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avatar_bmathison1972

Mathison Museum of Natural History

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

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bmathison1972

Species: Papilio machaon Linnaeus, 1758 (Old World swallowtail)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Shine-G
Series: Larvae Moei
Year of Release: unknown
Size/Scale: Figure length 4.0 cm. Measured along midline, body length 6.0 cm for a scale of 1:1 for a larger specimen
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: The Larvae Moei figures by Shine-G are stylized strap figures; the strap can be safely unscrewed, leaving a tiny hole. These two figures represent the same sculpt, one with and one without an extended osmeterium.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Holarctic
Habitat: Highly varied, including forests, grasslands, hilltops, Alpine meadows, tundra, wetlands, disturbed areas, gardens
Diet: Larvae feed on primarily on plants in the families Apiaceae (umbillifers), but also Rutaceae (rues); adults take nectar from flowers.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Papilio larvae possess an eversible organ on the prothorax called an osmeterium. It emits a foul odor to deter predaceous insects and spiders. Some papilionid larvae also have large eyespots on their thorax, and it is believed the combination of osmeterium and eyespots also scares away potential predators by mimicking the head and forked tongue of a snake.



bmathison1972

#481
Species: Otocolobus manul (Pallas, 1776)
Common name(s): Pallas's cat

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Naturalism
Series: Naturally Adorkable
Year of Release: 2016
Size/Scale: Figure is 5.0 cm wide. Scale is difficult to calculate based on its resting position; the head-body length is roughly 8.5 cm for a scale of 1:5.8-1:7
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: The Naturally Adorkable collection is made up of resin figures released in conjunction with the Chinese magazine Natural History. The almost all represent unusual taxa of Central Asian and Chinese species (except, surprisingly, for a sloth from South America).

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Central Asia
Habitat: Rocky steppes, stony outcroppings
Diet: Small rodents, pikas
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Like many wild felines, O. manul is solitary. They spend much of the day resting in crevices, caves, and marmot burrows, and come out at night to hunt. They specialize on small rodents and pikas.


bmathison1972

#482
Species: Lepidobatrachus laevis Budgett, 1899 (Budgett's frog; hippo frog)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Ikimon
Series: Nature Techni Colour - Axolotl, Argentine Horned Frog, Red-eyed Tree frog, and Lepidobatrachus Frog
Year of Release: 2018
Size/Scale: Figure height 6.5 cm. Body length 6.0 cm for a scale of 1:1.67
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique [as a sculpt]
Miscellaneous Notes: All of the species in this collection are from Latin America, an interesting theme from a Japanese company. There were two figures of this sculpt in the collection; one as a magnet and one as a strap figure.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay
Habitat: Ephemeral pools in the Gran Chaco
Diet: Aquatic insects, snails, other frogs (including other members of their species)
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: The rhythm of activity of L. laevis is synchonized with the extreme climate changes of the Gran Chaco. During the wet summer, frogs feed and breed in pozos (ephemeral pools), but during the dry winter, they remain dormant underground encased in a protective covering made of layers of unshed skin.


bmathison1972

#483
Note: going forward, I am changing 'Year of Release' on these to 'Year of Production'

Species: Pagophilus groenlandicus Gray, 1844 (harp seal)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Wild Safari Sealife
Year of Production: 2004
Size/Scale: Figure length 10.0 cm. Body length 9.0 cm for a scale of 1:18.7-1:21.1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: A familiar species, P. groenlandicus has been largely ignored by the 'major' Western companies. Safari Ltd. also produced a pup in 2005 to compliment this adult.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: North Atlantic, Arctic Oceans
Habitat: Coastal pack ice
Diet: Fish, marine invertebrates
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Populations of P. groenlandicus have fluctuated over the past 150 years due to hunting for food and fur. Today, seals are hunted under certain restrictions to prevent their populations from falling too low. To date, their IUCN status is Least Concern, with a trend of population increasing.


