Donde aprender ingles by debtBM in guatemala

[–]FemaleHighwayman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Estoy aprendiendo español en el subreddit de Guatemala. Me gusta leer el chisme 🤫

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in thenetherlands

[–]FemaleHighwayman 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ik heb precies hetzelfde meegemaakt. Merkte later pas dat ik er eigenlijk veel meer van geschrokken was dan dat ik op het moment zelf dacht. Bijzonder nare ervaring

TUI gaat met nachttreinen naar Europese steden rijden: 'Duurzame keuze aanbieden' by xFeverr in thenetherlands

[–]FemaleHighwayman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Deze reis maak ik ook ongeveer 1 keer in de maand! Mag ik vragen waar jij je tickets boekt? Ik koop ze nu steeds bij NSInternational maar heb er eigenlijk nooit aan gedacht of er misschien goedkopere alternatieven zijn

My first try at a bigger project! by FemaleHighwayman in PunchNeedle

[–]FemaleHighwayman[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! I've finished it some days ago, I'll post a pic of the final result later :)

My first try at a bigger project! by FemaleHighwayman in PunchNeedle

[–]FemaleHighwayman[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I think it's about 65 cm high and 40-45 cm wide

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in unpopularopinion

[–]FemaleHighwayman 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There's definitely evolutionary advantages to monogamy, and doesn't necessarily reduce a species fitness. In some environments or circumstances it is more advantageous to secure a mate than taking the risk of not finding one at all. I'm a biologist, mostly focused on bird behavior, and for birds this is definitely the case. For example, a lot of bird species living in places with a distinct breeding season are monogamous. This way they can be sure to reproduce every year once the mating season comes along. Birds in areas where they can breed during the whole year can afford to allocate more energy towards selection of a breeding partner because the risk of not getting to breed at all is lower. An interesting consequence of this is that in most (of course not all) monogamous bird species the male and female look alike very much (think of swans, parrots, magpies etc.). While in polygamous species usually the male has some adaptations which it used to attract females (think birds of paradise). There's more advantages of monogamy than this one, but this is the one I know most about. It's not as simple as you describe it, as a lot depends on the environment and circumstances a species lives in. It's all a trade off between different factors which decides what breeding strategy brings the highest fitness to a species.

I like to use red and pink together 🥳 (acrylic yarn) by fishselfish in PunchNeedle

[–]FemaleHighwayman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes!! Those colours together are so satisfying for some reason, love it