Possibly female Cosmophasis Lami, wild caught and kept in captivity until presumedly matured, for observation purposes. Photos contains the 6 appearances after each moulting stage. After 2 months of keeping, spider grew from <2mm at the time of capture, to 5-6 mm at time of release (body length may vary due to feeding and positioning during measurement -> errors). It's unknown how many moulting stages the spider went through prior to stage 1, but was well-fed enough to begin molting from stage 1 to 2 without feeding after capture. The early stages seem to have green-ish body color with dark color bandings. At the last 6th stage, spider's cheek area seems to exhibit iridescent coloration, which may be seen in one of the extra photos showing the side profile. The 5th stage seems to lose the dark areas until returning at the 6th, it is also when the orange color shows more clearly (or at least that's what my eyes are telling me), before then, it was more green-ish with black or brown-ish bands, except for the 1st stage where it was either very reflective dark green or black. Preys fed include various types of flies such as drain flies, fruit flies, and mosquitoes in the area, feeding occurs almost daily which might accelerate the growth more than in the wild.
This is only a fun personal project, not anything extensive; spider was released at the time of uploading observation. Formatted date in the photos is YYYY/MM/DD.
Edit 1: Another specimen with clearer patterns at assumedly stage 1
Edit 2: A male specimen observation here
I'm the chosen one!!!
Very friendly
The Saola was only discovered to science in 1992. There are no Saola in captivity. No Saola have been seen by scientists in the wild. A few records on camera trap exist. In 2004, there were still reports of Saola deep in the Truong Son mountains. This individual was confiscated from hunters in A'Luoi district, in the western reaches of the province. The other pictures are from interviews with Ka Tu ethnic hunters in A'Luoi and A'Vuong districts (Minh Hoang). The last photo is James with rangers from Hue Forest Department examining Saola tracks in A'Luoi - and identifzing schistamoglottis plants, reportedly favoured food for the saola.
In 2013, its status is critical. See what is happening on http://www.savethesaola.org/
Not verifiable from photos, but posting to add to my life list. This was the long-captive adult male from Hoan Kiem lake in Downtown Hanoi, who passed away a few years ago, leaving 3 left known in existence.
Feud with a woodpecker
Heard a cry outside, went to check it out and then bam, snek swallowing a poor frog. You can see the frog's legs in some of the pictures
Why is he so frickin cute
Good boi
Whale god skeleton