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Ragwort gives rise to chronic hepatotoxic poisoning due to the alkaloids present in the plant. All livestock are affected ie cattle, horses, sheep though sheep tend to more resistant to poisoning. In practice cattle do not generally graze the plant and paddocks become heavily infested. Sheep do graze it, especially while the plant is still young, and pastures grazed by sheep are almost always free of the weed. Most horses are too stupid to be trusted not to eat ragwort hence the absolute paranoia on the part of horse owners in controlling the plant.Sheep seem to have a high tolerance to many toxic plants and can tolerate hemlock, ngaio (Myoporum laetum) and Solanum laciniatum. I have seen a horse poisoned by Solanum laciniatum ( it recovered) and a lamb poisoned by Rhododendron by chewing on dried twigs (very unhappy for a couple of day but also recovered). Plant poisonings of livestock are very unpredictable - somtimes animal can ingest huge amounts of a particular plant while on other occasions small amounts can be fatal,
Hi Armin ,I live here in the river Rhein Valley ( near Kaiserstuhl) we have this Wood Bees since more then 10 years -but we are also in the warmest part of Germany - since some years we have also "Taubenschwänzchen" = Macroglossum stellatarum + auch "Gottesanbeterin" = Mantis religiosa has visit our garden .Friends told me that this bees are the natural pollinators of bearded Iris -I dont know if this is correct .Many greetingsHans
During an excursion by car along the Mondego river in central Portugal we saw this bird of pray.I did not get a feeling of how big it was and first thought it was of eagle size and later more of kite size.Any possible sugestions are wellcome.
The thin tail is confusing. Kites have a long wedged tail and Buzzards have a quarter circle shaped tail. Maybe it's missing some tail feathers
Armin ,Sorry but I dont know locations for this Muscari - I know only locations for Pulsatilla vulgaris and Anemone sylvestrisEuropean green lizard are also on Kaiserstuhl - also I have hear that there breed "Bienenfresser" ( Merops apiaster).On Kaiserstuhl grows 8-10 different orchids - it is fantasitc !GreetingsHans