bmathison1972

Species: Odorrana narina (Stejneger, 1901) (Ryukyu tip-nosed frog)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Kaiyodo
Series: Capsule Q Museum - Okinawa
Year of Production: 2013
Size/Scale: Figure height 3.0 cm. Snout-to-vent length 4.5 cm for a scale of 1:1.1 for a male or 1:1.5 for a female
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique [as a sculpt]
Miscellaneous Notes: Minimal assembly is required. There were two versions of this figure in the Okinawa collection, this one with a green dorsal stripe and another that is brown dorsally.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan
Habitat: Rivers in tropical and subtropical lowland forests
Diet: Terrestrial and aquatic invertebrates
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Endangered
Miscellaneous Notes: It is believed Odorrana separated from Rana in the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau during the late Miocene and further diversified due to niche specialization. The genus migrated to the Ryukyu Archipelago from Taiwan at least twice, resulting in the extant species O. ishikawae and the members of the O. narina-complex.


bmathison1972

Species: Oxyporus sp.

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: unknown
Series: unknown
Year of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Body length (excluding appendages) 5.5 cm for a scale of 11:1-4.4:1 [scale species dependent]
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique (?)
Miscellaneous Notes: This figure came from a set of eight flat, stylized insects purchased from a dollar store sometime between 2000 and 2005. I don't remember anything about it. This is one of the figures in the set I retained since it appears to be recognizable at the genus level.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: North and Central America, Eurasia
Habitat: Fruiting bodies of basidiomycete fungi
Diet: Larvae and adults feed on host fungi
IUCN Status (at time of posting): N/A
Miscellaneous Notes: Most members of the family Staphylinidae are predators on other soft-bodied invertebrates. However, despite their large, fearsome-lookin mandibles, members of the genus Oxyporus feed on the fruiting bodies of the fungi in which they live.


bmathison1972

Species: Martes melampus tsuensis (Thomas, 1897) Tsushima Island marten

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Kaiyodo
Series: Natural Monuments of Japan
Year of Production: 2002
Size/Scale: Figure 5.5 cm tall. Head-and-body length approximately 7.0 cm for a scale of 1:6.7-1:7.8
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Some assembly is required. Kaiyodo made three other figures of this species (two of which represent this subspecies), but none of those come with habitat-style bases.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Tsushima Islands, Japan
Habitat: Boreal forests, open fields
Diet: Opportunistic omnivore, including berries, seeds, bird eggs, small mammals, terrestrial invertebrates
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern [as a species; this subspecies has not been specifically evaluated]
Miscellaneous Notes: Molecular analysis shows the Tsushima populations of M. melampus form two genetic clusters. Restricted gene flow or inbreeding may have reduced genetic diversity in the Tsushima populations, having been genetically isolated from mainland populations since the formation of the Tsushima Strait.


bmathison1972

#487
Species: Papilio machaon Linnaeus, 1758 (Old World swallowtail)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Ikimon
Series: Science Techni Colour - Private Specimen of a Lepidopterist Acrylic Mascot 1
Year of Production: 2017
Size/Scale: Wingspan 4.5 cm for a scale of 1:1.4-1:1.7
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: The figures in this set are essentially photographs of butterflies embedded in acrylic. Flip the figure over and the underside reveals an image of the ventral side of the animal, too. They are also sold as keychains (hence the hole in the acrylic above the head).

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Holarctic
Habitat: Highly varied, including forests, grasslands, hilltops, Alpine meadows, tundra, wetlands, disturbed areas, gardens
Diet: Larvae feed on primarily on plants in the families Apiaceae (umbillifers), but also Rutaceae (rues); adults take nectar from flowers.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern [Europe]
Miscellaneous Notes: Papilio machaon has only been IUCN-evaluated for Europe. And although it is classified as Least Concern there, it is generally considered rare throughout its range. It is protected by law in Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, United Kingdom, and Moldovia. In South Korea it is listed as 'vulnerable' in their Red Data Book, and one subspecies is protected in India.



Gwangi

At first glance I thought it was an actual butterfly preserved in acrylic. Nice to see it's actually a photograph. Interesting concept.

bmathison1972

Quote from: Gwangi on August 02, 2021, 02:33:15 PM
At first glance I thought it was an actual butterfly preserved in acrylic. Nice to see it's actually a photograph. Interesting concept.

thanks @Gwangi - there are several insects sold like this but I only collect the leps since I store my flat butterfly figures in Riker mounts like actual specimens ;D

bmathison1972

Species: Scorpiones, gen. sp.

