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CHOW CHOW ENTROPION CASE STUDIES
https://2010vets.blogspot.com/2016/08/2906-entropion-surgery-in-adopted-3.html
FINAL VIDEO
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEIGUPUIYnc
Pet health and care advices for pet owners and vet students, photography tips, travel stories, advices for young people
2. Spay female rabbits, guinea pigs. Excludes antibiotics, painkillers, Elizabeth collars. $380 - $480 depending on size |
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VIDEO SCRIPT (DRAFT) FOR SHAN
SINGAPORE WILDLLIFE CONSERVATION VIDEO
SPONSORED BY TOA PAYOH VETS
UPDATES AT:
https://2010vets.blogspot.com/2019/12/4021-singapore-wildlife-kesser-dart.html
TO BUY PHOTO:
www.shutterstock.com/g/toapayohvets
ORIGINAL VIDEO
2019 report
A
Lesser Dart (Potanthus omaha omaha) was resting on a leaf with its
unique skipper pose - forewings vertical and hindwings flat
A Hubner's Wasp Moth (Amata huebneri) seen during the walk.
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8 Oct 2022
PHOTOGRAPHY TIPS - Use tripod
Hubner’s wasp moth sips nectar
Yio
Chu Kang Cres forest, 8 AM, 8 Oct 2022. Bright daylight.
Canon R5,
Tripod is needed to give sharp image.
AV Mode, ISO 200. F/8-11.
Lens at 105MM. Take over 10 images.
Too many mosquitoes bite the
photographer.
This moth was absent
for over a year as contractors cut and prune plants and trees and
apply insecticide fogging degrading the habitat and depriving the
moth of flowers. During the 2020 – 2022 period of the Covid-19
pandemic, the Bidens pilosa flowers were abundant, but now, there are
a handful of stunted ones.
The weather got hotter.
Yesterday, I saw this sole moth but did not get a sharp image.
UPDATES AT:
https://2010vets.blogspot.com/2019/12/4021-singapore-wildlife-kesser-dart.html
A
VIDEO IS made.
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A
Hubner’s wasp moth sips nectar from a Bidens pilosa flower in the Yio
Chu Kang Cres forest, 8 AM, 8 Oct 2022. Only a handful of poor quality
Bidens pilosa exist nowadays, hence this moth will be extinct in the
near future.
TO BUY PHOTO: shutterstock.com/g/toapayohvets
Swimming lopsided is a sign of a respiratory infection. It happens because the lungs fill with fluid, making normal swimming difficult. One lung often has more fluid than the other, leading to lopsided swimming. The amount of fluid can change from day to day, Resulting in different degrees of problems.
Bubbles from the nose and mouth and open mouth breathing are further signs of respiratory infection. The mucus you found was most likely from his nose or mouth, too. Appetite loss often occurs as a respiratory infection progresses. You may also see frequent yawning, stretching the neck upward, lack of energy, refusing to leave the basking area, or conversely, trying to hide in the water.
Respiratory infections in turtles are not the same as colds in humans. In turtles, they are bacterial, not viral. They don’t get better on their own, but usually progress to life threatening pneumonia. This is one of the most common causes of death in young turtles.
When temperatures are not optimal, it sometimes helps a bit to increase them, but that doesn’t result in a cure, Your temps are perfect. There isn’t anything you can do on your own. See by a reptile vet. Once a diagnosis is confirmed, treatment usually involves prescription antibiotics, such as Baytril, being given by injection or orally.
Oriental Garden Lizard is at the central point of this image |