Fossa moodboard
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Fossa moodboard

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vivs.jpg (01/15/2001), Roz Gibson (via)
Another species line-up picture. This one wasn't as hard to do as the weasel one, because I wasn't trying to do every species and could choose ones I had good reference on. Done in markers and colored pencil. Scan by Ron Johnson.
This is a...
critter
creature
beast
By Ran Kirlian - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
Ring-Tailed Mongoose // Ring-Tailed Vontsira
Redbubble
On the ferry
Not my best perspective work ever, but hey, this was drawn on paper.
Onja on the ferry back to his home island.
Pose referenced from a vacation photo I took.

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“Onja”
Pose referenced from a vacation photo I took last year.
The logo on the shirt and the motif on the armband are based on traditional patterns from southwestern Madagascar.
Onja is a common given name in Madagascar. It means “waves”.
Malagasy civet (Fossa Fossana)
The Malagasy or striped civet is an euplerid endemic to Madagascar. It is a small mammal: about 47 cm excluding the tail (which is only about 20 cm) and 2.5 kg. It has the appearance and movements of a small fox. It is nocturnal, though sources disagree over whether it is solitary or, unusual among euplerids, lives in pairs. It is not a good climber and frequents ravines. It eats small vertebrates (mammals, reptiles, and amphibians), insects, and eggs stolen from birds' nests. Though threatened by deforestation, hunting and competition from introduced species, the Malagasy civet is locally common.
photo credits: itsnature, biolib, link, blueanimalbio
Fossa (Cryptoprocta ferox)
Also known as the Fosa, the foosa is a species of euplerid (a family of feliform carnivorans native to Madagascar) found throughout Madagascar. Fossa are active both during the day and at night and will feed on a variety of animals including mammals, birds and reptiles. Their diet also depends on their environment as the diets of foosa that live in forests will consist of mostly lemurs, but the diets of foosa that live in mountainous areas will consist mostly of tenrecs. Foosa are very agile and can run down their prey through trees with ease, using their extremely long tails for balance. Foosa also have an unusual mating ritual which consists of a female who runs up a tree, males will then congregate under the tree and start fighting/calling for the female. Over a one week period the female will select and mate with several males after the week is over a new female will occupy the tree and the cycle will continue. Foosa are currently listed as vulnerable as they are suffering due to habitat destruction and introduced disease.
Phylogeny
Animalia-Chordata-Mammalia-Carnivora-Eupleridae-Cryptoprocta-ferox
Image Source(s)