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Hidden Kingdom Insects; Incredible Creatures
Years of Production: 2000 and 2018
Size/Scale: Body length (excluding pedipalps) 17.5 cm [scale species dependent, see below]
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): N/A [frequency species dependent; scorpions in general are very common]
Miscellaneous Notes: These two figures represent different paint jobs of the same sculpt. The yellow version was released in 2000 as part of the Hidden Kingdom Insects line; the brown version was released in 2018 as part of the Incredible Creatures Line, at which time the remaining HK figures were folded into the IC line. Both figures have wires in the pedipalps and metasoma, allowing them to be bent into the desired pose of the collector. Neither figure was marketed at the species level. Historically, it has been suggested the yellow version represents the Arizona desert hairy scorpion (Hadrurus arizonensis), but the brown version doesn't match that species quite as well. If one chooses to have either of these figures represent H. arizonensis, the figure would be slightly larger than 1:1 scale for a maximum-sized specimen.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Nearly worldwide
Habitat: Highly varied; most common in deserts but also fields, disturbed areas, forests, rainforests, mountaintops, and intertidal zones. Diversity greatest in subtropical areas
Diet: Predator on terrestrial arthropods; larger species may take lizards, snakes, small mammals, earthworms, and mollusks. Several species are specialized predators.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): N/A [species dependent]
Miscellaneous Notes: Scorpions are among the oldest terrestrial animals known. Fossils of scorpions date back to the Silurian; the presumptive marine Dolichophonus loudonensis is known from the Telychian of modern-day Scotland. Gondwanascorpio emzantsiensis from the Devonian (Famennian) of modern-day South Africa is the oldest terrestrial animal known from Gondwana. Morphologically, extant scorpions are not unlike their ancient cousins.



bmathison1972

Species: Isistius brasiliensis (Quiy et Gaimard, 1824) (cookiecutter shark)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Takara Tomy A.R.T.S.
Series: Ocean Predators - Sharks
Year of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Body length 4.3 cm for a scale of 1:8.8-1:10
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: The figure is removable from its base. The only other figures of this species I am aware of are by Colorata and Neko Works, the latter of which comes unfinished and needs to be painted.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Circumtropical
Habitat: Bathypelagic, at depths of 0-3700 meters (usually below 85 meters)
Diet: Large fish, cetaceans, squid, crustaceans
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Isistius brasiliensis gets its common name 'cookiecutter' shark from its habit of taking bites out of the skin and soft tissues of large fish and cetaceans, reminiscent of the use of a cookie cutter. They are considered facultative ectoparasites, because in addition to this unusual feeding habit, they will also ingest entire smaller animals, such as smaller fish and invertebrates.


bmathison1972

#492
Species: Ameerega braccata (Steindachner, 1864)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Club Earth
Series: Poison Frogs Alive!
Year of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Snout-to-vent length 3.8 cm for a scale of 1:2-1:1.5
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique [as a sculpt]
Miscellaneous Notes: This figure is stamped Wing Mau but the packaging indicated Club Earth, reinforcing the relationship between these two companies (Wing Mau produced figures for several companies, including Club Earth). The sculpt was also used for the Frogs to Go collection by Club Earth (and possibly others). This figure is stamped Epipedobates tricolor, which must just be a production error since the set also includes E. tricolor and the sculpts are not the same.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Cerrado Region, Brazil
Habitat: Tropical dry forests, shrubland, grasslands, rivers
Diet: Insects, primarily ants, termites, and mites
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: After calling for a mate, the male A. braccata leads the female to an oviposition spot, usually in shaded leaf litter. After the eggs hatch, the male carries the young tadpoles on his back to a nearby body of water (usually a river or stream) where the young complete their development. A female lays egg masses containing around 30 eggs, but a male can only carry 5-7 larvae on his back; as such, he needs to make frequent trips back and forth between the oviposition spot and water.


