Event JSON
{
"id": "60f74fc2b8f473b98ec44198fe71b128b162d65188911b2ea527cbedba9a0639",
"pubkey": "c054144d7615820eaa2322e78ba10e111c44219059482b21ba71e51a9729f40b",
"created_at": 1741745123,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
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"p",
"0356fa97edb64ed67d23df95c19ae3d9d812507404163825ba745dd4c4e44c65",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"61637115023fc85d158e5654e7d6ec6d47f0bad60031f2409ad48c01f8ba3d31",
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[
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[
"content-warning",
"Ants and Reptile Limb"
],
[
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"https://sauropods.win/users/futurebird/statuses/114147008383474258",
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],
"content": "nostr:nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpqqdt049ldke8dvlfrm72urxhrm8vpy5r5qstrsfd6w3waf38yf3jsmfnm96 \n\nI'm glad the anole got away. Poor little guy. I would like to identify these ants, but going just on size and gaster shape alone is risky. They look very small. Were they especially small (for ants)? It could be Monomorium sp. but they could also be Paratrechina longicornis which is invasive, but largely naturalized. \n\nThe social carrying makes me think it's Paratrechina longicornis (aka \"crazy ants\" though that common name is no good it's used for too many sp.)",
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}