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avatar_brontodocus

Odontoceti (Toothed whales)!

Started by brontodocus, January 15, 2013, 11:31:32 PM

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widukind



brontodocus

#81
Does the world need yet another Bottlenose Dolphin figure? Well, judge for yourselves but if it is so detailed it even has ears... maybe yes? So here is a walk-around of the Kaiyodo Aquatales Polyresin Series 1 No. 001 (Common) Bottlenose Dolphin, Tursiops truncatus (Montagu, 1821). Total length from tip of rostrum to notch in the fluke is 119 mm so the scale is between approx. 1:19 and 1:32. The model has a faint shadowing which is not easy to capture on a photo - it is not just plain grey. The subtle sculpt details are amazing: This figure even has ears, something I've never seen in a cetacean figure before. The human figure (scuba diver from Safari Ltd Coral Reef Toob) is approx. 1:32 - 1:35 scale. The Common Bottlenose Dolphin as a species itself needs no introduction being the most popular delphinid species next to the Orca. The world wide population is estimated to be 600,000 individuals or more and IUCN lists it as "Least Concern".























Edit 2017-02-04: Fixed broken image urls.

Jetoar

My website: Paleo-Creatures
My website's facebook: Paleo-Creatures

MariaEvri

this is one cute beluga. Im waiting for mine in the mail soon

Thylakeane

 This is a walk- around of the Schleich 2016 Sperm Whale (Physeter macrocephalus). The sperm whale is the largest of the toothed whales and the largest predator on earth. The males are bigger than the females. Sperm whales are named after the waxy substance in their head, called spermaceti.

The figure is made of rubber like the new orca and blue whale by Schleich. It is smaller than the old Schleich sperm whale, but it is probably one of the best sperm whale figures currently available.














Jetoar

New sculpt of these species is really nice. Thanks for sharing  ^-^.
My website: Paleo-Creatures
My website's facebook: Paleo-Creatures

Thylakeane

#86
Odontoceti include sperm whales, beaked whales, dolphins and porpoises. Let's see your toothed whales!

Here are mine:



Shown in picture:
-Schleich 2016 Sperm Whale (Physeter macrocephalus)
- CollectA Pilot whale (Globicephala macrorhynchus)
- CollectA Pygmy Sperm Whale (Kogia breviceps)
- CollectA Pacific white sided Dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens)
- Schleich old Bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
- Maia and Borges Common dolphin (Delphinus delphis)
- Safari ltd Beluga (Delphinapterus leucas)
- Schleich Orca (Orcinus orca)
- Bullyland Orca (Orcinus orca)


Safari Beluga


Maia and Borges Common dolphin... Is a lot more yellow than in this picture

AcroSauroTaurus

Ah, my favorite group of cetaceans, I have lots of them but I will put pictures up later because my phone can't post pictures, but I will be getting a new laptop soon.
I am the Dinosaur King!


Rossano

Hi everyone, this is my first post on the forum and I hope I am not just breaking some internal rule or habit.

I began collecting some toy animals with my son who is 7yo as a way to prevent him getting too much into videogames and the like, and now it is getting a more interesting and stimulating thing, for both of us.

The question is: my son got in love with the pseudorca crassidens aka false killer whale, and asked me if I could find a model of it, but as i browsed the catalogues of the three main producers that are easily available in my area (Milan, Italy) Schleich, Papo and Collecta, I found nothing, and nothing searching the database of this forum.

Anyone can help me? Thanks in advance.

sauroid

#89
as far as i know, it hasnt been made into a figure/model yet. let's wait for the others to reply.


and, welcome to the forum! :)

Stuckasaurus

Isnt' "false killer whale" just another name for "pilot whale"? If so, Safari and Collecta both have one.

stargatedalek

The false killer whale is actually a species of pilot whale (as are true orca depending on who you ask).

AcroSauroTaurus

I am the Dinosaur King!

sphyrna18

Quote from: Rossano on August 09, 2016, 06:28:32 PM
Hi everyone, this is my first post on the forum and I hope I am not just breaking some internal rule or habit.

I began collecting some toy animals with my son who is 7yo as a way to prevent him getting too much into videogames and the like, and now it is getting a more interesting and stimulating thing, for both of us.