bmathison1972

Species: Asio otus (Linnaeus, 1758) (long-eared owl)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Wings of the World
Year of Production: 2018
Size/Scale: Figure height 6.5 cm. Body length about 7.3 cm for a scale of 1:4.2-1:5.5
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Other than the face, the paint application on this figure is overly simple, and the bird itself blends into its perch. Some vintage figures have been attributed to this species, but the only other figure I am aware of specifically marketed as A. otus is by Kaiyodo in the Capsule Q Museum line.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Holarctic
Habitat: Forest edges and clearings, semi-open taiga forest, bogs, agricultural land and fruit orchards, parks, cemeteries, gardens; in general, areas mixed with open spaces for hunting and wooded areas for roosting and nesting.
Diet: Primarily rodents and lagomorphs, but also other small mammals, small birds, reptiles, and insects
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: There are four subspecies of A. otus. The nominate A. o. otus occurs throughout the Palearctic. Asio o. canariensis is endemic to the Canary Islands. There are two subspecies in North America: A. o. wilsonianus which occurs in the Northeast and A. o. tuftsi which occurs in the West and Midwest. Most populations appear relatively stable, but they are still protected under CITES Appendix II and the U.S. Migratory Bird Act.


bmathison1972

#494
Species: Lobophyllia radians (Milne-Edwards et Haime, 1849) (lobed brain coral)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Yujin
Series: Corals in Colour
Year of Production: 2005
Size/Scale: Figure 2.7 cm long for a scale of 1:5.5-1:7.4
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique
Miscellaneous Notes: This figure was marketed as Symphyllia radians, which is now considered a synonym of L. radians. The Yujin corals are small and made out of a limestone-calcium carbonate sandstone, rather than the usual PVC. They make great accessories for other marine wildlife.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Indo-Pacific
Habitat: Coral reefs, at depths of 0-40 meters
Diet: Floating microorganisms that come within reach of their tentacles; also, nutrients derived from photosynthetic dinoflagellates living within the coral's tissues
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: It appears that what is currently known as L radians is a species complex, containing more than one cryptic species that are grossly morphologically similar to one another.



Programming Note: Tomorrow will be the 300th post, so I'll follow it up with some stats. I have posted almost every day since I've started this (missed a few days recently when I was traveling for baseball)

bmathison1972

#495
Species: Kirkaldyia deyrollei (Vuillefroy, 1864) (Japanese giant water bug)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Yujin
Series: Insects of Japan Vol. 3
Year of Production: 2007
Size/Scale: Body length (excluding appendages) 6.0 cm, within scale of 1:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon to rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Some assembly is required. The Yujin Insects of Japan figures are believed to be cast from actual specimens and are therefore all in the 1:1 scale. This is probably the best figure to date of K. deyrollei outside of the giant 2021 Kaiyodo Revogeo model.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Southeast Asia
Habitat: Freshwater lakes, ponds, marshes, ditches, temporary pools, rice paddies
Diet: Primarily aquatic insects, small fish, and amphibians; occasionally young turtles and water snakes
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Female K. deyrollei lay their eggs on vegetation above water. The male guards the eggs from potential predators and keeps them moist by regularly supplying them with water. On occasion, females will destroy eggs that are not hers to secure a future for her offspring.




bmathison1972

#496
With today's post being the 300th, I thought I would do a fun stats update. I have posted almost every day since I started (missed a couple days not too long ago when I was traveling for baseball games).

First, let's look at percentages of major groups and how well they have performed.

percentage of my collection/percentage to date in this thread:
Arthropods: 57.5%/54.7%
Mammals: 13.2%/13%
Fish: 8.4%/12%
Birds*: 7.4%/6.3%
non-Arthropod Invertebrates: 4.2%/4.3%
Reptiles: 3.7%/3.7%
Amphibians: 2.6%/2%
Dinosaurs*: 2.2%/3.3%
Protozoans/Plankton: 0.9%/0.7%

*Note on Birds vs. Dinosaurs. Birds are all theropods within Euavialae, extinct or extant. The Dinosaur category is for 'traditional' prehistoric dinosaur clades (except anything in Euornithes); pterosaurs; mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs and other prehistoric aquatic reptiles; prehistoric crocodylomorphs; prehistoric non-mammal synapsids; and prehistoric reptiles with no close modern relatives.

