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Golden Poison Dart Frog - The Most Poisonous Animal on Earth

  1. #41
    cupocheer Space Nigga [unwillingly condescend the dp]
    OP, a saddleback, ain't no hack!
  2. #42
    NARCassist gollums fat coach
    box jellyfish, blue ringed octopus and sea snakes all have more potent venoms. i'm pretty sure the poison in the pufferfish is more poisonous too.



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  3. #43
    NARCassist gollums fat coach
    Originally posted by -SpectraL I watched President Nixon on live television, kid. And you think I was just twiddling my thumbs when computers first came out? I was on the Radio Shack Tandy and the Amiga and the Commadore64 as soon as they came out. And you think when &Totse came out in 1989 I didn't ALREADY have a computer and a modem and couldn't dial in as easy as anyone else? I was there, kid. None of this is new to me. I've been along for the ride the entire time, from start to finish. From the start of the Net to now. Who else do you know who can say that?

    i had a spectrum zx when i was a kid, my mate had a commodore 64 and at school we learnt on the old bbc basics. plus we used to play atari in the early 80s, i used to have high score on pacman, so naahaaahh.



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  4. #44
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Well, I played black and white ping pong. So there.
  5. #45
    NARCassist gollums fat coach
    i played chucky egg so fuck you



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  6. #46
    Enterita African Astronaut
    Originally posted by -SpectraL Well, I played black and white ping pong. So there.

    As soon as it came out, you weasly fuck?
  7. #47
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by Enterita As soon as it came out, you weasly fuck?

    The very first day black and white table tennis came out on the Amiga it was all the rage, and I was one of the very first gamers to play it. I had been waiting in anticipation for months.
  8. #48
    RisiR † 29 Autism
    You mean "Pong"?
  9. #49
    Enterita African Astronaut
    Originally posted by -SpectraL The very first day black and white table tennis came out on the Amiga it was all the rage, and I was one of the very first gamers to play it. I had been waiting in anticipation for months.

    Noob. I played Spacewar! as soon as it came out.
  10. #50
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by RisiR † You mean "Pong"?

    Please stay on topic, kid. This thread is about killer frogs.
  11. #51
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by NARCassist …i'm pretty sure the poison in the pufferfish is more poisonous too.



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    Not true. The dart frog beats the pufferfish palms down, as far as toxicity.
  12. #52
    Enterita African Astronaut
    Originally posted by -SpectraL Not true. The dart frog beats the pufferfish palms down, as far as toxicity.

    Dont double post.
  13. #53
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
  14. #54
    Enterita African Astronaut
    Originally posted by -SpectraL

    lol
  15. #55
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    lots of awesome frog pics and spooky ass froglore data in here ( as well as a lot of frothy cucks). 10/10 thread.
  16. #56
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    The strange thing about these frogs is they are only poisonous if they have been feeding in their own native habitat, otherwise they lose their poison. Scientists are still not certain exactly why that is.
  17. #57
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    best I can tell the sheer lethality of these frogs ha freaked (gay)enter right the hell out. And hes taking his anger out on other people in this thread because of how fucking deadly and persistent this frogs toxic excretions are.

    by his reaction you would think he lives in a rainforest and not his marms basement
  18. #58
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Batrachotoxin (BTX) is an extremely potent cardiotoxic and neurotoxic steroidal alkaloid found in certain species of frogs (poison dart frog), melyrid beetles, and birds (the pitohui, blue-capped ifrit, and little shrikethrush). Batrachotoxin was derived from the Greek word βάτραχος bátrachos "frog".[2] Structurally-related chemical compounds are often referred to collectively as batrachotoxins.

    The "poison dart" (or "poison arrow") frog does not produce batrachotoxin itself. It is believed that the frogs get the poison from eating beetles or other insects in their native habitat. Frogs raised in captivity do not produce batrachotoxin, and thus may be handled without risk. However, this limits the amount of batrachotoxin available for research as 10,000 frogs yielded only 180 mg of batrachotoxin.[9] As these frogs are endangered, their harvest is unethical. Biosynthetic studies are also challenged by the slow rate of synthesis of batrachotoxin.[3]
    The native habitat of poison dart frogs is the warm regions of Central America and South America, in which the humidity is around 80 percent.

    Of the three so-called "poison dart" frogs which contain batrachotoxin—golden poison frog, Kokoe poison frog, and neari—the most toxic is the most recently discovered golden poison frog, which generally contains 27 times more batrachotoxin than its close relatives and is 20-fold more toxic.

    Batrachotoxin (BTX) irreversibly binds to the Na+ channels which causes a conformational change in the channels that forces the sodium channels to remain open. Batrachotoxin not only keeps voltage-gated sodium channels open, but it also reduces the single-channel conductance. In other words, the toxin binds to the sodium channel and keeps the membrane permeable to sodium ions in an all or none manner.[8] This has a direct effect on the peripheral nervous system (PNS). Batrachotoxin in the PNS produces increased permeability (selective and irreversible) of the resting cell membrane to sodium ions, without changing potassium or calcium concentration. This influx of sodium depolarizes the formerly polarized cell membrane. Batrachotoxin also alters the ion selectivity of the ion channel by increasing the permeability of the channel toward larger cations. Voltage-sensitive sodium channels become persistently active at the resting membrane potential. Batrachotoxin kills by permanently blocking nerve signal transmission to the muscles. Batrachotoxin binds to and irreversibly opens the sodium channels of nerve cells and prevent them from closing. The neuron can no longer send signals and this results in paralysis.

    Currently, no effective antidote exists for the treatment of batrachotoxin poisoning.
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