What you are looking at is one of the rarest guitarfishes, a family of rays that are known for their flattened heads and are normally shy from humans, but sadly are critically endangered thanks to overfishing.
(Originally drawn in January 2021, redrawn for May 2025)
The only tapir species to live in Asia, outside of the Americas, only found in the tropical lowland rainforests of Malaysia to Sumatra in Indonesia.
(Art made back in late November 2024)
The largest stingray of the Atlantic, these trapezoid shaped stingrays are known for their thorns on their back and tail, as well as their large size, often found in the coastal waters in the western Atlantic Ocean in the summer months.
(Art originally made in late 2020, remastered in May 2024)
(Originally made back in late 2020, remastered in May 2024)
One of the most common and popular stingrays for popular aquariums, these stingrays are plentiful across the sandy seafloor, to which they make up for their diamond shaped disc bodies, helping them glide across the tropical waters.
(Originally drawn in late 2020, redrawn in May 2024)
Of the many oceangoing rays of the seas, cownose rays are by far the most common, as they are found in the shallow coastal waters and have a distinctive cow like appearance on their forehead, hence their name.
A carpet shark found in the Indo-Pacific coral reefs, these sharks are popular with ecotourism and are also popular for public aquariums, as in the case that most adult zebra sharks have lots of spots but in some occasions are albino with little to no spots.
(Originally made in late 2020, remastered in March 2024)
One of the most common sharks found in the Indo-Pacific, these sharks rest together in caves, only to come out at night to hunt in large groups, when many fish are asleep and they scan the coral reef to find them for food.
(Originally made in late 2020, remastered in March 2024)
One of the most abundant tropical reef sharks, the blacktip reef shark is found in coral reefs to lagoon, and is a popular shark species in public aquariums.
(Originally drawn in late 2020, remastered June 2024)
Recognizable by their unusual but famous hammer-shaped heads, these hammerheads usually gather in large shivers across seamounts, where females gather for mating purposes and dominance.
(Originally drawn in late 2020, remastered March 2024)
One of the fastest living sharks to which they can burst speeds up to 74 km/h and are found in offshore temperate and tropical seas.
(Originally made in late 2020, remastered in August 2024)
A slow-moving bottom dwelling docile shark, these sharks are also popular in public aquariums, usually inhabiting reefs and resting on the sandy bottoms during the day.
(Originally made in late 2020, remastered in August 2024)
Another common species of shark kept in public aquariums, named for the sandy flats and estuaries from where they are found.
(Originally made back in late 2020, remastered in August 2024)
One of the most widely kept shark species in public aquariums, for their fearsome appearance and bulky body, but are docile in terms of looks, and are the only sharks to gulp air from the surface.
Famously credited as the world’s most fearless mammal, these members of the weasel family are found in Africa to Asia, to which their fearlessness makes predators no escape who try to hunt them.
(Art made back in early November)
One of Africa’s four pangolins, these scaly anteaters are well known for being the only mammals whose scales cover up from head to tail, and dig burrows and feast on ants and termites in the African savannas and woodlands.
(Art made in late October)
One of the world’s weirdest mammals found im the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia, to which due to their prehistoric like appearance, they are called the pig deer by the locals in the Malay language.
Condors are arguably my favorite birds of prey, and the Andean Condor is no exception because they’re the national symbol of Peru, which is the country of origin of where I’m from.