Notes: It's amazing; as there are more posts, the stats even out nicely. Mammals, non-arthropod invertebrates, and reptiles are dead-on. Arthropods have actually slipped a little. Fish are still overperforming and birds slightly underperforming (but not as bad has previously). Amphibians were always way behind (in the first 200 posts there was only one amphibian), but have crept their way back up. Dinosaurs are still slightly overperforming as well.

Now, within Arthropods:
Insects: 71.7%/74.4%
Crustaceans: 13.7%/12.2%
Arachnids: 10.3%/10.4%
Misc. Arthropods: 4.4%/3%

Notes: There also things have smoothed out a bit. Historically, crustaceans overperformed at the expense of arachnids and miscellaneous arthropods. But the latter two have crept back up (it does seem like it's been a while since I've posted a crustacean).

There is one caveat that will affect percentages, ever so slightly (and mostly with regards to the arthropods), and that involves posts that remove two or more figures from the database (e.g., male and female figures released together). For the database, with the exception of life cycle sets, one line represents one figure. So, in these cases it is when the random number generator lands on one of the two (or more), but both (or more) are reviewed and removed. I have done a rough estimate on the number of posts that will remove more than one line from the database in one post:
Two figures: 135*
Three figures: 11*
Four figures: 2
Five figures: 1*
*we have seen two figures covered 28 times, three figures twice, and five figures once.

Now, some interesting numbers and tidbits of information:

Species that have come up more than once: Allomyrina dichotoma (4), Allotopus rosenbergi (2), Atrax robustus (2), Bathynomus giganteus (3), Brachypelma smithi (2), Cybister chinensis (2), Danaus plexippus (4), Dynastes grantii (3), Dynastes hercules (2), Dynastes neptunus (3), Lamprima adolphinae (2), Latrodectus mactans (2), Lucanus maculifemoratus (2), Macrocheira kaempferi (2), Megasoma actaeon (2), Mesotopus tarandus (4), Papilio machaon (3), Prosopocoilus dissimilis (2), Prosopocoilus giraffa (2), Prosopocoilus inclinatus (5).

Genera with more than one species: Ameerega (2), Chalcosoma (2), Dynastes (3), Eupatorus (2), Hexarthrius (2), Lamprima (2), Latrodectus (2), Lucanus (2), Megasoma (3), Morpho (3), Myotis (2), Odontolabis (2), Oncorhynchus (2), Ornithoptera (2), Papilio (3), Prosopocilus (4), Zerene (2).

Here are a list of companies (alphabetical order) and how many have come up in each (some posts can have more than one company when sculpts are shared). Companies with an asterisk are new since the last stats update:

4D Master 2   
AAA 1   
AquaKitz 1   
Arboreum Artwork 2   
Bandai/Bandai Spirits 6   
Blip Toys 1   
Bullyland 3   
Cadbury/Yowie Group 10   
Club Earth/Wing Mau 12   
CollectA 13   
Coca Cola 2   
Colorata 15   
DeAgostini 6   
Dreams Come True Ltd. 1   
Eikoh 1   
Epoch/Tarlin 5   
FaunaFigures 1   
F-toys   6   
Funrise Toys 1*
Hayakwa Toys 2*
Ikimon/Kitan Club 11   
Insect Lore 2   
Jam 1   
K&M International 7   
Kabaya 5   
Kaiyodo/Furuta 46   
Koro Koro 1   
Land & Sea Collectibles 1*
Maruka 1   
Mojo Fun 3   
Natural History 3   
Noah's Pals 1   
Paleocasts 1   
Paleo-Creatures 3   
Papo 5   
Play Visions 11   
PNSO 2*
Safari Ltd. 37   
Sasto 3D File 1   
Schleich 2*
Science & Nature 2   
Sega 16   
ShanTrip 2   
Shine-G 2*
Southlands Replicas 3*
Stewart Sales Services 1   
Subarudo 1*
Takara Tomy A.R.T.S. 10   
Toy Fish Factory/Replica Toy Fish 3   
Toy Major 1   
Toys Spirits 1   
Trilobiti 1   
US Toy 2   
Vivid Toy Group 1   
Wild Kraatz 2   
Yell 1*
Yujin 14   
unknown 7   


