Could I get a flag for a common bottlenose dolphin therian? Thanks if you do ^^!
Common bottlnose dolphin flag!
The colors on the flag represent beaches and shallow water where dolphins swim, as they live in the tidal zone.
I made the circle within the therian symbol into 3 separate crescent shapes which are supposed to resemble dolphins, especially when they leap out of the ocean.
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TW For major caps under the cut
ITCGJCGJCTJDYRSDTJG GUYS. I JUST GOT ANOTHER FAHLO ODYSSEY BRACELET (the dolphin ones). THE POD GROWS EVER STRONGER!!! (it's aqua blue btw! ^^)
@joyfulbounds (tagged u because you're the only other dolphin therian I know of that I'm mutuals with lol.) (I also consider u part of the pod lol)
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could u do a bottlenose dolphin moodboard pls!!
bottlenose dolphin alterhuman moodboard with themes of the ocean!
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Ahh ty ty! Your so sweet omg- I have also never met any other squirrels lol.
Gotta love when I don't know my own species (epic sarcasm) BUT GOOD NEWS: Bottlenose Dolphin is confirmed thanks to (a rlly unsettling phantom) shift!
Your welcome! Anyways I have some questions, feel free to ignore hehe
1. What kin types are you questioning?
2. If you shift, what are your main shifts
3. Have you ever had the urge to go and hunt something down? or is it just me 😭
and Tumblr never gives me notifications if my asks get answered so I feel that lol-
-Vivi <3
CONGRATS ON CONFIRMING YOUR KINTYPE THAT'S SO COOL AAAAA!!!!/GEN It's always so nice to learn something new about oneself ehehe
Sooo... Kintypes. I am questioning some kind of canine that probably(???) lives in packs. I'm pretty sure it's either a coyote or a wolf!
I'm also questioning a deer theriotype!! I'm pretty sure it's either a fallow deer or a white-tail deer! It's really confusing tho... I feel like both species could be me rrr
And of course... There's the aquatic one. Could be lots of animals. But it's probably a fish. A CARP. A COMMON CARP AAAAA that's way too funny to me. Big black scary dog, wild canine that ruthlessly hunts down its prey, a majestic deer that strolls through the forest like a king, and a carp. CARP
IDK IT'S FUNNY TO ME AAA
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Commission for samd6 of Kim the Dolphin Cosmonaut, their character for @torchship-rpg
Image ID: Bottlenose dolphin with a white box on its belly with four fabric-covered robot legs coming out of it, and two robot arms with anthropomorphic hands coming out from the fins. The dolphin is wearing a white and navy blue uniform and the blue flag with red star of the IUR. The Dolphin is waving at the viewer. End Image ID.
Bio:
Your crewmates call you “Kim.”
This is not your full name. Your actual, full name is unpronounceable by the typical voicebox of a convergent biped without technological assistance.
You grew up in the northern pacific, swimming with your kin, singing songs that have been passed down since before man had fire. You also sang the newer songs. You remember the light in the sky when you were five years old, the terror of the rest of Earthclan, the news of the War.
The War ended when you were ten. The consequences of the War are still unfolding.
When you were old enough, you enrolled in the Academy for Star Patrol. You are not the first dolphin to graduate from that prestigious school. Nor were you the first to get a field posting.
You are the first dolphin to get a rocket posting. It may be unfair, but the hopes and dreams of many young people are riding in your wake.
You are the best pilot aboard the Di Renjie-7, and the stars are your ocean now.
Kim is depicted above in astrogation navy blue. Here's a security red version, since they have dual certs in astrogation and security.
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Intro I guess
Ello! I'm your local creature! I am a minor so feel free to leave if that makes you uncomfortable! People over 18 can interact just don't be weird (duh)! I do not require tone tags but I do use them a lot! If you have them in your pinned I'll try to keep that in mind but I might forget! You can call me Tor or Theo! I'm also fine with the terms 'good dog' and stuff along those lines (species euphoria go brrrrrrrrr)
My theriotypes/Kintypes are: Tyrannosaurus rex, Great plains coyote, Bottlenose dolphin, Long-eared owl, Melanistic Spinosauridae cladotherian, Blue jay and Harlequin great Dane! I am questioning wolfkin! I'm also a Shirshu fictotherian, along with being a Dragon and Merfolk kin!
