First time drawing the cutest bearded dragon ✨💖
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violet lemonade for sale 🪻🍋
sleepy gator taking a nap on a summer day ♡
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Water Lily Turtle - Botanimal Portrait
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If you like what I do and you would like to support my artwork, I am on Patreon and I have an Etsy Shop.
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Hydras are a highly elusive drake found primarily deep within cave systems.
Known across the globe for their multi venomous heads the true nature of the Hydra is a bit more complex.
Much of it’s life the hydra will live solitarily, and living within labyrinthian cave systems makes that quite easy. Males and Females of the species are quite dimorphic, rarely coming across one another. However it is upon maturity the the Hydra will undergo it’s task of metamorphism. The multi headed dragon of legend is in fact a bonded and mated pair. Females develop a bioluminescent lure, that both attracts prey but also a potential mate. Upon finding a suitable sire, the male will adhere to his mate’s back. This process is not immediate and full adhesion will take years to complete. An enzyme is released from his underbelly allowing for the fusing process. However females have a counter enzyme allowing for females to reject potential males should better stock be found. Upon full adhesion the males body nearly fully absorbs into his mate, even their brain chemistry will intertwine. His wings, however, will remain fully functional and as such will allow for the pair to venture beyond the cave for greater feeding opportunity. Why most hydra are double headed, there are cases where multiple males will adhere to a single female. The most dominate male remaining most intact. This typically only happens to larger more dominant females.
Other dragon species have following a similar convergent evolution such as the False Hydra. Male False Hydra possess a suction cup appendage on their underbelly comprised of highly modified ventral scales and females have the responding on their back. However this bond is not permanent and separation is capable.
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My 25 years of palaeoart chronology...
"Cretaceous Blue Moon," a composite artwork from 2013. A gathering of male Elasmosaurus show off their strength by lifting their heads high out of the water during a bloom of bioluminescent plankton.
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Reptiles - Elena Gertik, Flammarion (Paris) - 1938 (marked as public domain) - via Gallica
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Riso tribute to the natural spaces around me growing up in Texas (yes, Texas has a ton of alligators)
Now up in my shop!
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Various scaled reptiles. The life of vertebrates. 1962.
Internet Archive
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Lancer comm for commissioner's campaign. They named the frame; Watchertower, and the pilot; Yippark
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New Caledonian Geckos 🍌🥭🦎
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