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#spot billed pelican
birdblues · 7 months
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Spot-billed Pelican
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snototter · 5 months
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A spot billed pelican (Pelecanus philippensis) stretches its wings in Manas National Park, India
by praveen pandian
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natural-world · 6 months
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Rakesh Baro captured this spot-billed pelican in Mysuru, India
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danial1 · 1 year
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Tempat menarik di Johor Bahru - Zoo Johor - Paddle Boat + Bot Kayuh, Kenapa perlu pakai jaket?
Tempat menarik di Johor Bahru – Zoo Johor – Paddle Boat + Bot Kayuh, Kenapa perlu pakai jaket?
Foto atas :  Tu dia bersidai jaket-jaket keselamatan yang disediakan kepada pengunjung Zoo Johor . Bahagian ini menempatkan tasik yang menyediakan khidmat padle boat atau boat kayuh di mana terdapat beburung atau aviary dari jenis burung Pelican  Spot-billed Pelican dan Dalmatian PelicanTempat menarik di Johor Bahru ni iaitu Zoo Johor merupakan Zoo yang bersejarah dan tertua di Malaysia di mana…
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fromtraveldiaries · 1 year
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Spot-billed pelicans, Ameenpur lake, November, 2022
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mutant-distraction · 2 months
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Reju K Ravi
Spot-billed pelican
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magnetothemagnificent · 6 months
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I guess it's time I share my list of birds from this past Jewish year (I've been keeping two Big Year lists, Jewish year and secular year). All are from the US, except the last few which are indicated.
