American Pika (Ochotona princeps), family Ochotonidae, order Lagomorpha, found in mountain regions of the western U.S. and Canada
Photograph by JN Stuart
“When the worst that can happen has come and gone And you’re still standing, remember that you won.”
— Joan Bauer, Almost Home
Common Dunnart (Sminthopsis murina), family Dasyuridae, order Dasyuromorphia, interior eastern Australia
photograph by Brother-Nature
feline friends!
One of the reasons why they cast Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump in the movie ( expect the fact that he looks like him) is that Sebastian has a history of making characters with psychopathic tendencies and questionable actions likeable and the audience will love them.
Some male Humboldt Penguins are exclusively homosexual, remaining with their male partners for their entire lives, or else re-pairing with another male should they lose their original partner. Other males are sequentially bisexual, pairing with a male after having lost one or more previous female mates. Still other males are simultaneously bisexual, engaging in both same-sex and opposite-sex courtship and copulation.
"Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity" - Bruce Bagemihl
Don Balke (b. 1933), Indiana - Spotted Sandpiper Bird, 1986, gouache and watercolor on board.
Invaluable
Australian Water Rat aka Rakali (Hydromys chrysogaster), family Muridae, Canberra, Australia
Aquatic, predatory, and nocturnal rat, native to Australia.
photograph by Raw Shorty
Crab Spider (Epicadus heterogaster), family Thomisidae, Brazil
photograph by Frederico Falcão Salles