@sansskelington
Joined on March 6th, 2020, this user has been a member for 2,298 days and is the 33,995th person to register an account.
Has 1 submission, the first one uploaded on November 16th, 2021 and the most recent on November 16th, 2021.
Of those, 0 have been featured and 0 have won Users' Choice.
On average, each submission earns 758 downloads.
In total, they have been download 758 times.
Counting every individual stickfigure, including the contents of all packs, this user has technically made and submitted 7 stickfigures.
On average, when this user rates stickfigures, they are 91% positive.
Has made 12 comments on non-activity pages of the site. Alternatively, this user has made 4,782 comments on actual activity pages of the site.
This member is not a Users' Choice voter.
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Wow! What a knee slapper!
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I concur.
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I claim your soul! Boom! It is mine!
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It is “red moth Amalgamation”. It brings up something about this cinnabar moth. Here is what I copy/pasted from the wiki.
“ The cinnabar moth (Tyria jacobaeae) is a brightly coloured arctiid moth found as a native species in Europe and western and central Asia. It has been introduced into New Zealand, Australia and North America to control ragwort, on which its larvae feed. The moth is named after the red mineral cinnabar because of the red patches on its predominantly black wings. The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. Cinnabar moths are about 20 mm (0.79 in) long and have a wingspan of 32–42 mm (1.3–1.7 in).
Cinnabar moths are day-flying insects with distinctive pinkish-red and black wings. There is little variation in patterning, although on rare occasions the red markings may be replaced with yellow, or the forewing is entirely red with a black border, or the wings are completely black. Like many other brightly coloured moths, it is unpalatable; the larvae use members of the genus Senecio as food plants. Many members of the genus have been recorded as food plants, but long-term population success has only been confirmed on the North American native plant Senecio triangularis[1]. Other plant species, such as groundsel, are sometimes used, but larval and population survival tends to be reduced. Newly hatched larvae feed from the underneath of ragwort leaves within the area of their old eggs. The larvae absorb toxic and bitter tasting alkaloid substances from the food plants, and assimilate them, becoming unpalatable themselves.[2] The bright colours of both the larvae and the moths act as warning signs, so they are seldom eaten by predators. An exception is among different species of cuckoo which eat hairy and poisonous caterpillars including cinnabar moth larvae.[3]
Females can lay up to 300 eggs, usually in batches of 30 to 60 on the underside of ragwort leaves. When the caterpillars (larvae) hatch they feed on and around the area of the hatched eggs but as they get bigger and moult (instars) they mainly feed on the leaves and flowers of the plant, and can be seen out in the open during the day.
Like several other Arctiinae larvae, cinnabar caterpillars can turn cannibalistic. This is mainly due to lack of food, but they can eat other cinnabar larvae.[4] Initially, the larvae are pale yellow, but later larval stages develop a jet-black and orange/yellow striped colouring. They can grow up to 30 mm (1.2 in), and are voracious eaters; large populations can strip entire patches of ragwort clean, a result of their low predation.
Often, very few survive to the pupal stage, mainly due to them completely consuming the food source before reaching maturity; this could be a possible explanation for their tendency to engage in seemingly random cannibalistic behaviour, as many will die from starvation. Additionally, the larvae are preyed upon by species like the ants Formica polyctena.[5]
Relationship with humans[edit]
The moth has proven to be particularly successful as a biocontrol agent for ragwort when used in conjunction with the ragwort flea beetle in the western United States.[6]” -
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(RED MO-UH AMALGAMAUION) might be wrong.
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Couldn’t see -
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Thank you.
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You may join.
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Keep working on it.
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I’ll never disappear.
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I have a project for anyone willing to take it. Make Alastor from the Hazbin hotel.
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Sound of silence ‘Eh?
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Is this for skele-freak? I hope it is!
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You can’t!
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I see
So this a internet show ??
I’ll watch it tomorrow to get the full experience
Ok! Hey, not that it matters. But how’s Lenny?
Here he is
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Lenny is what I call @lengdfs . So not that one.
Currently busy with homework
Ok. Tell her I said hi and good luck!
This lenny?

Oh I get it.

It’s this lenny
No that’s lugi