1. Ruby-crowned kinglet
2. American Robin
* Leucistic American Robin
3. Song sparrow
4. Rock pigeon
* Melanistic rock pigeon
5. Chipping sparrow
6. Hairy woodpecker
7. Mourning dove
8. Northern flicker
9. Eastern towhee
10. White crowned sparrow
11. White-throated sparrow
12 Savannah sparrow
13. House sparrow
14. European starling
15. American Crow
16. Common Raven
17. Gray catbird
18. Northern mockingbird
19. Canada Goose
20. Spotted Sandpiper
21. American herring gull
22. Marsh wren
23. Limpkin
24. Great white heron
25. Cattle egret
26. Anhinga
27. Snowy egret
28. Great blue heron
29. Black-crowned night heron
30. Wood stork
31. Common gallinule
32. Blue-gray gnatcatcher
33. Turkey vulture
34. Black vulture
35. Yellow rumped warbler
36. Tufted titmouse
37. Little blue heron
38. White ibis
39. Cooper's hawk
40. Cardinal
41. Green heron
42. Carolina wren
43. Palm warbler
44. Pine warbler
45. Sandhill crane
46. Carolina chickadee
47. Bluejay
48. Osprey
49. Chimney swift
50. Red-tailed hawk
51. Prairie warbler
52. American kestrel
53. Glossy ibis
54. Pied-billed grebe
55. Double-crested cormorant
56. Grey kingbird
57. Brown pelican
58. Fish crow
59. Royal tern
60. Bald eagle
61. Painted bunting
62. American white pelican
63. Common grackle
64. Boat-tailed grackle
65. Great-tailed grackle
66. American purple gallinule
67. American coot
68. Brown-headed cowbird
69. Tricolored heron
70. Mallard
71. Black-bellied whistling duck
72. Eastern kingbird
73. Yellow-billed cuckoo
74. Muscovy duck
75. American bittern
76. Ring-billed gull
77. American Pekin
78. Mallard-Pekin hybrid
79. Eastern bluebird
80. Yellow-bellied sapsucker
81. Red-winged blackbird
82. White-eyed vireo
83. Mottled duck
84. Broad-winged hawk
85. Dark-eyed junco
86. Brown thrasher
87. Sharp-shinned hawk
88. House finch
89. Eastern Phoebe
90. Downy woodpecker
91. Fox sparrow
92. Loggerhead Shrike!!!!
93. White breasted nuthatch
94. Red-bellied woodpecker
95. Brown creeper
96. Pileated woodpecker
97. American goldfinch
98. House wren
99. Barn swallow
100. Tree swallow
101. Black and white warbler
102. Red eyed vireo
103. Yellow warbler
104. Mute swan
105. Rusty blackbird
106. Common yellowthroat
107. Warbling vireo
108. Northern waterthrush
109. Veery
110. Swamp sparrow
111. Wood duck
112. American redstart
113. Orchard oriole
114. Greater Yellowlegs
115. Lesser Yellowlegs
116. Baltimore oriole
117. Hermit thrush
118. Wood thrush
119. Ovenbird
120. Indigo bunting
121. Black-throated blue warbler
122. Scarlet tanager
123. Worm-eating warbler
124. Northern rough-winged swallow
125. Blue-headed vireo
126. Northern parula
127. Prothonotary warbler
128. Philadelphia vireo
129. Blackburnian warbler
130. Magnolia warbler
131. Cedar waxwing
132. Blackpoll warbler
133. Yellow-throated vireo
134. Eastern wood pewee
135. Acadian flycatcher
136. Tennessee warbler
137. Caspian tern
138. Laughing gull
139. Forster's tern
140. American oystercatcher
141. Green-winged teal
142. Purple Martin
143. Least tern
144. Field sparrow
145. Killdeer
146. Grey-cheeked thrush
147. Rose-breasted grosbeak
148. Great-crested flycatcher
149. Swainson's thrush
150. Bay-breasted warbler
151. Chestnut-sided warbler
152. Willow flycatcher
153. Ruby-throated hummingbird
154. Peregrine falcon
155. Hooded crow IL
156. Laughing dove IL
157. Eurasian collared dove IL
158. Eurasian jackdaw IL
159. Common myna IL
160. Rose-ringed parakeet IL
161. White spectacled bulbul IL
162. European bee eater IL
163. Chukar IL
164. Short toed snake eagle IL
165. White stork IL
166. Little egret IL
167. Pygmy cormorant IL
168. Eurasian hoopoe IL
169. Alpine swift IL
170. Graceful pinia IL
171. Eastern Olivaceous Warbler IL
172. Tristan's Starling IL
173. Fan tailed raven IL
174. Eurasian black cap IL
Here's to at least 200 next year!
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aquatark · 2 months
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Australian Pelican - Gatama Atoll
Endless Ocean: Blue World, Nintendo Wii
crazy how just because of one scientific name mistake in the japanese release of eo1, this guy was mistakenly named "spot billed pelican" in all releases of the game lmao
at least you got your true identity back in the sequel, big guy
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THE COMPETITORS
After hours of filtering, I have a list! From 411 submisstions to 134 competitors. Of course, that means that not all the submissions are competing. My main rule for filtering was that when many similar animals were submitted, one was selected. This means that even if your submission din't get in, there is likely somthing else similar you can vote for instead! I'm hoping to get the polls out this Saturday or Sunday, and I'll post the time once it's decided. That being said... here's the list!
Mouse deer
Blanket octopus
Twenty plume moth
Anomalocaris
Caecilian
Bagworm moth caterpillars
Balaenognathus
Banded archerfish
Barnacle
Barreleye fish
Tripod fish
Bigfin squid
Bilby
Black sea hare
Black snub nosed monkey
Blobfish
Blue sea dragon 
Nano-chameleon
Bush brown caterpillar
Chinese water deer
Maned wolf
Colugo
Common spotted cuscus
Corpse Assassin Bug
Messmate pipefish
Cotylorhynchus
creatonotos gangis
Tongue eating louse
Ganges river dolphin 
ghost pipefish
Giant Anteater
Giant gippsland earthworm
Giant tube worm
Giraffe Weevil
Glowworms
Goblin shark
Golden mole
Green-banded broodsac
Greenland shark
Gum leaf skeletonizer caterpillars
Hagfish
Hallucigenia
Hammer head bat
Helicoprion
Honduran white bat
Short horned lizard
Green hydra
Jerboa
Jerusalem cricket
Lamprey
Largetooth sawfish
Bulwer’s pheasant
Lowland Streaked Tenrec
Lyrebird
Marbled polecat
Mata mata
Mexican mole lizard
Ghost faced bat
Mudskipper
Muntjac
Naked bulldog bat
Naked mole rat
Phillipene tube nosed fruit bat
Oarfish 
Mantis shrimp
Ogre faced spider
Okapi
platypus
Pangolin
Parrot fish
Partridge bug
Pelican eel
Asian giant softshell turtle
Pink fairy armadillo
Pipa pipa
Platybelodon
Portuguese Man O War
Potoos
Predatory tunicate
Pufferfish
Sea spider
Red lipped batfish
Bowmouth guitarfish
Roseate spoonbill
Pink iguana
Royal albatross
Sage grouse
Saiga antelope
Sailfin dragon
Volcano snail
Schaefer’s anglerfish
Sea cucumber
Sea pig
Sea sheep
Sharovipteryx
Echidna
Assassin spider
Spider tailed viper
Siphonophore
Solenodon
Spectral bat
Spix’s disc winged bat
Spotted wobbegong
Stalk-eyed fly
Stoplight loosejaw
Giant phantom jelly
Sunfish
Sword billed hummingbird
Tailless whip scorpion 
Tapir 
Tardigrade
Tarsier
Telescopefish
Woodcock
Aye-aye
Bobbit worm
Nautilus
Glass frog
Immortal jellyfish
Olm
Mirror spider
Trilobite Beetle
Trumpetfish
Vampire bat
Vampire squid
Velvetworm
Wonderfish
Wrinkle-faced bat
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wildflowerwoodsworld · 6 months
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I don't really talk about my aus on here, but I'm pretty proud of the work I've put into this one so I thought I'd share
Nobody ask how long this took.
