Fucking lions.
I didn’t know we had so many god damn veggie heads…
[quote]im kenny wrote:
my childhood is now a part of youtube. great.
If we were supposed to eat plants, then why does steak taste so awesome?
- im vegetarian.
- i FULLY believe humans are designed to EAT MEAT.
- If you wanna be a veggie, more power to you. but don’t try to justify it by saying humans are made to be veggie, or give us that cruelty to animals crap.
- i’m not an animal hater, i’ve probably done more charitable work for animals than most ppl that claim its inhumane to kill them, and think theyre making a difference by becoming fans of various facebook groups supporting animals.
- Live at my parents house, therefore i respect and follow their rules. Once i move out, time to delve into a variety of dead animals.
In the aanimal world…CARNIVORES kill herbivores, size don’t mean shit.
If you want the most muscular, most powerful animals, then i’d look at the sharks and big cats.
Most of the other animals mentioned (hippo, rhino, bear, whale, etc) have a HUGE pecentage of FAT on them.
vegan can/will work for SOME people. Not all. /thread
Deep sea dwelling bacteria anyone? I love me some Nitrogen!
[quote]Gregus wrote:
[quote]Iron Dwarf wrote:
It’s ironic that a dude named PORKPIE is advocating vegetarianism, while a dude named VEGITA is pushing carnivorism.
lol[/quote]
LOL! Good observation
[/quote]
Good shout, however i am REALLY not pushing vegetarianism!!
Bring me that steak now!!
There are a lot of tough people of this thread for some reason ?
And i mean really tough, sit behind your computer, mean muthas with tatoos and gold teeth!!
But why are people getting so irritated, it was just something to start a debate.
I love steak, chicken, lamb, venison, rabbit, hell i’ve eaten ostrich burgers for got sake??
Oh and the whole /end thread
Well done, you da man…

Dragons!
/Thread
V
[quote]legendaryblaze wrote:
[quote]Artem wrote:
[quote]Vegita wrote:
/thread
V[/quote]
motherfucking thread![/quote]
The reason these animals are so big is because the vegetation, where they live, is very high up.
Most animals graze at ground level. If you specialize and are able to eat where no one else can reach, you are guaranteed a meal.
Through evolution, this process came about.[/quote]
So they’re able to eat a lot 'cause they got big, and they got big 'cause they’re able to eat a lot? Looks like circular logic to me.
They got big because they had to in order to eat.
Those giraffes with the biggest neck had a better chance of breeding.
Exactly, they got bigger before the surplus of food could affect them.
A lack of food affected those giraffes who were too small.
Read a bit about the mechanisms of evolution and you´ll understand.
In the course of evolution animals adapt to their environment, because those with attributes that allowed them to deal or use the environmental aspects could survive.
By the way the fact that e.g. polar bears are quite big as opposed to the rather lanky giraffes is also related to the fact, that an animal´s heat producing mass in comparison to their heat “leakin” surface is much higher in compactly build big animals than in small or lanky animals.
Different races of dogs in Africa also have bigger ears than those in cold areas.
You can´t conclude that an animal race will get big because of a surplus of calories. A single animal can get bigger than an average one with a surplus.
But how big the average animal can get is rather affected by what it needs to best deal with its surounding conditions.
[quote]Ken St.Mich wrote:
A lack of food affected those giraffes who were too small.
Read a bit about the mechanisms of evolution and you�´ll understand.
In the course of evolution animals adapt to their environment, because those with attributes that allowed them to deal or use the environmental aspects could survive.
By the way the fact that e.g. polar bears are quite big as opposed to the rather lanky giraffes is also related to the fact, that an animalÃ?´s heat producing mass in comparison to their heat “leakin” surface is much higher in compactly build big animals than in small or lanky animals.
Different races of dogs in Africa also have bigger ears than those in cold areas.
You can�´t conclude that an animal race will get big because of a surplus of calories. A single animal can get bigger than an average one with a surplus.
But how big the average animal can get is rather affected by what it needs to best deal with its surounding conditions.[/quote]
It’s not a surplus of vegetation that caused the large vegetarians to evolve, it allowed them too. The large vegetarians evolved because the smaller ones were eaten which lead to a population of bigger, which reproduced and created even bigger babies. In other words, the large vegetarians were forced into their size by pressure from predators. Be big or be eaten.
For other vegetarians it was be fast or be eaten, or be numerous so it don’t matter if you are eaten, or climb trees or be eaten, or fly or be eaten, or or or.
[quote]on edge wrote:
[quote]Ken St.Mich wrote:
A lack of food affected those giraffes who were too small.
Read a bit about the mechanisms of evolution and you�?�´ll understand.
In the course of evolution animals adapt to their environment, because those with attributes that allowed them to deal or use the environmental aspects could survive.
By the way the fact that e.g. polar bears are quite big as opposed to the rather lanky giraffes is also related to the fact, that an animalÃ??Ã?´s heat producing mass in comparison to their heat “leakin” surface is much higher in compactly build big animals than in small or lanky animals.
Different races of dogs in Africa also have bigger ears than those in cold areas.
You can�?�´t conclude that an animal race will get big because of a surplus of calories. A single animal can get bigger than an average one with a surplus.
But how big the average animal can get is rather affected by what it needs to best deal with its surounding conditions.[/quote]
It’s not a surplus of vegetation that caused the large vegetarians to evolve, it allowed them too. The large vegetarians evolved because the smaller ones were eaten which lead to a population of bigger, which reproduced and created even bigger babies. In other words, the large vegetarians were forced into their size by pressure from predators. Be big or be eaten.
[/quote]
A complete lack of predators can also predispose to greater size. There’s a well described island effect where species that end up on isolated islands lacking in predators, nearly always end up evolving into a larger sub-species than their mainland cousins.
The hippo is a bad motherfucker. They are one of the most feared animals in Africa - being responsible for more deaths than most any other animal on the continent.
[quote]Vegita wrote:
Dragons!
/Thread
V[/quote]
Dragons ? Nice.
Oh and the Tyranosaurus Rex was actually small compared to the vegetarian Brontosaurus, Barachiosaurus or Diplododus (spelling may not be great but i guess you know what i am sayin)