some underappreciated mammals
african civet
fanaloka
egyptian mongoose
linsang
white tailed mongoose
coati
@viverridae
i didn’t even know these animals existed
binturong
javelina
gray langur
tiger quoll
aardwolf
ojovivo
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
h
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tumblr dot com
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@ornitho-muse
some underappreciated mammals
african civet
fanaloka
egyptian mongoose
linsang
white tailed mongoose
coati
@viverridae
i didn’t even know these animals existed
binturong
javelina
gray langur
tiger quoll
aardwolf

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Kakapo - A Flightless, Owl-like, Critically Endangered Parrot from New Zealand.Â
Prints Available on Society 6.Â
That’s a pretty cool lookin’ bird.Â
Full story and video here.
Image Credit: Stanford University, GIF’d by: Maddie Sofia
A leucistic female Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis), Clinton-Como Park, Columbus, OH, USA
photographs by Paul Hurtado | Flickr
Notice that this bird still has red tips. That’s because those colors are due to carotenoid pigments, not melanin, and aren’t affected by leucism!
If this bird were leucistic, it would still have all of its red pigment.
This is pibaldism.
Female cardinals only express carotenoids in the wings and crest in the pattern we see in this bird. So it does have a normal level of red pigmentation.
Piebald is a subcategory of leucism usually used in reference to animals that show patches of normal pigmentation in addition to dilute or white patches. I guess you could call this bird piebald, but it’s still leucistic.
It’s true: The Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) was believed to be either functionally or fully extinct in the wild, and multiple subspecies were believed to be extinct altogether, back in the mid-1900s.Â
Read more about the re-discovery and recovery of Branta canadensis maxima.
THEY WONT STOP ATTACKING MY CAR
(Truthfully, I love the big jerks; they’re amazing parents and the poster child for critically endangered species recovering - but DAMNIT I JUST WANT MY PANERA NOT YOUR STUPID BABIES, LEAVE ME ALONE)
This is correct, and I didn’t phrase this particularly well either in this post or the original - while all subspecies of Canada Goose were found to be threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species act of 1973 (and were known to be so well before then), the Giant Canada Goose was the only one ever thought to be extinct in the wild.
That said, the massive flying hateboats that are the Giant Canada Goose are the primary problem for me (in Central Minnesota) these days, so forgive me if I seem slightly biased towards their annoyingly impressive recovery.