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As per usual, several of the ocs on this list (Nickole, Bastian, Aella, Madlyn, Ruth, Madeline, Vivian, Cornelia, Silas, Angela, Primrose, Lerola, Dalila, Levi, Sylvia, Hannah, Juniper, Silvester, Alexandra and Alderbrand) belong to the lovely @crazedstoryteller, the rest of the ocs (Fiona, Lana, Tondra and Lia) are mine, and obviously canon chracters are canon
(alternate version of the table under the cut)
Surname Name Height Bird Wingspan
Poizot Gueldre 194cm Common Ostrich 142cm
Vermillion Mimosa 161cm Beautiful Sheartail 143cm
Vermillion Kirsch 182cm Purple-Throated Carib 152cm
Unsworth Dorothy 145cm Green Peafowl 158cm
Mehmad Rhya 181cm Superb Lyrebird 168cm
Adlai Marie 135cm Eurasian Magpie 182cm
Becquerel Letoile 165cm Zebra Dove 187cm
Vermillion Nickole 168cm Rufous-collared kingfisher 191cm
Silva Nebra 170cm Buff-Breasted Paradise Kingfisher 192cm
Tenmanyashiki Fujio 176cm Anna’s Hummingbird 192cm
Florimond Bastian 176cm Turkey 202cm
Pappitson Charmy 142cm Dalmatian Pelican 216cm
Silva Acier 167cm Kookaburra 217cm
Clarkson Aella 165cm Northern Cardinal 218cm
Swallowtail Secre 152cm Anti-Bird 225cm
Francois Marx 167cm Common Grackle 226cm
Faust Morgen 180cm White-Necked Raven 228cm
Silva Nozel 177cm Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher 228cm
Faust Nacht 180cm White-Necked Raven 228cm
Fiore Madlyn 149cm European Robin 234cm
Roselei Ruth 169cm House Sparrow 235cm
Bergen Fana 162cm Baltimore oriole 236cm
Mehmad Fana 162cm Baltimore oriole 236cm
Angel Puli 168cm Tundra Swan 236cm
Wechsler Grey 159cm Kererū 238.5cm
Funar Recca 153cm European Robin 240cm
Thorncroft Madeline 171cm Black Swan 241cm
Mikuriya Fumito 176cm Eurasian Teal 241cm
Adlai Gauche 181cm Eurasian Magpie 245cm
Tium Shiren 183cm Great Potoo 245cm
Silva Solid 169cm Yellow Billed Kingfisher 246.5cm
Silva Noelle 161cm Common Kingfisher 250cm
Vaude Langris 166cm Western Tanager 253cm
Tormenta Fragil 162cm European Robin 254cm
Portaport Cob 173cm Willow Ptarmigan 256cm
Shipley Vivian 175cm European Robin 257cm
Franklin Cornelia 159cm Black-necked Grebe 257cm
Kozma Lolopechka 165cm American White Pelican 257cm
Luftair Randall 175cm Mute Swan 263cm
Libardirt Morris 177cm Mallard 267cm
Vaude Silas 173cm Hepatic Tanager 271cm
Keller Mariella 157cm Pacific Loon 271cm
Code Dominante 167cm Superb Starling 272cm
Clarkson Angela 168cm Vermilion Cardinal 274cm
Hage Asta 155cm Shining Bronze Cuckoo 275cm
Bullard Sally 160cm Pacific Loon 277cm
Roulacase Fiona 171cm Common Snipe 278cm
Marron Sol 180cm European Robin 282cm
Enoteca Vanessa 170cm Taiwan Rosefinch 283.5cm
Roselei Lerola 170cm Aztec Thrush 283cm
Roselei Primrose 175cm Varied Thrush 283cm
Holt Nash 136cm Common Kestrel 286cm
Ringard En 176cm Great Spotted Woodpecker 286cm
Roulacase Finral 172cm Great Snipe 287cm
Lister Dalila 177cm Great Spotted Woodpecker 288cm
Legolant Henry 190cm Trumpet Swan 290cm
McNamara Owen 180cm Great Spotted Woodpecker 293cm
Roe Levi 178cm American Coot 294cm
Vaude Sylvia 167cm Summer Tanager 295cm
Orfai Orsi 180cm American Coot 297cm
Hangatsuji Jozo 178cm Alpine Chough 297cm
Aquaria Lily 160cm Grey Heron 306cm
Kruger Fanzell 178cm Spur-Winged Goose 310cm
Kezokaku Ginnojomorifuyu 169cm Pygmy Falcon 313cm
Sandler Alecdora 178cm Common Cuckoo 314cm
Caseus Hamon 170cm Least Sandpiper 317cm
Starr Mars 170cm Common Starling 325cm
Gerver Hannah 169cm Chimney Swift 338cm
Ideale Zara 177cm Carrion Crow 340cm
Bronzazza Sekke 175cm Rock Dove 341cm
