News:

The official blog of the Animal Toy Forum is now LIVE! Check it out at Animal Toy Blog!

Main Menu

Disclaimer: links to Ebay.com and Amazon.com on the Animal Toy Forum are often affiliate links, when you make purchases through these links we may make a commission.

avatar_bmathison1972

Mathison Museum of Natural History

Started by bmathison1972, October 12, 2020, 02:35:40 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

bmathison1972

Species: Allomyrina dichotoma (Linnaeus, 1771)
Common name(s): Japanese rhinoceros beetle; kabutomushi

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: F-toys
Series: Insect Hunter Beetle and Stag Beetle
Year of Production: 2014
Size/Scale: Body length (including cephalic horn) approx. 7.0 cm, within scale 1:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very common
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the fourteenth time we have seen A. dichotoma in the Museum. These two figures represent the same sculpt. This sculpt was introduced to the line in 2014 and has been reissued nearly every year since. I know the same sculpt was reused through at least 2019, but based on promotional photos, I think it's the same sculpt still used today. Also, F-toys continues to release two every year, one blackish and one reddish-brown. I stopped collecting F-toys beetles a few years back pending new species, which of course they haven't produced in a while, so if the sculpt has changed I have not seen figures in-hand to confirm.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: East Asia, including China, Korean Peninsula, Taiwan, and Japan
Habitat: Tropical and subtropical hardwood forests
Diet: Larvae feed on organic detritus in soil; adults are attracted to sap and overripe fruit
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Like other large dynastines, A. dichotoma is sexually dimorphic and only males have cephalic and pronotal horns. Males use their horns for fighting rival males over females and feeding and breeding sites.




bmathison1972

Species: Odontolabis alces (Fabricius, 1775)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Sega
Series: Mushi King - small series, standard
Year of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Body length including mandibles approx. 5.0 cm for a scale of 1:1.8-1:2 for a large major male
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the fifth species of Odontolabis seen in the Museum. The Sega 'small standard series' were 10 sets of 10 figures each, for a total of 100 figures representing 65-75 species of Lucanidae and dynastine Scarabaeidae. The dates of release are currently unknown to me (c. 2008). The figures were produced in conjunction with Bandai and came with Pokemon-style playing cards. At the time of this writing, I think I have all but two of the species. For a review of the sets, please see the overview by forum member Beetle guy here.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Philippines
Habitat: Tropical broadleaf forests
Diet: Larvae feed in rotting wood; adults feed on tree sap
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Apparently, O. alces is quite common throughout much of the Philippines in suitable habitats. It occurs sympatrically with the similar O. intermedius. The two can be separated by color; O. alces tends to be a duller brown-black while O. intermedius has a shiny, almost reflective black luster.


bmathison1972

Species: Vulpes vulpes (Linnaeus, 1758)
Common name(s): red fox

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Wild Safari North American Wildlife
Year of Production: 2008
Size/Scale: Height at shoulder approx. 3.5 cm for a scale of 1:10-1:14.3
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very common
Miscellaneous Notes: This is Safari's second standard-sized red fox, following the original that ran from 1998-2008. Later this year (or maybe early 2025), they are expected to release a red fox kit. Being in the North American Wildlife line, it can be presumed that this figure represents the North American subspecies V. v. fulva; however, the scale above is calculated for the species as a whole.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Holarctic; introduced to Australia and the Falkland Islands
Habitat: Highly variable, including deciduous, coniferous, and mixed forests, tundra, prairie, mountains, farmlands, and urban and suburban areas
Diet: Non-discriminant omnivore, including small animals (especially rodents, lagomorphs, insects), eggs, fruit, carrion
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Vulpes vulpes is believed to have originated in Eurasia and may have evolved from V. alopecoides or V. chikushanensis, both of which lived during the Middle Villafranchian of the Pleistocene. It is thought that the red fox colonized North America twice, once before and during the Illinoian Glaciation and a second time during the Wisconsin Glaciation. North American red foxes are believed to have been genetically separated from their Eurasian kin for over 400,000 years, indicating speciation may have occurred! Although European red foxes have been introduced to North America, 2012 genetic analyses did not show evidence of hybridization between North American and European foxes.


bmathison1972

Species: Nipponluciola cruciata (Motschulsky, 1854)
Common name(s): Genji firefly; gengi-botaru

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Jám
Series: Miracle of Earth - The Brilliance of Fireflies
Year of Production: 2005
Size/Scale: Base 6.5 cm long by 5.0 cm wide. Body length (excluding appendages) approx. 2.7 cm for a scale of 2.6:1-1.6:1 for a male or 1.8:1-1.5:1 for a female.
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Since this figure is essentially its own diorama, I did not photograph it in one. The firefly is not removable from its base. This figure was marketed as Luciola cruciata, before the description of Nipponluciola in 2022.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Japan
Habitat: Riparian habitats, especially around small streams and ditches
Diet: Larvae are predaceous on the freshwater snail Semisulcospira libertina; adults do not feed
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Nipponoluciola cruciata has aquatic larvae; these larvae cannot swim but rather crawl along the bottom of creeks, streams, and ditches where they prey on the freshwater snail Semisulcospira libertina. The larvae pupate on land and emerge in June. Adults live for less than three weeks and do not feed.




EpicRaptorMan

I was literally looking at this figure to purchase last night LOL.

bmathison1972

Quote from: EpicRaptorMan on September 17, 2024, 07:39:38 PMI was literally looking at this figure to purchase last night LOL.

I am sure you are aware then, it's one in a set of five. I reviewed them briefly on the Blog: https://animaltoyforum.com/blog/miracle-of-the-earth-the-brilliance-of-fireflies-jam/

A remarkable set. But the fireflies are permanently affixed to their bases and in some (if not all) cases, the legs are part of the base.

EpicRaptorMan

Disregard I guess that's not the one I saw. The one I saw had no base.

bmathison1972

Species: Cheirotonus jansoni (Jordan, 1898)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Bandai
Series: Diversity of Life on Earth - Beetles Vol. 4
Year of Production: 2023
Size/Scale: Body length (excluding appendages) approx. 7.0 cm for a scale of 1.3:1-1:1 (slightly over 1:1 for a maximum sized specimen)
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the second time we've C. jansoni we've seen in the Museum. The last time was in July 2022 and the figure was by DeAgostini which, at the time, was unique for the species. Like other Diversity of Life on Earth figures, today's C. jansoni is large, requires assembly, and has a few articulations.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Southeast Asia (China, Myanmar, Vietnam)
Habitat: Subtropical highland broadleaf forests
Diet: Larvae feed on rotting wood in treeholes; adults feed on sap flows.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: I had trouble researching information on the biology of this species; however, they are not uncommon with skilled breeder hobbyists.