I use He/It/That! I love FNAF, Gravity falls, Wings of fire, Hazbin hotel, and Dinosaurs so expect me to reblog or post a lot about that stuff! I am a Singlet so please don't try to drag us into system discourse! (I also like to use the term 'we' and 'us' to refer to myself, so keep that in mind)
My vent tag is 'The Rex growls' and my original posts related to my Tyrannosaurus paleotherianthropy is 'Rexy rumbles'
I'll update my DNI whenever I feel like I need to
Peace out bros!
DNI under cut
I am not comfortable with you using the term 'kinnie' for me. If you use it you can still interact, just don't use it for me. Please and thank you ^^!
DNI: 18+ BLOGS, PRO CONTACT FOR HARMFUL AND NON-CONSENSUAL PARAS (ZOO, PEDO, NECRO, ETC), PROSHIP, R@CISTS, ANTIKIN, ANTI LGBTQIA+, ANTI MOGAI, TRUMP SUPPORTERS, SEXISTS, TERF, TRUSCUM, PEOPLE WHO THINK ALL AGE/PET REGRESSION IS NSFW, NSFW AGERE/PETRE, RADQUEER, N@ZI, NEON@ZI, SUPPORT THE GENOCIDE AGAINST PALESTINIANS
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Why hello hello! When I say, your blog makes me feel so at home, I MEAN it/gen
All the stim boards and moodboards make me feel wonderful! I have a request, but by all means, feel free to ignore!
Note: I am a system, might seem odd that I'm not using "we" and "us" that just is because sometimes I like to be considers one.
Anyways, my request:
-A bottlenose dolphin moodboard with a water park theme?/nf
Ah, I struggle to be at the ocean due to sensory issues, but water parks truly make me feel at home
Lots of platonic love
-@justletmestayawakeatthispoint
Ofc !! It’s been posted !!
thank you so much for all the kind words, I love doing this stuff for aquatic kins and this was really fun !! I’m sorry about the ocean sensory issues, I hope this moodboard brings some sort of comfort !!
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How Well Do You Know British Wildlife?
Surprisingly, three out of 10 Britons do not know there is wildlife in Britain. But the larger British Isles are teeming with wildlife including land mammals, birdlife, and marine life. There is also a wonderful variety of small animals and insects including the lovable bumblebee. The good thing is that you can travel to any of the popular wildlife viewing sites in a short time seeing as it is that the UK is not a large country. The diverse landscape is a bonus attraction for the avid tourist. There are marshes, moor, cliffs and beaches to explore while looking for wildlife. All of it here in the UK.
What is some popular wildlife to see in the UK?
• Scottish wildcat
This feline is to be found in Northern England, Wales and Scotland. It is almost indistinguishable from the domestic cat and can crossbreed with it. The numbers are declining because of this diminishing breeding line.
• Pine Marten
This is a kin to weasel, and native to the Lake District. It is a nocturnal hunter and prefers to sleep in underground burrows.
• Red squirrels
This squirrel has ginger fur and taller years than the grey squirrel. The ginger fur changes to a grey shade in winter. These cute furry animals are declining in numbers as they are decimated by squirrel pox from their larger and more numerous kin, the grey squirrel. They number less than 200,000 of them.
• Skomer vole
This rodent is only found on Skomer Island in Wales. It is popular prey for the numerous predator birds on the island.
• Hedgehogs
These rodents are also on the decline due to habitat destruction and changing climates. They numbered over 30 million 50 years ago but now number about a million.
• Turtledoves
These beautiful birds have become very rare to see in the UK have declined in numbers by over 90%. The best time to see them is in the summer.
• Natterjack Toad
It has become very rare to hear this noisy amphibian, remaining only in small numbers in Norfolk and Lincolnshire.
• Slow Worm
This is a legless lizard that closely resembles a snake. It can be found in all parts of the UK.
• Bumblebees
These hairy black and yellow striped bees can be found hovering over flowering plants all over the UK. Unlike the aggressive honey bees, bumblebees make are generally harmless and their gentle buzzing will be heard in many fields, gardens and parks.
Bees in general are a particular passion of mine. I recently became a beekeeper and regularly purchase products from The Humble Bumble as they donate to various bee charities and organizations. I just received a new bee charm from them for my sister which i’m over the moon with!