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The conch (Strombea): in pictures after nature with descriptions
plate explanations here
By Kuster, HC (Heinrich Carl), 1807-1876Â
Chemnitz, Johann Hieronymus, 1730-1800 Martini, Friedrich Heinrich Wilhelm, 1729-1778
Publication info Nuremberg: Publisher of Bauer and Raspe (Julius Merz) in 1845.
Contributor:Â Smithsonian Libraries
Sponsor: Biodiversity Heritage Library
ORBITAL MECHANICS
Complexity Graphics by Tatiana Plakhova
[previously: Red Trees - Biosphere]
I think I’ve already reblogged this, but it needs another airing. It’s spectacular!
Artists Covertly Scan Bust of Nefertiti and Release the Data for Free Online
An Iraqi/German pair of artists just pulled off what might be one of the most digitally-enhanced art heists in recent time. They covertly scanned the Nefertiti bust (with an Xbox 360 Kinect sensor, no less) and released the 3D printing plans online. They did so as an act of defiance, as the bust was actually looted from an Egyptian site by German archaeologists.[x]
[article by Claire Voone /Hyperallergic]
Last October, two artists entered the Neues Museum in Berlin, where they clandestinely scanned the bust of Queen Nefertiti, the state museum’s prized gem. Three months later, they released the collected 3D dataset online as a torrent, providing completely free access under public domain to the one object in the museum’s collection off-limits to photographers. Anyone may download and remix the information now; the artists themselves used it to create a 3D-printed, one-to-one polymer resin model they claim is the most precise replica of the bust ever made, with just micrometer variations. That bust now resides permanently in the American University of Cairo as a stand-in for the original, 3,300-year-old work that was removed from its country of origin shortly after its discovery in 1912 by German archaeologists in Amarna.
Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles with the 3D bust in Cairo
The project, called “The Other Nefertiti,” is the work of German-Iraqi artist Nora Al-Badri and German artist Jan Nikolai Nelles, who consider their actions an artistic intervention to make cultural objects publicly available to all. For years, Germany and Egypt have hotly disputed the rightful location of the stucco-coated, limestone Queen, with Egyptian officials claiming that she left the country illegally and demanding the Neues Museum return her. With this controversy of ownership in mind, Al-Badri and Nelles also want, more broadly, for museums to reassess their collections with a critical eye and consider how they present the narratives of objects from other cultures they own as a result of colonial histories.
The Neues Museum, which the artists believe knows about their project but has chosen not to respond, is particularly guarded towards accessibility to data concerning its collections. According to the pair, although the museum has scanned Nefertiti’s bust, it will not make the information public — a choice that increasingly seems backwards as more and more museums around the world are encouraging the public to access their collections, often through digitization projects. Notably, the British Museum has hosted a “scanathon” where visitors scanned objects on display with their smartphones to crowdsource the creation of a digital archive — an event that contrasts starkly with Al-Badri and Nelles’s covert deed.
3D rendering of the bust of Nefertiti
“We appeal to [the Neues Museum] and those in charge behind it to rethink their attitude,” Al-Badri told Hyperallergic. “It is very simple to achieve a great outreach by opening their archives to the public domain, where cultural heritage is really accessible for everybody and can’t be possessed.”
In a gesture of clear defiance to institutional order, Al-Badri and Nelles leaked the information at Europe’s largest hacker conference, the annual Chaos Communication Congress. Within 24 hours, at least 1,000 people had already downloaded the torrent from the original seed, and many of them became seeders as well. Since then, the pair has also received requests from Egyptian universities asking to use the information for academic purposes and even businesses wondering if they may use it to create souvenirs. Nefertiti’s bust is one of the most copied works from Ancient Egypt — aside from those with illicit intents, others have used photogrammetry to reconstruct it — and its allure and high-profile presence make it a particularly charged work to engage with in discussions of ownership and institutional representations of artifacts.
“The head of Nefertiti represents all the other millions of stolen and looted artifacts all over the world currently happening, for example, in Syria, Iraq, and in Egypt,” Al-Badri said. “Archaeological artifacts as a cultural memory originate for the most part from the Global South; however, a vast number of important objects can be found in Western museums and private collections. We should face the fact that the colonial structures continue to exist today and still produce their inherent symbolic struggles.”
Al-Badri and Nelles take issue, for instance, with the Neues Museum’s method of displaying the bust, which apparently does not provide viewers with any context of how it arrived at the museum — thus transforming it and creating a new history tantamount to fiction, they believe. Over the years, the bust has become a symbol of German identity, a status cemented by the fact that the museum is state-run, and many Egyptians have long condemned this shaping of identity with an object from their cultural heritage.
The heist: museumshack from jnn on Vimeo
Ultimately, the artists hope their actions will place pressure on not only the Neues Museum but on all museums to repatriate objects to the communities and nations from which they came.
Rather than viewing such an idea as radical, they see it as pragmatic, as a logical update to cultural institutions in the digital era: especially given the technological possibilities of today, the pair believes museums who repatriate artifacts could then show copies or digital representatives of them. Many people have already created their own Nefertitis from the released data; the 3D statue in the American University in Cairo stands as such an example of Al-Badri and Nelles’s ideals for the future of museums, in addition to being one immediate solution that may arise from individual action.
“Luckily there are ways where we don’t even need any topdown effort from institutions or museums,” Al-Badri said, “but where the people can reclaim the museums as their public space through alternative virtual realities, fiction, or captivating the objects like we did.”
3D-printed bust of Nefertiti
[source: Hyperallergic, emphasis mine]
I am IN LOVE with EVERY SINGLE THING ABOUT THIS !!!!
Excellent story on museum “ownership” of cultural objects!
Blue Tit (One Legged) by CMM_456 on Flickr.
Birds are so funny when they stand on one leg, I wonder why they do it!
They stand on one leg for the reason of tucking it up out of the cold air and under their insulating feathers. They conserve body heat by doing so. Especially true of birds that stand in water for a long time! It may also just be habit in other situations where they may be cozy but still like to tuck up their leg (like getting a blanket out even when it’s hot; I suppose)
Haven’t had a lot of time or energy for Tumblr so much lately– Lots of family stuff and real life; then I started a new job. So stick with me, things will get better soon!Â

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Noisy friarbird (Philemon corniculatus)
The noisy friarbird is a passerine bird of the honeyeater family Meliphagidae native to southern New Guinea and eastern Australia. It is one of several species known as friarbirds whose heads are bare of feathers. It is brown-grey in colour, with a prominent knob on its bare black-skinned head. It feeds on insects and nectar. As its name suggests, it is noisy. The calls are used to identify an individual’s feeding territory, and also announce the presence of food sources worth defending to other birds - not necessarily friarbirds alone.
photo credits: wiki, wiki, fir0002 | flagstaffotos.com.au,Â
Anything with “Noisy” (or “Screamer”) in its name, I have to check out its call. I’d say this one is something like a high-pitched honk, or something a plastic toy would make:
The face of this bird is so wonderfully vulture-like. I’m seriously surprised it’s not a carrion-eater.
The African pygmy falcon is not only the smallest falcon on the continent, but also a cooperative breeder, meaning more than two adult birds tend their nests! [OC]
ICYMI - here’s a short video that features some ridiculous sounding birds. I put it together with the help of Nick Lund (creator of the blog The Birdist).
And here it is on soundcloud.
Images: The engravings of John James Audubon and artvintage1800s.etsy.com’s photostream
The bird specimen storage room went from just over 81 degrees F on Monday to just under 68 F Today. Although being a little cold is a lot less miserable than being too hot, I’ve decided.
Juvenile Crested owl (Lophostrix cristata) - Christian Nunes
Classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, the crested owl inhabits lowland rainforests across a large range in Central and South America, and is common in undisturbed forests.

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Late to work today for a good reason: Found an adult mourning dove on the sidewalk while heading to the bus. Was missing his tail and couldn’t perch, just sat on the ground. Brought him in to the local bird rehab center; hopefully he was not super injured (was relatively active, alert, and wings were okay) and will be able to grow back his tail and be released.
Vaalia’s Turtlefish is available now on Society6 as prints, phone cases, and stationary cards! (ngl, I want the phone case)
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