Monthly archives: July, 2020

Potto (Lemurs and Prosimians by Play Visions)

4.3 (3 votes)

Review and images by stemturtle; edited by bmathison1972

The potto, Perodicticus potto, may look like a little bear, but it is a strepsirrhine primate, commonly called a prosimian. The potto is nocturnal and arboreal, moving slowly through the canopy. Its distribution is the tropical rainforests of equatorial Africa, including the Congo region.

Alpaca (Premier Series by Yowie Group)

4 (2 votes)

Images by Takama; additional text by bmathison1972

The alpaca (Vicugna pacos) is classified as a thoroughly domesticated animal. Even though it has its own species-level epithet, it is merely the domestic form of the vicuña (V. vicugna). The alpaca, along with its vicuña predecessor and the related llama and guanaco, is a South American camel species.

American Bison, 2014 (Wild Life by Schleich)

4.7 (9 votes)

Review and images by Suspsy; edited by bmathison1972

An inevitable fact of life is that there are very few toys that can withstand rough play, especially from very small children. It was not long after the ATB posted my review of the Wild Safari American bison figure that my little boy dropped (or possibly threw) it against a bare wooden floor, causing one of the front legs to break right off.

Mountain Nyala (Wildlife by CollectA)

5 (5 votes)

Review and photos by OkapiBoy

High in the mountain woodlands of Ethiopia lives one of the most distinctive and endangered of Africa’s large antelope. Here and nowhere else lives the mountain nyala (Tragelaphus buxtoni), a large and shy antelope that was first described in 1910. It is monotypic with no subspecies.

Jackson’s Chameleon (African Animals by PNSO)

3.3 (3 votes)

Walkaround of the Jackson’s chameleon, Trioceros jacksonii (Boulenger, 1869), by PNSO African Animals (2018). This has always been one of my favorite reptiles, and always surprised they were not more commonly made in toy/figure form due to the armature of the males. When I decided to build a synoptic collection, I was happy PNSO released one, and at a decent size for my tastes!

Flamingo (AAA)

3.7 (3 votes)

Across the globe, there are many amazing bird species. One of the few groups of vertebrates to develop powered flight, they now fill the skies with song and colour. Some are more colourful than others, with this review’s subject being a great example, the flamingo, a bird seen in America, Africa, Asia and Europe.

Leatherback Sea Turtle, 2017 (Wild Safari Sealife by Safari Ltd.)

4.5 (4 votes)

Review and images by suspsy; edited by bmathison1972

The leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) is by far the biggest of all living turtles and one of the world’s biggest reptiles, exceeded only by a few crocodilians. The largest scientifically verified specimen weighed in at 650 kg (1433 lbs), although it’s quite possible that even larger individuals exist somewhere out there in the deep blue sea.

African Elephant, calf (Living Animal Models by PNSO)

5 (1 votes)

Review and images by postsaurischian; edited by bmathison1972

Today we not only get the Blog’s first African elephant, specifically the African bush elephant (Loxodonta africana), but also the first figure by PNSO. This figure No. 04 in the Living Animal Models line, which figures large-scale models. Like other PNSO models, the figure comes with a name, and this figure is sold as ”Manman the African Elephant”.

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