What are the best places to see wildlife in the UK?
Cairngorms National Park, Scotland
The Cairngorms National Park in the Scottish Highlands is a land of rare beauty with a variety of wildlife and stunning landscapes. The varied landscape consists of forests, moorlands, mountain, and grass fields. The wildlife to be found here includes pine martens, red squirrels, Scottish wildcats, and golden eagles. There is also a variety of small mammals, rodents and innumerable insects including wasps, ants and bumblebees. Tourists can walk this place on foot in guided tours.
Blakeney Point, Norfolk
This is area is world famous for its attraction as a site to see marine bird life. It is a breeding ground for grey seals with over 2,000 grey seal pups coming to life each year from October to January. This area is part of Blakeney National Nature Reserve. An organized boat trip is the only way to get here during the breeding season.
The Isle of Mull, Scotland
The white-tailed eagle has been re-introduced in the UK on this isle. This is the biggest bird of prey native to the UK. It can be spotted swooping down on fish in the sea or soaring over the forests in search of small prey. Buzzards and golden eagles can also be sighted here. Marine attractions include porpoises and dolphins.
Falmouth, Cornwall
Pendennis point is on this location. This is one of the best spots in the UK to view marine wildlife, with breathtaking sea views as the background. There are also good views of Falmouth Bay and River Mal. It is a good spot for viewing bottlenose and common dolphins. Other marine attractions include shallow swimming sharks, grey seals and a variety of marine birds.
New Forest, Hampshire
This ancient woodland and heath is home to a herd of over 3,000 wild ponies that roam this area. Tourists can also spot all the deer species that are native to the UK. Other attractions include birds and snakes as well as insects including butterflies, dragonflies and bumblebees.
Kielder Forest, Northumberland
This is the home of the photogenic red squirrel whose numbers have dwindled dramatically. This forest is also home to bats, badgers, pipistrelle bats and other small mammals. Tourists can also see an osprey swooping down on these small prey from time to time.
Causeway Coast, Northern Ireland
This rugged coast landscape is a challenge to navigate but offers plenty to see in terms of wildlife. The cliffs are home to agile mountain hares and birds including peregrine falcons, and puffins. There are sharks, Atlantic grey seals and porpoises to be found in the sea. Bird watchers will find an interesting variety of marine birds including razorbills, auks and guillemot heading off to fish in the sea, homing in and heading to breeding grounds.
Shetland and Orkney Islands
These isles in the northernmost point of the UK offer plenty for the tourist if you can get there. The waters off the coast hold killer whales, minke whales, humpback whales, white-sided and white-beaked dolphins. There are also sea otters and a variety of marine birds. Bird watchers will especially find Skara Brae, Noss and Sumburgh areas rich with different bird species. These isles are also interesting archaeological sites.
Gilfach Nature Reserve, Wales
This is a great spot to see otters on the hunt for salmon. They come here every year from October to December to catch easy salmon prey at the waterfalls as the salmon swim upstream. These elusive water predators can also be spotted at other times of the year although it is a bit harder to do so. Early morning and sunset hours are the best for viewing.
Skomer Island
The hugely popular Atlantic Puffin is to be found in good numbers on this island off the coast of Pembrokeshire in western Wales. This is a popular destination with birders who come here for the rich bird life and photo opportunities. Seeing about 70,000 Manx Shearwaters make a landing in the dusk is a phenomenon that is one of the rarest in the world. There are also the photogenic Atlantic puffins who are happy enough to pose for photos as they are well-used to human presence.
Dorset
This is one of the most beautiful inhabited places in the UK. The meadows of Kingcombe are perfectly kept and preserved, with over 200 years of well-maintained fields, hay meadows and hedgerows. All of it is done naturally without pesticides which makes it highly attractive to insects and other small wildlife.
There is plenty to see if you take the time to stroll leisurely through the meadows. There are buzzing bumblebees, numerous scurrying insects and different birds that make a living of these small prey. The soothing landscape holds plenty to see and photograph.
