
From LiveScience:
Venomous Fish Outnumber Snakes
By Robert Roy Britt
LiveScience Managing Editor
posted: 22 August 2006
It’s a good thing fish wouldn’t survive long if loose on a plane. A new study finds there are more venomous fish than venomous snakes.
The 1,200 presumably venomous fish tallied in a new study is six times previous estimates.
Fish with a biting bite outnumber all other venomous vertebrates combined, in fact.
“The results of this research were quite surprising,” said researcher William Leo Smith of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
This might surprise you, too: More than 50,000 people are poisoned by fish bites every year, Smith and his colleague said.
Symptoms range from blisters to death.
Among the fish to look out for: lionfishes, catfishes, scorpionfishes, weeverfishes, toadfishes, surgeonfishes, scats, jacks, rabbitfishes, stargazers, and stonefishes.
Poisonous ants in South America:
here.
CARACAS, Dec 2 (IPS) - The red lionfish (Pterois volitans), a venomous coral reef fish from the Indian and western Pacific Oceans, has invaded the waters of the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, threatening to wreak havoc on ecosystems, native fish populations and popular underwater diving areas: here.

From London daily The Morning Star:
POETRY: The Spanish civil war
ANDY CROFT appreciates an anthology of poetry from the Spanish civil war, penned by those who were in the thick of it.
Probably the most famous poem about the Spanish civil war was WH Auden’s Spain, written after a brief visit to the country in 1937.
Auden’s image of “poets exploding like bombs” and the line about the “conscious acceptance of guilt in the necessary murder” have encouraged historians to think of the men and women who served the cause of the Spanish republic as bloodthirsty young Bloomsbury poets.
Poems from Spain should certainly help to challenge this kind of lazy cold war caricature.
Published in association with the International Brigades Memorial Trust to mark the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Spanish civil war, it is the first anthology solely devoted to poems written by British International Brigaders ….
There are 85 poems here, written by 33 volunteers, six of whom did not return from Spain.
It does not include any poems by famous non-combatants such as Spender and Auden.
A few of these poems have become justly celebrated, notably Alex McDade’s Valley of Jarama, Tom Wintringham’s Monument and John Cornford’s Full Moon at Tierz, A Letter from Aragon and To Margaret Heinemann.
Others, by Clive Branson, Miles Tomalin and Charles Donnelly have appeared in previous anthologies.
The real value of this book, however, lies in the inclusion of a great many poems which have been out of print for decades or have never previously been published.
There are some wonderful poems here by Bill Feeley, Tony MacLean, Bill Harrington, Eric Edney, John Dunlop, Aileen Palmer and the editor’s father Jimmy Jump - variously rhetorical, bitter, documentary, prophetic, lyrical, satirical, warm and heroic.
See also
here.