Rapual Theresa 162cm Common Kestrel 341cm
Salik Revchi 176cm Rock Dove 342cm
Lugner Xerx 177cm Snowy Sheathbill 345cm
Roselei Charlotte 171cm Mountain Bluebird 346cm
Voltia Luck 167cm Peregrine Falcon 348cm
Vaude Lana 168cm White Winged Tanager 349cm
Dorthonion Ladros 180cm Rock Dove 350cm
Landvik Valtos 178cm Chimney Swift 356cm
Ideale Zora 176cm Hooded Crow 357cm
Vermillion Leopold 170cm Brown Falcon 360cm
Boismortier Rill 165cm Kea 363cm
Swing Magna 169cm Gyrfalcon 364cm
Lunettes Klaus 176cm European Nightjar 371cm
Fodor Gadjah 176cm Magnificent Frigatebird 377cm
Novachrono Julius 180cm European Golden Eagle 379cm
Granvorka Kaiser 193cm Kori Buzzard 393cm
Mushogatake Yosuga 181cm Saker Falcon 400cm
Grinberryall Yuno 172cm Common Swift 404cm
Kay Juniper 170cm Great Shearwater 406cm
Sturm Tondra 167cm Barn Owl 407cm
Vermillion Mereoleona 178cm Fox Kestrel 409cm
Yami Ichika 156cm Northern Royal Albatross 414cm
Gidul Vetto 196cm California Condor 420cm
Vermillion Fuegoleon 188cm Nunkeen Kestrel 421cm
Garver Silvester 184cm Eurasian Hobby 429cm
Spirito Rades 174cm Hooded Vulture 435cm
Swallow David 175cm Tree Swallow 438cm
Imari Komari 160cm White-Throated Needletail 440cm
Mehmad Patri 172cm New Zealand Dotterel 440cm
Vangeance William 172cm New Zealand Dotterel 440cm
Vermillion Alexandra 181cm Madagascar Fish Eagle 441cm
O’oka Daizaemon 193cm Great Buzzard 453cm
Bardsley Lia 168cm White-Throated Needletail 462cm
Summerfield Jack 197cm Common Swift 464cm
Agrippa Gordon 187cm Rüppell’s Vulture 468cm
Yami Sukehiro 183cm Wandering Albatross 476cm
Vermillion Alderbrand 185cm African Fish Eagle 493cm
Ryuudou Ryuuya 182cm Amsterdam Albatross 507cm
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echoes-of-kemet · 1 year
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Do yu know what other animals were in ancient egypt? I want my oc to have a unique animal and you seem to know a fair amount
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I am a well of ridiculous, hyperspecific, only interesting to some trivia lmao.
I would encourage you not to limit yourself to an entirely unique beast- many deities share sacred animals and are still strong individuals. My mind immediately goes to the huge number of feline deities- lions and lionesses in particular- for an example. Additionally, it's nigh impossible for me (with no academic anthropology/egyptology/historic zoology knowledge) to say for certain that particular animals were present in Kemet when they have no documented deities, mummies, or written mentions. I've had to guess for some, deduce by their present day habitats and more or less "timeline" of their species.
It's also important to keep in mind Kemet had contact with other civilizations in other habitats, meaning they were aware of animals not necessarily native to the area. A perfect example is the Hamadryas baboon- they were Nubian animals, but were sacred to both Thoth and Babi, depicted in art, and many mummies of the species have been recovered. A more surprising example is the Syrian brown bear, which was a rare exotic spectacle for the royal elite. There's also the trouble of many species now being extant from the area, meaning they were there but the local population is now extinct- the African sacred ibis is the example my mind comes to first, the waterfowl no longer present along the Nile.
Coincidentally, I've been compiling a list of animals for my own reference to supply a beast or two for the deities that don't have one in tradition. 