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Slobodchikoff, an emeritus professor of biology at Northern Arizona University, has been analyzing the sounds of prairie dogs for more than 30 years. Not long after he started, he learned that prairie dogs had distinct alarm calls for different predators. Around the same time, separate researchers found that a few other species had similar vocabularies of danger. What Slobodchikoff claimed to discover in the following decades, however, was extraordinary: Beyond identifying the type of predator, prairie-dog calls also specified its size, shape, color and speed; the animals could even combine the structural elements of their calls in novel ways to describe something they had never seen before. No scientist had ever put forward such a thorough guide to the native tongue of a wild species or discovered one so intricate. Prairie-dog communication is so complex, Slobodchikoff says — so expressive and rich in information — that it constitutes nothing less than language.
[...]
In the 1990s, inspired in part by Slobodchikoff’s studies, the primatologist Klaus Zuberbühler began investigating monkey vocalizations in the dense and cacophonous forests of the Ivory Coast in Africa. Over the years, he and his colleagues discovered that adult male Campbell’s monkeys change the meaning of their screeches by combining distinct calls in specific sequences, adding or omitting an “oo” suffix. Krak exclusively warns of a leopard, but krak-oo is a generalized alarm call; isolated pairs of booms are a “Come this way!” command, but booms preceding krak-oos denote falling tree branches. Studies of songbirds have also uncovered similar complexity in their communication. Japanese great tits, for example, tell one another to scan for danger using one string of chirps and a different set of notes to encourage others to move closer to the caller. When researchers played the warning followed by the invitation, the birds combined the commands, approaching the speaker only after cautiously surveying the area. In the South Pacific, biologists have shown that humpback-whale songs are neither random nor innate: rather, migrating pods of humpback whales learn one another’s songs, which evolve over time and spread through the ocean in waves of “cultural revolution.” And baby bottlenose dolphins develop “signature whistles” that serve as their names in a kind of roll call among kin.
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"Their Home, Their Ocean" - 🔵@maestro320v s Notes: It would be the height of human arrogance to say that it is only us that has families, communities, towns, cities and nations. These non-human beings had all of these figured out even before we were placed here to wreak havoc on the planet. This beautiful drone footage was filmed by Australia's Ambassador for Tourism, Professional Landwcaoe and Wildlife Photographer, Sean Scott @seanscottphotography - The super pod. I watched this pod of dolphins for hours and it was one of the most incredible thinks I have seen. @seanscott_touring • Common dolphins can live in aggregations of hundreds or even thousands of dolphins. Common dolphins are often seen in groups numbering several hundred individuals (with subgroups consisting of 20-30 individuals). Occasionally, different groups will come together to form mega-pods which can consist of over 10,000 dolphins. Genetic studies in the Northeast Atlantic suggest that common dolphin pods generally do not consist of close kin, but rather of members that are not closely related. Unlike many delphinids, common dolphins do not live in a matriarchal society. That being said, closely related individuals are usually found in similar geographical locations fairly consistently, providing evidence that this species displays site fidelity (at least in the Northeastern Atlantic). Male common dolphins display greater site fidelity in relation to their kin than females. Common dolphin pod structure often consists of nursery pods (which includes females and calves), bachelor pods (consisting of all males) and mixed groups of males and females, including sub-adults and calves. Genetic evidence seems to indicate that common dolphins live in fission-fusion societies, where dolphins form pods that are not necessarily stable and do not necessarily consist of related individuals. It is not known if common dolphins form life long bonds with other individuals like the long-term male alliances seen in bottlenose dolphins. There is some evidence that common dolphins use signature whistles, similar to that of the bottlenose dolphin. (Continued in comments section below @maestro320v https://www.instagram.com/p/CFIEfIXhrvH/?igshid=1hhj2dgz29uu3
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Female dolphins form the closest social bonds with each other
Female dolphins form the closest social bonds with each other
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Similar in giraffes, lions, hyenas and grey kangaroo populations, bottlenose dolphins appear to form social bonds with kin and other females in similar reproductive condition, while…
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Ngl Dolphin phantom shifts for me, are hella weird. Like, when I'm walking I'll feel the tail where it would be for any other phantom shift of mine, on the lower back (don't know if that's the right part but you guys would probably know what I'm talking about.). But when I'm sitting, it's my legs that become the tail but my tail will be bent really weird if I sit normally, so I'll do really weird stuff with my legs so that having a tail instead of legs makes sense for my mind. Also I'm very sad that I can't perfectly imitate dolphin vocals. Very sad.
