To: centurion316
Hate to tell you this, but back in the 70's my father showed me a dead kangaroo rat in Carson, CA (NOWHERE NEAR THEIR HABITAT ZONE) that apparently died inside a garage. I saw it with my own eyes and it looked identical to that shown in the article.
These critters are probably scattered throughout southern areas of California, BEYOND THAT WHICH RESEARCHERS DISCUSS HERE.
21 posted on
05/06/2018 2:47:10 PM PDT by
CivilWarBrewing
(Get off my back for my usage of CAPS, especially you snowflake males! MAN UP!)
To: CivilWarBrewing
It doesn’t count. You are not a scientist and your discovery was not published in an academic publication. Besides, it was dead, wasn’t it? There you go, you probably saw the very last one. Scientists are very smart, you know.
25 posted on
05/06/2018 3:04:02 PM PDT by
centurion316
(Back from exile from 4/2016 until 4/2018.)
To: CivilWarBrewing
Yes. Be advised, the official definition of extinction in the government vocabulary is probably far from what you might expect. In official lingo, extinction is often used to describe population loss
in a defined locale or micro ecosystem. Thus a common minnow known as the snail darter was defined as threatened with extinction if the Tombigbee river was dammed. The fact that it proliferated abundantly in many other rivers was unimportant to the legal attempt to block the dam construction.
Yeah. Deep state shit been going on a long time.
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