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Birds
Abdim's Stork
African Darter
African Dwarf Kingfisher
African Grass Owl
African Open-billed Stork
African Pied Wagtail
African Sacred Ibis
Asian Green Bee-Eater
Barbary Falcon
Barbary Partridge
Barn Owl
Barn Swallow
Bearded Vulture
Bennu Heron (likely not an actual animal, the Bennu bird inspired by the Goliath Heron- but felt like including it anyhow)
Black Kite
Black Stork
Black-throated Loon
Black-winged Kite
Brown-necked Raven
Carrion Crow
Cattle Egret
Chukar Partridge
Common Buzzard
Common Cormorant
Common Crane
Common Greenshank
Common House Martin
Common Kestrel
Common Kingfisher
Common Pochard
Common Quail
Common Raven
Common Redshank
Common Redstart
Common Sandpiper
Common Spoonbill
Common Teal
Crab Plover
Crested Plover
Dalmatian Pelican
Demoiselle Crane
Eagle (I'm sure there were some, but I can't find any definitive evidence of species in the ancient Kemetic culture- I would take a guess that the Golden Eage was an infrequent visitor)
Egyptian Plover
Egyptian Vulture
European Roller (considered a pest)
European Turtle-dove
Eurasian Coot
Eurasian Crag Martin
Eurasian Teal
Eurasian Wigeon
Fan-tailed Raven
Ferruginous Duck
Gadwall
Garganey
Glossy Ibis
Golden Oriole
Goliath Heron
Great Bittern
Great Bustard
Great Cormorant
Great Egret
Great Spotted Cuckoo
Great White Pelican
Greater Flamingo (possibly not native)
Green Sandpiper
Grey Heron
Griffon Vulture
Helmeted Guineafowl (not native)
Hermit Ibis
Hobby Falcon
Honey Buzzard
Hooded Crow
Hoopoe
Houbara Bustard
House Crow
House Sparrow (pest, hieroglyph had negative connotation)
Kittliz's Plover
Lanner Falcon
Lappet-faced Vulture
Laughing Dove
Lesser Kestrel
Lesser Pied Kingfisher
Little Bittern
Little Bustard
Little Egret
Little Owl
Long-eared Owl
Long-legged Buzzard
Mallard
Marabou Stork
Marsh Sandpiper
Masked Shrike
Merlin
Mourning Wheatear
Northern Lapwing
Northern Pintail
Northern Shoveler
Ostrich
Pale Crag Martin
Peregrine Falcon
Pied Avocet
Pink-backed Pelican
Purple Gallinule
Purple Heron
Red Kite
Red-backed Shrike
Red-footed Falcon
Red-rumped Wheatear
Reed Cormorant
Ring-necked Dove
Rock Dove
Rook
Ruddy Shelduck
Saddle-bill Stork
Saker Falcon
Sandhill Crane
Sand Martin
Sand Partridge
Short-eared Owl
Spotted Redshank
Sooty Falcon
Squacco Heron
Striated Heron
Swan (not native)
Tawny Owl
Tufted Duck
Western Reef Heron
White-backed Night Heron
White-crowned Wheatear
White Stork
White Wagtail
Wood Sandpiper
Yellow-billed Stork
Mammals
Aardvark (possibly not native)
Aardwolf
Addax Antelope
African Clawless Otter
African Giant Shrew
African Green Monkey (not native)
African Grass Rat
African Leopard
African Striped Weasel
Arabian Oryx
Barbary Deer (not native)
Barbary Lion (now extinct)
Barbary Macaque (not native)
Black Rat
Common Patas Monkey (not native)
Black Rhinoceros
Blanford's Fox
Black Wildebeest
Bubal Hartebeest (now extinct)
Cairo Spiny Mouse
Cape Hare
Caracal
Cheetah
Common Beisa Oryx
Common Genet
Desert Hedgehog
Desert Long-eared Bat
Dorcas Gazelle
Desert Black Cobra
Egyptian Fruit Bat
Egyptian Jackal/African Wolf (originally misidentified, now the African Wolf)
Egyptian Mongoose
Egyptian Pipistrelle
Egyptian Red Fox
Egyptian Slit-faced Bat
Egyptian Tomb Bat
Egyptian Weasel
Egyptian Wild Ass 
Fennec Fox
Flower's Shrew
Four-toed Jerboa
Geoffroy's Horseshoe Bat
Gerenuk
Giraffe
Golden Spiny Mouse
Greater Egyptian Jerboa
Greater Mouse-tailed Bat
Greater Red Musk Shrew
Hamadryas Baboon (not native)
Hippopotamus
Honey Badger
House Mouse
Lesser Egyptian Jerboa
Lesser Mouse-tailed Bat
Long-eared Hedgehog
Long-nosed Shrew
North African/Bush Elephant (vilified and driven out by prehistoric Egyptians)
North African Crested Porcupine (not native)
Nubian Ibex (not native)
Olive Baboon (likely not native, sometimes called the Anubis Baboon)
Persian Fallow Deer (not native)
Rhim Gazelle
Rüppell's Fox
Sand Rat
Serval (likely not native, but Ra was depicted as one)
Scimitar Oryx
Soemmerring's Gazelle
Somali Dwarf Shrew
Spotted Hyena
Spotted-necked Otter
Striped Hyena
Syrian Brown Bear (not native)
Wild Boar
White Rhinoceros
Yellow Baboon (not native, species' epithet means 'dog-head' in Greek)
Vervet Monkey
Reptiles
African Chameleon
African Rock Python
Arabian Horned Viper
Desert Horned Viper
Desert Monitor Lizard
Egyptian Cobra
Egyptian Gecko
Egyptian Sand Boa
Egyptian Sand Racer
Egyptian Tortoise
Javelin Sand Boa
Insects/Arachnids/Etc.