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ECOCORE The Queer Issue
cover 1: Exene Karros @donaldtrompeloeil
cover 2: Andrej Dubravsky @andrej_dubravsky
cover 3: Caspar Jade Heinemann @angstravaganza
ECOCORE is proud to announce issue 6, an online only issue dedicated to queer strategies in nature. Following the US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement it is urgent to find new approaches to ecology and environmentalism.
Starting today @ blog.ecocore.co
Queerness is not yet here. Queerness is an ideality. Put another way, we are not yet queer. We may never touch queerness, but we can feel it as the warm illumination of a horizon imbued with potentiality. We have never been queer, yet queerness exists for us as an ideality that can be distilled from the past and used to imagine a future.
-José Esteban Muñoz,
Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity
Ecocore’s sixth issue, The Queer Issue, guest edited by The Institute of Queer Ecology (IQECO), operates at the intersection of queer and environmental discourse, with a mission to improve both fields. Each movement, perpetually evolving though not fast enough, benefits from being in conversation with the other.
Yesterday I found myself at one of the last shows of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, in Providence, Rhode Island. I had just left a meeting with two other members of IQECO, where we discussed the types of invisible labor being done by plankton (plus other microbial Foundation Species) and queer (human) communities. When I arrived at the circus, then, I found myself still burdened with criticality.
When the lights went out and spotlights hit a cage in the center of the arena, 12 tigers were sitting on stools and I braced myself for an unnerving show. A large man with dueling whips lashed the tigers, ordering the cats to jump, roar, stand, and move about. I sank lower into my chair, feeling rather microbial as a crowd of thousands clapped and screamed in excitement at the spectacle of human supremacy.
Earlier, as the National Anthem had boomed, a lesbian couple sat down next to me and I let out a sigh of relief. The three of us would form an instant unspoken alliance for the next 3 hours, silently critiquing the The Greatest Show on Earth. So when the 12 tigers began leaping in fear of a man who commanded them and the audience into a frenzy, I looked towards my newfound queer sisters. I was disappointed to see that they too were cheering, hand in hand.
I lay out this anecdote to highlight the dangerous rift still standing between queer and environmental justice. I expected the couple next to me to naturally align themselves with the subjugated tigers, rather than with oppressive man. But as critical conversations about ecology and queerness are still far from the mainstream, this way of thinking takes time and dedication. Eventually, I believe it will prove incredibly helpful for both the lgbt+ community and the natural world. This new alignment allows queer individuals to find kin with any oppressed species, many of which are queerer than we imagined. While tigers have not yet been observed to engage in homosexual behavior, at least another 1,500 species have, including lions, where homosexual and trans individuals have been recorded.
Our simplified collective understanding of human gender and sexuality collapses on itself when we are confronted by a fungus with 28,000 sexes. Catriona Sandilands states (while discussing the works of Elizabeth Wilson and Myra Hird) that “nonhuman sexual and gender diversity both calls into question human exceptionalism and destabilizes notions of identity, authenticity, and technology on which modern categories of human sexual orientation rest.” The research is overwhelming and powerful, as exemplified by the enduring influence of Bruce Bagemihl’s seminal text, Biological Exuberance. Bagemihl’s book about animals with homosexual tendencies was used as evidence by the American Psychiatric Association before the US Supreme Court in Lawrence v. Texas, a case that ultimately struck down sodomy laws in 14 states.
The Queer Issue presents IQECO’s inaugural attempt to present a sliver of this growing body of research, as well as works by artists that consider this hybridized way of thinking. The Queer Issue is assembled eclectically, with republished texts by Bruce Bagemihl that have heavily influenced the field, as well as original commissions for the occasion of this issue. Liby Hays will present a collection of four poems from the perspective of a Trans Termite Queen. Briohny Walker will contribute a new paper on an ethics of failure and futurelessness. Greta Skagerlind invites you to contribute to their ever-growing in-flux definition of Queer Design Principles via a collaborative google doc. Ryan Hammond will talk about their ongoing work, Open Source Gender Codes, which attempts to queer current regimes of pharmaceutical production and systems of ownership by producing open source hormone production protocols.
Ecocore and IQECO welcome you to The Queer Issue.
