(Art made back in December 2024)
One of Southeast Asia’s largest hornbills, these hornbills are known for their impressive red-orange/yellow casques and large wingspans, and are found in the Southeast Asian rainforests where they mate for life.
(Originally drawn in Thanksgiving 2024)
Famous for being the best known hornbill found in Asia, these beautiful hornbills are known for their bright yellow casque and black colors and are found in the dense forests of India and Southeast Asia.
An artpiece of Africa’s wildlife, mostly from the African savanna altogether in one big herd ready to march forward.
(Based on an old art I did two years ago now remastered with updated looks for the animals)
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)
A large wading bird found in the wet and arid habitats of Sub-Saharan Africa. Often credited with the largest wingspan of any land birds, these birds love to scavenge on carrion with vultures beside them.
(Art made back in early November)
Champion hunters of the savannah and rainforests, these are the most widespread of all big cats in Africa, to which they can carry prey that’s twice their body weight, and are extremely stealthy hunters when stalking their prey.
(Art made back in early November)
A medium sized terrestrial mammal that resembles a guinea pig or a rabbit, the rock hyrax is actually in fact related to elephants, to which they have two tiny incisor teeth that resemble mini tusks.
(Art made back in early November)
One of Africa’s most iconic and dangerous crocodilians, best known for their powerful bite, sharp conical teeth that sink into the flesh of their prey, and especially their method of ambush to which they attack by surprise.
(Art made back in October)
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)
A nocturnal primate also known as the galago, these small prosimians are most active at night, popping out of the trees that they sleep during the day and are known for making calls resembling that of a human baby’s cry.
(Art made back in October)
One of the 17 species of sengi, also known as elephant shrews, these small mammals with long proboscises live in the dense woodlands of central and eastern Africa, and are closely related to elephants more than shrews.
(Art made back in October)
A medium sized burrowing mammal whose name means “earth pig, with a long snout for smell and sharp claws to help dig up termite mounds for food.
Once thought to be related to pangolins and armadillos, the aardvark is now known to be related to elephants.
(Art drawn back in October)
One of the tallest and most recognizable of all giraffes, found across the Masai Mara in Kenya and identified by their irregular star-shaped patterns covered in their body.
(Art made back in October)
The largest flying stork in the Americas, especially found in Brazil’s Pantanal, these birds build large nests from large branches, and their name means “swollen neck” in the Tupi-Guarani language.
(Art made back in mid October)
A medium-sized motmot bird found in the humid rainforests of the Amazon and the forest edges of the Andes, best known for their blue crown colors, green with orange underparts, and black mask.
(Art made back in mid October)
The largest and most recognizable of all toucans, as they’re one of the best known Neotropical birds and most represented toucan, known for it’s massive yellow-orange beak with a black base and it’s black body and white throat, and makes frog-like vocalizations.
(Art made back in early October)
One of the most colorful of all ibises thanks to their remarkable scarlet red colors, and are the national birds of Trinidad and Tobago, and can be found from tropical South America to the Caribbean.
(Art made back in early October)
The largest and terrestrial of all the anteater species, to which they live in the grasslands and tropical rainforests of South America, and are recognized for their long snout, bushy tail, large sharp fore claws, and distinctive fur to stand out.
One of the world’s most rarest tropical birds found in Sulawesi of Indonesia, where they are best known for laying eggs in the sand like sea turtles, but unfortunately are critically endangered from habitat loss and harvesting of their eggs.