Nile Crocodile
Nile Soft-shelled Turtle
Red Spitting Cobra
Saharan Sand Viper
Amphibians
African Common Toad
European Green Toad
Marsh Frog
Mascarene Grass Frog
Nile Delta Toad
Nile Valley Toad
Camel Spider
Banded Garden Spider
Brown Widow Spider
Carpenter Ant
Centipede
Click Beetle
Common Housefly (NOT considered a pest, actually revered as a protector)
Danaid Eggfly
Desert Ant
Desert Locust
Devil's Coach Horse Beetle
Dorippus Tiger Butterfly
Dragonfly
Flea
Fire Ant
Jewel Beetle
Gaudy Commodore Butterfly
Half-edged Wall Jumping Spider
Large Salmon Arab Butterfly
Maggot/Carrion Fly
Migratory Locust
Messor Ant
Millipede
Red-breasted Goose
Mosquito (pest)
Moths in the Saturniidae family
Palestine Yellow Scorpion
Pantropical Jumping Spider
Pharaoh Ant
Plain Tiger Butterfly
Praying Mantis
Scarab Beetle
Sinai Baton Blue Butterfly
Southern White Admiral Butterfly
Scorpions in the Buthidae and Scorpionidae families
Water Scorpion
Fish, Mollusks, etc. (Keep in mind fish were taboo in Kemet)
Abju
African Catfish
African Tigerfish
Bayad Fish
Blacktip Shark
Blue-spotted Stingray
Bolti
Chromis
Cichlid
Cornish Jack
Eel
Flatfish
Gilt-head Bream
Great Barracuda
Leopard Shark
Lepidotus Fish
Loligo Squid
Lungfish
Moon Fish
Mullet
Nile Barb
Nile Bichir
Nile Carp
Nile Mormyrid
Nile Labeo
Nile Perch
Nile Puffer
Parrotfish
Reef Manta Ray
Reef Shark
Sandbar Shark
Sea Snake
Scorpionfish
Spiny Lobster
Sturgeon
Surgeonfish
Swordfish
Thornback Ray
Thresher Shark
Tiger Shark
Tilapia
Triggerfish
Unicorn Fish
Wrasse
Zebra Shark
Domestic Animals
Bean Goose
Brant Goose
Camel (not introduced until Middle/New Kingdom)
Cats (Mau breed)
Chickens (not introduced until New Kingdom era)
Cow/Bull
Dogs (Saluki, Greyhound, Basenji, and Pharaoh Hound breeds)
Donkey
Egyptian Goose
Greater White-fronted Goose
Greylag Goose
Honey Bees
Horse (not introduced until New Kingdom)
Pig
Ram
My sources, if you're interested, are the Wikipedia page for Egyptian wildlife, a few different diving sites about the Mediterranean and Red Sea, a couple books I own on Ancient Egypt that describe the geography of the periods, and this lovely reddit multi-post
Sheep
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100yearoldcomics · 2 years
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April 16, 1922 Krazy Kat by George Herriman
[ID: A dog lifts himself up on the edge of a billiards table and angrily stares at the blank green felt in front of him /end] Caption: "Bozwell Beegle," whose "Billiard Parlor," and "Soda Squirtery" is the rendevous of "Coconino's" elite, finds that his entire equipment of billiard balls has been pilfered - and grows excited. Bozwell: Jee wiz!! Somebody has stolen my "three billiard balls." Help, fire, po-leece!!!
[ID: Bozwell leans in close to Officer Pupp's face and loudly complains about the theft. To their right, a group of animals stand with their hands raised in the air. From left to right, we see a pelican, Ignatz Mouse, an owl, Mr. Krane, an ostrich, a duck, a dog, a turtle and a pig. /end] Caption: And discloses the incident to "Officer Pupp," whereupon certain of the solid citizens declare themselves guiltless in no weak terms. Bozwell: And they were the three best billiard balls in "Coconino," and don't let that fact escape your mind, neither. Pupp: Have no fear, Mr. "Beegle." The honor of "Coconino" lies in my hands, and before many minutes have passed, that billard ball burglar will be in the hands of the law. Citizens: You can search us, we are innocent!!!