Edited by Lee Pivnik for the Institute of Queer Ecology
Bruce Bagemihl
Urban Barnyard
Alessandro Bava
Andrej Dubravsky
Ryan Hammond
Liby Hays
Caspar Heinemann
Alex Ju
Exene Karros
Les U. Knight / VHEMT
Lee Pivnik
Isabella Rossellini
Jack Schneider
Greta Skagerlind
Briohny Walker
Additionally, we would like to out our non-human contributors. The following is a list of animals that have been recorded exhibiting either homosexual or transgender behavior, assembled by Bagemihl in his 1999 publishing of Biological Exuberance. Their vibrant and diverse existence reminds us with force that we are not alone in our queerness, but should our species continue to encroach on their habitats, we may find ourselves increasingly lonesome.
Acorn Woodpecker
Addax
Antelope
Adelie Penguin
African Buffalo
African Elephant
African jacana
African swallowtail butterfly
Agile Wallaby
akepa
Allen hummingbird
Amazon Molly
Amazon River Dolphin see Boto
American Bison
American kestrel
angelfish
Anna’s Hummingbird
ant
Aoudad
Aperea
arctic tern
Asiatic Elephant
Asiatic Mouflon
Atlantic Spotted Dolphin
Australian noisy miner
Australian raven
Australian Sea Lion
Australian Shelduck
avocet
Aztec Parakeet
badger
Bank Swallow
Barasingha
Barbary Sheep
Barn Owl
barn swallow
bat
bearded seal
beaver
Beluga Bengalese Finch (Domestic)
bewick’s swan
Bezoar
Bharal
Bicolored Antbird
Bighorn Sheep
bird of paradise
black-and-white warbler
Black Bear
Black-billed Magpie
Blackbuck
black-capped chickadee
black-capped lorikeet
Black-crowned Night Heron
Black-footed Rock Wallaby
black-headed grosbeak
Black-headed Gull
Black-rumped Flameback
Black Stilt
Black Swan
Black-tailed Deer
black-tailed gull
black-tailed prairie dog
Black-winged Stilt
Blue-backed Manakin
Blue-bellied Roller
blue-billed duck
bluebird
bluejay
Blue Sheep see Bharal
bluethroat
Blue Tit
Blue-winged Teal
boat-tailed grackle
Bonnet Macaque
Bonobo
Boto
Bottlenose Dolphin
bowerbird
Bowhead Whale
Bridled Dolphin
Brown Bear see Grizzly Bear
brown booby
Brown Capuchin
Brown-headed Cowbird
Brown Long-eared Bat
brown noddy
Brown Rat Budgerigar (Domestic)
Buff-breasted Sandpiper
bufflehead duck
burro
Bush Dog
butterfly
Calfbird
California Gull
California sea lion
Canada Goose canary
Canary-winged Parakeet
Caribou
Caspian Tern
cassowary
Cat (Domestic)
Cattle (Domestic)
Cattle Egret
centipede
Chaffinch
Cheetah
Chicken (Domestic)
Chiloe Wigeon
chimney swift
Chinese water deer
clapper rail
Cliff Swallow
Collared Peccary
Commerson’s Dolphin
Common Brushtail Possum
Common Chimpanzee
Common Dolphin
Common Garter Snake
Common Gull
Common Marmoset
Common Murre
Common Pipistrelle
Common Raccoon
Common Shelduck
Common Tree Shrew
coral goby
cormorant
Costa’s hummingbird
cottontail rabbit
Cotton-top Tamarin
coyote
coypu
Crab-eating Macaque
crane
crane fly
Crane spp.
Crested Black Macaque
crow
Cui
curlew
cutworm
Dall’s Sheep see Thinhorn Sheep
Damaraland mole-rat
Daubenton’s Bat
Dayak fruit bat
Desert Tortoise
dipper
Dog (Domestic)
Doria’s Tree Kangaroo
dragonfly
Dragonfly spp.
