Day two of drawing dumb little sharks until I learn how to draw sharks: The thresher shark! I spent more time on this one and I hope it shows! Also if you know how to draw sharks id love feedback! This lil guy uses his tail as a sort of whip in order to bonk their prey. A thresher sharks tail can be up to 3 meters (around 9 feet) long on the common thresher sharks (the biggest ones)! Also did you know that they're also referred to as the fox shark? I think thats pretty neat :)
"which reptile is the most catholic?" obviously Komodo Dragons because they have virgin birth
many other reptile lineages also have virgin birth (parthenogenesis), there's even MULTIPLE species of whiptail lizards that reproduce entirely this way!
there are no males in these species. only females.
however! they still court each other and do some copulating.
LIZBEANS.
Six sets of Sacoglossa stickers! These are sea slugs, also named solar-powered sea slugs are able to photosynthesise! The mascot of this superorder is the sea bunny with their vibrant green bodies and pink rosy cheeks
Each pack will have a little information card and fun facts about these cuties.
Have put a lot of time and passion into these and hope you all like them as much as I do :)
sea lemons 🍋 are my new favorite thing
and I know I can’t eat them but that doesn’t stop me from wanting to
I met some relatives of my beloved leatherleaf slugs in the mangroves of Singapore, the onch slugs! they’re perhaps some of the slowest-moving animals I’ve ever encountered; this is one in a hurry:
the species pictured is a Platevindex, which are particularly interesting to me since their backs are studded with extra eyes! the dorsal papillae each have a little black dot that’s a photoreceptor, which helps the slug detect changes in light exposure.
onchidiids are marine animals, living on costal rocks and in mangroves, but breathe air and spend much of their time out of the water. like the leatherleafs, they’ve got a dry, tough hide that maintains water balance, but Platevindex takes that to an extreme—when I picked one up, it felt like a vulcanized rubber tire!
do eastern hognoses get attacked by toads a lot? them being immune to their poison seems really specific
Quite the opposite! Many toads secrete toxins to avoid being eaten (most animals don't like eating poisonous food).
However, because they really like eating toads, hognose snakes have evolved specifically to be immune to those toxins. There are many examples of this kind of co-evolution in the animal kingdom (another common one are garter snakes and salamanders).
my fish delivered a hot new reaction image