[ID: Pupp is shocked to find a long-necked duck-billed spotted bird snoozing under a tree with three large round protuberances in his neck. /end] Caption: In due time, "Officer Pupp's" labors of law and order lead him where he listed least, and wotted not. Pupp: Oh, Walter!! Walter, my old friend. To think that you, you of all people should have done it. Oh-h-h, Walter!!!!
[ID: Pupp leans glumly beneath the barred window of the jail cell he's thrown Walter into. Bozwell Beegle stands beside him, still angry. /end] Caption: And nobly does his duty. E'en though "sorrow" grips his suffering soul. Pupp: To think that I should have lived to snag my old pal, "Walter." Oh, why did I ever get myself got on the "force"? Bozwell: You've got the dern crook in jail, and he's got my billiard balls in his neck. But now, how am I gonna get them, huh? How?
LET'S PASS ON.
[ID: Krazy bends over to speak with Mrs. Plimmit Rokk, a hen roosting in a wooden crate full of hay. /end] Krazy: Well, well, well, "Mrs. Plimmit Rokk," how's things anyhow? Mrs. Rokk: Rotten!!!
[ID: Mrs. Rokk stands to inspect the three ovoid shapes in her nest. /end] Caption: And so gathers a heap of information. Rokk: Here I was, passing by "Mr. Bozwell Beegle's" billiard parlor last week, and what should I see on a big green table but these three eggs looking very sad, and very orphan like. Well, having a mother's heart under my left wing, I took them home, hoping to hatch the poor things.
[ID: Mrs. Rook kicks the billiard balls out of her nest, ZIPping them off into the air. Krazy catches them with a BLOP sound. /end] Mrs. Rook: But dawgunnem!!! I can't get a peep out of them. Take 'em away. I'm through with such ingrates!!!
[ID: Krazy carries the billiard balls back into town. /end] Krazy: I s'pose the best thing I can do is to put them back on Mr. Beegle's green table.
[ID: Krazy places them back on Bozwell's billiard table in a straight row. /end] Krazy: There now.
[ID: Bozwell returns to find his billiard balls back where he left them. /end] Bozwell: Bless my pale blue eye, they're back!!
[ID: Bozwell hurriedly runs off. /end] Bozwell: Oh, Officer "Pupp," Officer Pupp!!!
[ID: Bozwell excitedly tells Pupp the news. /end] Bozwell: The billiard balls are back. All three of them!!! Pupp: Then "Walter" is innocent. Thank goodness!!
[ID: Pupp questions the newly-freed Walter, who bends down to meet his eye level. /end] Pupp: Now that the shadow of the prison cell is offa you, "Walter," I ask you as a pal, tell me what is it, huh? "Adenoids," "tonsils," "quinsies," or what? Walter: Just vanity, "Officer Pupp," just the vanity of a foolish bird. I had an idea that a neck the length and grace of mine should have more than one "Adam's apple," and so I swallowed a couple of "Spitzbergens," and a "Johnathan" to satisfy my pride. But dawgunnit, it lands me in jail. Soon as these "apples" digest, I'll be satisfied with a neck without "Adam's apples," y'bet.
[ID: Officer Pupp walks happily down the street, twirling his baton as he goes. Krazy buys three eggs from a dog running a department store booth. Ignatz hides between wooden barrels and crates, lying in wait for the right moment to bean Krazy with a brick. /end] Shopkeep: Hatch? Of course them eggs will hatch. Why? Krazy: Oh, nuttin. Nuttin uttall. Pupp: ALL's well, all's well, for the nonce.
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danial1 · 1 year
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Tempat menarik di Johor Bahru - Zoo Johor - Spesis burung migrasi Pelican
Tempat menarik di Johor Bahru – Zoo Johor – Spesis burung migrasi Pelican
Foto atas : Tempat menarik di Johor Bahru bertambah menarik dengan wujudnya koleksi aviari  (aviary) atau spesis beburung yang berkebolehan untuk terbang. Pelican yang anggun ini jika diamati berkemungkinan besar dari jenis Dalmatian pelican atau pun nama saintifiknya Pelecanus crispus . Mungkin juga terdapat 2 spesis Pelican di sini iaitu satu lagi dari jenis Spot-billed pelican atau nama…
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mutant-distraction · 5 months
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Raveesh Ks
Spot-billed pelican
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Proud to announce that I spotted 60.5 species of birds in my week trip to Florida (copied-and-pasted from my Big Year google doc, so the FA stands for Florida):
Marsh wren FA
Limpkin FA
Great white heron FA
Cattle egret FA
Anhinga FA
Snowy egret FA
Great blue heron FA
Black-crowned night heron FA *was on a boardwalk trail and saw a bunch of people crouching down and looking at something and I thought they saw another gator (on this trip we saw 32 gators in total) but it was something better! A bird! And then I saw another one the next day hiding under brush.