Dugong
Dusky Moorhen
Dwarf Cavy
Dwarf Mongoose
eagle earthworm
Eastern Bluebird
Eastern Cottontail Rabbit
Eastern Gray Kangaroo
echidna
Egyptian Goose
eider duck
Eleanora’s falcon
Elegant Parrot Elk see Wapiti
emperor penguin
Emu
Euro
European Bison see Wisent
European jay
European Shag
falcon
Fallow Deer
False Killer Whale
Fat-tailed Dunnart finch
Fin Whale
firefly
fisher
Flamingo
fox
fox squirrel
frog, poisonous
fruit bat
Fruit Fly spp.
fulmar
Galah
garter snake
gecko
Gelada Baboon
Gentoo Penguin
giant cowbird
giant river otter
Giraffe
glaucous-winged gull
Goat (Domestic)
Golden Bishop Bird
golden eagle
golden lion tamarin
Golden Monkey
Golden Plover
Gorilla
Grant’s Gazelle
Gray-breasted Jay
Gray-capped Social Weaver
gray-cheeked mangabey
Gray-headed Flying Fox
Gray Heron
Gray Seal
Gray Squirrel
Gray Whale
great bustard
Great Cormorant
great crested flycatcher
great egret
Greater Bird of Paradise
greater painted-snipe
Greater Rhea
great tit
Green Sandpiper
Greenshank
Greylag
Goose
Griffon Vulture
Grizzly Bear
grouper
grouse
Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock
Guillemot see Common Murre Guinea Pig (Domestic)
Hamadryas Baboon
hamlet Hammerhead
Hamster (Domestic)
Hanuman Langur
Harbor Porpoise
Harbor Seal
hare
Harris’s hawk
Harris’s sparrow
hawk
hawkmoth
hedgehog
heron
Herring Gull
Himalayan Tahr
Hoary-headed Grebe
Hoary Marmot
honeybee
hooded pitohui
Hooded Warbler Horse (Domestic)
house martin
House Sparrow
Humboldt Penguin
humbug damselfish
humpback whale
hyena
Indian Fruit Bat
Indian Muntjac
Indian Rhinoceros
Ivory Gull
jabiru stork
jacana
Jackdaw
jackrabbit
Japanese Macaque
Japanese sea raven
Javan wart snake
Javelina see Collared Peccary
jellyfish
kalanga parrot
Kangaroo Rat
kentish plover
Kestrel
Killer Whale
king bird of paradise
King Penguin
kit (blue) fox
Kittiwake
kiwi
Koala
Kob
lantern bass
lantern fish
Lapland longspur
lapwing
Larga Seal see Spotted Seal
Laughing Gull
Laysan Albatross
Least Chipmunk
Lechwe lemming
lesser black-backed gull
Lesser Bushbaby
Lesser Flamingo
lesser kestrel
Lesser Scaup Duck
lesser yellowlegs
Lion
Lion-tailed Macaque
Lion Tamarin
Little Blue Heron
Little Brown Bat
Little Egret
Livingstone’s Fruit Bat
Long-eared Hedgehog
Long-footed Tree Shrew
Long-legged Fly spp.
long-tailed duck
Long-tailed Hermit Hummingbird
long-tailed manakin
loon
lorikeet
lucifer hummingbird
lunulated antbird
magnificent hummingbird
Mallard Duck
marabou stork
marbled murrelet
Markhor
marmoset
marsupial mouse
Marten sp.
Masked Lovebird
Matschie’s Tree Kangaroo
Mazarine Blue
Mealy Amazon Parrot
Mew Gull see Common Gull
Mexican Jay see Gray— breasted Jay
mink
Mocó
Mohol Galago see Lesser Bushbaby
mole
mole-rat
mole-vole
Monarch Butterfly
monitor lizard
Montagu’s harrier
Moor Macaque
Moose
moth
Mountain Goat
mountain lion
Mountain Tree Shrew
Mountain Zebra
Mule Deer
murre
Mustached Tamarin
mustached warbler
Musk Duck
Musk-ox
Mute Swan
naked mole-rat
natal robin
Natterer’s Bat
New Zealand fur seal
New Zealand Sea Lion
nightjar
Nilgiri Langur
Noctule
North American Porcupine
Northern Elephant Seal
Northern Fur Seal
northern jacana
northern lapwing
Northern Quoll
northern rough-winged swallow
Ocellated Antbird
Ocher-bellied Flycatcher
Olympic Marmot
one-wattled cassowary
opossum
Orange Bishop Bird
Orange-fronted Parakeet
Orang-utan
Orca see Killer Whale
oriole
Ornate Lorikeet
osprey
Ostrich
owl
oyster
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Here's your friendly reminder that marine mammals have no business being in captivity! (I see you Seaworld)
-A litteral dolphin
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