Anyway, we'll look at stats again after post 400!! Until then, enjoy the posts!

bmathison1972

#497
Species: Polistes annularis (Linnaeus, 1758) (ringed paper wasp)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Skillcraft
Series: Insect Lab
Year of Production: 1998
Size/Scale: Wingspan 8.0 cm. Forewing length 3.5 cm for a scale of 2:1-1.5:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique
Miscellaneous Notes: The Skillcraft Insect Lab is a model kit, and the figures must be assembled and painted by the user. These were some of my earliest attempts at painting figures. The main focus of the Insect Lab set was a large anatomical model of a field cricket. However, there were five individual insects (including today's) that were marketed at the species level, four of which are currently unique and a fifth which is uncommon in toy form.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Eastern North America
Habitat: Forests, fields, disturbed areas, houses and buildings; usually nests in trees and shrubs, but also under the eaves of buildings. Large aggregations of colonies are usually built under rocky cliffs, often in riparian areas.
Diet: Larvae are fed lepidopteran larvae provided by adults; adults feed primarily on nectar and juices from overripe fruit.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Like other eusocial hymenopterans, P. annularis has a complex colony cycle. Mated females (foundresses) construct a new nest in the spring, usually with the help of other foundresses (associations). One foundress is the dominant queen, however the associations can also lay eggs in the colony. However, the primary role of the associations is to forage for food for developing larvae. The first brood is usually made of up non-reproductive females which serve as a labor force. Associations may start dying off after the first brood emerges. Later broods will consist of reproductive females, and then males. If a dominant queen dies early, a reproductive worker could emerge and assume the role of the queen.


bmathison1972

Species: Falco peregrinus Tunstall, 1771 (peregrine falcon)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Wings of the World
Year of Production: 2018
Size/Scale: Figure width 9.5 cm. Body length approximately 6.3 cm for a scale of 1:5.7-1:7.8 (male) or 1:7.1-1:9.2 (female)
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: My first peregrine falcon figure was by CollectA, but I was really disappointed in the paint job. I replaced it with this Safari figure which I think was a wise decision, it is one of the best, if not the best, version of this species, in my personal opinion.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Nearly worldwide (absent from large rainforests, large extreme deserts, and extreme polar regions)
Habitat: Prefer open habitats, such as mountain valleys, grasslands, meadows, tundra, shorelines, yards and gardens; some populations adapted to large urban areas. Nests in tall, open areas such as cliff faces and tall buildings.
Diet: Primarily other birds, on occasion bats and rodents
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Falco peregrinus is considered the fasted bird in the world. When hunting other birds in process called a 'stoop' (whereby the falcon flies to a high altitude and then dive-bombs its prey), it can reach speeds of more than 320 km/hr (200 mph).


bmathison1972

Species: Ahaetulla nasuta (Lacépède, 1789) (green vine snake; Sri Lankan vine snake; long-nosed whip snake)

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Yowie Group
Series: Colors of the Animal Kingdom
Year of Production: 2019
Size/Scale: Figure 5.5 cm wide. If stretched out, figure would be approximately 27.5 cm long for a scale of 1:3.6-1:4.4 [see below]
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique
Miscellaneous Notes: This figure is somewhat stylized, as the body length is short in relation to the length of the head. If one were to use head length for scale, it would probably scale larger than what I calculated above based on approximate body length. Unfortunately, I had trouble finding any information on the length of the head of A. nasuta.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Sri Lanka
Habitat: Low bushes, shrubs, and trees, usually in riparian areas
Diet: Frogs, lizards
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: Historically, A. nasuta was considered having a broad distribution throughout much of Southeast Asia from India to Cambodia and Thailand. However, a 2020 phylogenetic study revealed A. nasuta to represent a species complex, with true A. nasuta being restricted to the island of Sri Lanka. Three populations from mainland India were described as new species (A. borealis, A. farnsworthi, and A. malabarica) while two were found to be conspecific with previously-described species (A. isabellina and A. oxyrhyncha). The population in peninsular Southeast Asia is an as-of-yet undescribed species.