so he caged his visitors instead.

When Joe DuMond retired in 1955, his son, Frank, became director. Under his directorship the park was expanded and new scientific programs were developed. In 1960, Frank opened the four-acre Amazonian Rainforest, which featured Upper Amazonian monkeys living in a forest of native South American plants. This unique display habitat resulted in a true living museum and laboratory of that highly valued and threatened ecosystem. The Monkey Jungle Rainforest serves as an excellent breeding sanctuary for South American primates and many "first-in-captivity" births have occurred here. Frank DuMond and other scientists at Monkey Jungle have developed new concepts in primate behavior and ecology through work. In fact, the research, which defined aspects of squirrel monkey reproduction, is considered to be one of the classic works in primatology.

In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew destroyed all of our vegetation, including the Rainforest. We are now in the process of rebuilding and hope to open our Rainforest shortly, although it may well be years before it regains its splendor