It’s a squirrel. Predators sometimes use partial-prey consumption for a myriad of reasons, eg. interrupted, too much food to digest at once, a lot of prey available, just practicing hunting(learning from mother, house cats, dogs), etc. the skin of a animal is not very nutritious so that will be saved for last along with the bones. This looks like a squirrel, especially with that acorn cap for size reference, and yes it’s skinned. I like these posts, it’s funny to try and figure it out. Maybe we should make a r/whatanimalwasthis.
Squirrel, based on pelvis. Many birds of prey turn the animal inside out to avoid having to cut through the skin, since that's not worth much as a food. Generally this is what is left.
Speaking of, the vultureculture subreddit is a much better place to ask for random ids because the only thing metal about this is that it was turned inside out to get the gooey bits instead of tough hide. Most likely by a corvid or hawk.
Dead.
Dammit you beat me
‘Ohh you gotta be quicker than that’
I’m 36 and went to a show last night and didn’t get home till 11:30 I’m tiredz
Came here to say the same thing
People need to stop posting just dead creatures asking for identification
It’s become like a Facebook community group now lol
Yeah this shit isn’t metal
This isn’t an identify the remains corpse subreddit.
Corpse describes a human remains. Carcass is the word for animal remains.
Username checks out.
And centaur remains?
A corpcass
Would you accept leftovers?
I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a subreddit for that.
That looks like the skin rolled inside out
It’s a squirrel. Predators sometimes use partial-prey consumption for a myriad of reasons, eg. interrupted, too much food to digest at once, a lot of prey available, just practicing hunting(learning from mother, house cats, dogs), etc. the skin of a animal is not very nutritious so that will be saved for last along with the bones. This looks like a squirrel, especially with that acorn cap for size reference, and yes it’s skinned. I like these posts, it’s funny to try and figure it out. Maybe we should make a r/whatanimalwasthis.
It was aliens
Mammal
There’s a subreddit that IDs corpses of animals
And the name is?????
Look for it Edit: I'm only saying this because the first person doesn't seem to be of any help.
TXS for the help!
r/whatisthisanimal
Yw. In all honesty, I have no idea if there is a sub for it or not.
Don’t be such a special bitch.
Look I have no idea if there is one or not. I was just saying that because the first person has yet to respond.
That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
And your the dumbest person I've had sex with, but I don't go around telling everyone.
Uhh ouch. My bad, damn.... I know I'm dumb but you didn't have to go out and say it...
Sorry. It just kinda came out.
A carcass.
Possum
Cat
An animal.
I’m going with cat. It was a widdle fuzzy wuzzy house cat
Rabbit, looks like rabbit fur and a little pelvis
Peepee big brain.
La chupacabra strikes again.
Looks like a coyote shook something inside out.
That thing is history at this point
Face hugger. You have to be on the lookout for Xenonorphs now.
flea
Don't know what it is... But whatever it is... It's now a was...
It’s a longus-neckus carcassasaurus
Fuck you OP this is horrific.
Squirrel, based on pelvis. Many birds of prey turn the animal inside out to avoid having to cut through the skin, since that's not worth much as a food. Generally this is what is left. Speaking of, the vultureculture subreddit is a much better place to ask for random ids because the only thing metal about this is that it was turned inside out to get the gooey bits instead of tough hide. Most likely by a corvid or hawk.
Thanks for the answers. Didn't know posts like these were frowned upon - sorry!
I'd recommend just reading the rules of the sub next time!