The question is: my son got in love with the pseudorca crassidens aka false killer whale, and asked me if I could find a model of it, but as i browsed the catalogues of the three main producers that are easily available in my area (Milan, Italy) Schleich, Papo and Collecta, I found nothing, and nothing searching the database of this forum.

Anyone can help me? Thanks in advance.

Welcome to the Forum!  While False Killer Whales are very similar in appearance to pilot whales, pilot whale figures won't really substitute for a false killer whale figure.  So right now, there aren't any false killer whale figures available, but it's possible that one could be made in the future.

stargatedalek

I don't even think Kaiyodo's done one. You could fairly easily customize a pilot whale into a false killer whale, just as simple as filing down the dorsal and changing the markings on the underside.

Rossano

Thanks everyone for the many answers, I am really pleased for the welcome and the many hints.

As far as I know - I am a rookie of toy animal replicas as well as of animal taxonomy - the Pilot Wale and the False Killer Whale are not the same genus (Globicephala and Pseudorca), then they are not the same species (Globicephala macrorhynchus and Globicephala melas, the two species of Pilot Whales, and Pseudorca crassidens, the False Killer Whale).

At first sight they look very similar though, since they are the same family (Delphinidae), but the differences in the shape grow as you pass from the general outlook (same colour, same dimension, same general profile) to the shape of the head (more rounded the Pilot), of the mouth (shorter and more curvy the Pilot) and the teeth (bigger and more prominent the False Killer Whale).

Anyway I would like to educate my son to get the differences between one animal and the other, and not to mess up different species just because they look similar, so I would have preferred ti find out a nice authentic Pseudorcs model. Maybe I'll write a line to Collecta or Papo...

Very interesting the idea to modify a model of a different species to get the result, I had never thought of this possibility, and find it funny and stimulating, for both me and my son. Thanks stargatedalek.


widukind

#96
Quote from: Rossano on August 09, 2016, 06:28:32 PM
Hi everyone, this is my first post on the forum and I hope I am not just breaking some internal rule or habit.

I began collecting some toy animals with my son who is 7yo as a way to prevent him getting too much into videogames and the like, and now it is getting a more interesting and stimulating thing, for both of us.

The question is: my son got in love with the pseudorca crassidens aka false killer whale, and asked me if I could find a model of it, but as i browsed the catalogues of the three main producers that are easily available in my area (Milan, Italy) Schleich, Papo and Collecta, I found nothing, and nothing searching the database of this forum.

Anyone can help me? Thanks in advance.

I am a specie collector and have also a lot of whales and dolphins. The only model of a false killer whale that i know is a very expensive Resin figurine (i think it was more than 300$)  from Japan. The name of the brand is Kaiyoukoubou. You find him on ebay.com

Rossano

Thank you so much widukind! Unfortunately a resin model is not the right thing for my son, who is 7yo and likes to play with its little animals, and the price is too high, actually.

Anyway I'll give a look, maybe if my son's passion will become something more important than a funny and educative game, in the future we'll consider such beautiful items.

widukind

Quote from: Rossano on August 31, 2016, 09:20:01 PM
Thank you so much widukind! Unfortunately a resin model is not the right thing for my son, who is 7yo and likes to play with its little animals, and the price is too high, actually.

Anyway I'll give a look, maybe if my son's passion will become something more important than a funny and educative game, in the future we'll consider such beautiful items.

I understand, that are the reasons too why i dont have it. I also prefer the toy replicas. I am a specie collector and have a lot of species by a lot of brands. But i dont know a false killer whale as toy figurine, at the moment. There are any interesting whale species and i think i have the most, or better that i know. So if your son want a other specie, i think i could tell you if it exists or not. I know a friend who sale any different whales, so also a northern humpback dolphin and a risso dolphin. These figurines are hard to find and from the northern humpback dolhin the only figurine that exists. From the Risso exists 2 different figurines, one rare and expensive model by Kaiyodo and the Happy Kin.

brontodocus

While I don't know of any plastic figure representing Pseudorca crassidens either, Looking at the PlayVisions "Pilot Whale" that figure obviously doesn't look like a Pilot Whale at all. While still not representing P. crassidens it may well be interpreted as representing the Pygmy Killer Whale, Feresa attenuata. However, it's not exactly what you were looking for and it's also a tiny figure, 71 mm.