Wood stork FA
Common moorhen FA
Blue-gray gnatcatcher FA
Turkey vulture FA *was looking for wild turkeys and unfortunately didn't see any this trip but one of these guys was stalking on the side of the rode and for a second we got exciting thinking it was an actual turkey.
Black vulture FA
Yellow-rumped warbler FA
Tufted titmouse FA *my grandma's favourite bird
Little blue heron FA
White ibis FA *we were ambushed by them because people at the park would feed them so they expected us to feed them but we wouldn't so they just surrounded us and we thought they would attack us but they didn't.
Cooper's hawk FA
Cardinal FA
Green heron FA *my grandpa was walking a little ahead of me and whispered for me to come and there was this gorgeous green fishing. Moved so slowly and gently that he didn't make a sound, it was incredible.
Carolina warbler FA
Pine warbler FA
Sandhill crane FA
Carolina chickadee FA
Bluejay FA
Osprey FA
Chimney swift FA
Red-tailed hawk FA *saw this lovely lady perched on a fence as we drove out of my grandparents' neighbourhood
Prairie warbler FA
American kestrel FA
Glossy ibis FA
Pied-billed grebe FA
Double-crested cormorant FA
Grey kingbird FA
Brown pelican FA *we weren't anywhere near the ocean but a storm was likely brewing and huge flocks of brown pelicans and white pelicans flew inland
Fish crow FA
Royal tern FA
Bald eagle FA
Painted bunting FA *didn't think I'd see one this trip because the nature garden we went to last year that had a lot of birds, including the painted bunting we saw last year, had too many people this time around so there weren't many birds. But then I saw a painted bunting at a different trail and literally forgot to be quiet and freaked out.
American white pelican FA
Common grackle FA
Boat-tailed grackle FA *did you know that these grackles make a clicking sound when they see humans or predators that sounds like a turkey gobble sound? I didn't until these guys wouldn't stop yelling at my while I was just trying to rest my legs on a bench.
American purple gallinule FA *gorgeous birds. gorgeous.
American coot FA
Brown-headed cowbird FA
Tricolored heron FA
Mallard FA
Black-bellied whistling duck FA
Eastern kingbird FA
Yellow-billed cuckoo FA
Muscovy duck FA
American bittern FA *my grandma and I saw this one and at first thought it was a green heron but then realized it wasn't haha.
Ring-billed gull FA
Feral American Pekin FA
Mallard-Pekin hybrid FA *spent so much time trying to identify these weird ducks until I went on my laptop later that evening and read up way too much on duck genetics and realized that they were hybrids. They were probably second-generation hybrids from my brief scan of pedigree charts of ducks, meaning their grandparents were a mallard and a pekin, but their parents were a hybrid and a pekin.
Eastern bluebird FA
Yellow-bellied sapsucker FA *went to a park my grandparents recommended and there weren't really any new birds there and my legs hurt from walking but then I heard this guy tapping around in a tree and there he was. Still wouldn't recommend this park.
Red-winged blackbird FA *was complaining to my grandpa that I hadn't seen any red-winged blackbirds yet and my trip was almost over when a bunch of these guys literally flew down in front of us.
White-eyed vireo FA
Mottled duck FA
Broad-winged hawk FA *saw this guy as my plane was literally taxiing out of the runway to go home. I was looking out my window cause I was nervous and there he was! Just perched on a sign!
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satishrao2020 · 6 months
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B e a u t y in the B e a k
While ‘capturing’ birds, the main subject in my photography journey so far, I can’t help but notice the wide variety of beaks birds possess; variety in sizes, shapes and colors. It is all part of their evolutionary journey, wherein utility and efficiency are prime drivers - in the manner in which they obtain, transport and ingest their food. I present herein below a few samples of beaks I have had privilege to capture during the past 2 years….
But first a short poem:
What’s in a B e a k ?
A rose by another name
Still smells the same,
A bird with another beak,
Will surely be a freak.
Each species has a unique beak, crafted by Nature,
Evolving with time, keeping her avians in good stature.
Availability of changing food types, in Nature’s orchestra,
Survival of the fittest, the well known evolutionary mantra.
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I now present ‘my’ beaks:
Pond heron, purple swamphen, glossy ibis, painted stork, spot billed pelican, brahminy kite, greater cormorant and loten’s sunbird.
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I hope my post was of interest to you,
More in the pipeline……
Ciao, for now.
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