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 Mathison Museum of Natural History

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyMon Jan 22, 2024 11:45 am

Species: †Bothriolepis sp.

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Kaiyodo
Series: Dinotales Series 1
Year of Production: 2001
Size/Scale: Body length approximately 7.5 cm for a scale of 1:4-1:22.7 depending on the species
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Being one of the original Dinotales figures, some assembly is required. This sculpt, or a slight variation of it, was also used by Kaiyodo in 2015 for the Capsule Q Museum line; the 2015 version came with a base that included a placard with the animal's Latin and Japanese names.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Middle to Late Devonian, nearly worldwide
Habitat: Freshwater lakes and rivers, possibly brackish or coastal marine; benthic
Diet: Planktonic organisms, algae, detritus
IUCN Status (at time of posting): N/A [prehistoric]
Miscellaneous Notes: Bothriolepis had gills, but members of the genus also possessed a pair of sacs that originated from the pharynx. Some researchers have suggested these structures may have been analogous to lungs, allowing the placoderm to breath air as well and possibly venture onto land at times.

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyMon Jan 22, 2024 5:43 pm

cheers cheers

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyTue Jan 23, 2024 11:41 am

Species: Echinopora mammiformis (Nemezo, 1959)
Common name(s): hedgehog coral

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Yujin
Series: Corals in Colour
Year of Production: 2005
Size/Scale: Colony diameter approximately 2.5 cm for a scale of 1:200 (see below)
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Unique
Miscellaneous Notes: The Yujin corals are small and made out of a limestone-calcium carbonate sandstone, rather than the usual PVC. They make great accessories for other marine wildlife. The scale above was calculated based on a maximum diameter of 5 meters for a colony.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Indo-Pacific
Habitat: Swallow coral reefs, especially in lagoons and back reef margins
Diet: Nutrients derived from symbiotic zooxanthellae; also planktonic microorganisms via filter feeding
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Near Threatened
Miscellaneous Notes: Echinopora mammiformis can grow as either plates (as shown in today's figure) or branches. Plates and branches commonly occur in adjacent colonies or within the same colony.

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyTue Jan 23, 2024 4:24 pm

cheers cheers

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyWed Jan 24, 2024 11:57 am

Species: †Spinops sternbergorum Farke et al., 2011

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: PNSO
Series: Prehistoric Animal Models
Year of Production: 2019
Size/Scale: Raw figure length 15.0 cm. Using the base of the frill spikes as a metric (n=0.5 cm), scale comes to approximately 1:20
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: To my knowledge, there are only two figures of this species available, both by PNSO. In 2016, PNSO produced a miniature Spinops.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Late Cretaceous (Campanian) of present-day North America
Habitat: Open forests, seasonal floodplains
Diet: Vegetation; presumably browser on low-growing plants
IUCN Status (at time of posting): N/A [prehistoric]
Miscellaneous Notes: Spinops sternbregorum has an interesting paleontological history. Two partial skulls of the animal were found in 1916 and sent to the British Museum in London. The museum considered the remains too fragmentary for display and wrote back to Charles Sternberg, who found the fossils with his son, saying they were ‘nothing but rubbish’. So, the material sat tucked away in the museum, overlooked and unprepared for over 90 years. It wasn’t until the fossils were re-examined in the early 2000s that was it realized they represented a new genus of dinosaur, and in 2011 the species was formally described.

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyThu Jan 25, 2024 11:47 am

Species: Trioceros montium (Buchholz, 1874)
Common name(s): Cameroon sailfin chameleon; Cameroon two-horned mountain chameleon

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: CollectA
Series: Little Wonders
Year of Production: 2017
Size/Scale: Total figure length 11.8 cm. Snout-to-vent length approximately 7.0 cm for a scale of 1:1.2-1:1.5
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: In 2022, CollectA released a miniature version of this figure in their Reptiles & Amphibians Tube.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Cameroon
Habitat: Montane rainforests; occasionally small farms, rural gardens
Diet: Insects and arachnids
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Near Threatened
Miscellaneous Notes: Trioceros montium is sexually dimorphic and only males possess the two anteriorly-directed horns.

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyThu Jan 25, 2024 1:53 pm

cheers cheers

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyFri Jan 26, 2024 11:42 am

Species: Lucanus elaphus Fabricius, 1775
Common name(s): giant stag beetle; elephant stag beetle

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Safari Ltd.
Series: Safariology - Life Cycle of a Stag Beetle
Year of Production: 2014
Size/Scale: Body length of adult (including mandibles) approximately 7.8 cm for a scale of 1.3:1 for a large major male. Pupa and larva roughly in scale with adult; eggs scale larger.
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Very rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Safari Ltd. only marketed the beetle in this life cycle set as a 'stag beetle'. The species identification is my own. The overall morphology supports the genus Lucanus, and I am considering it L. elaphus based on the size of the mandibles and that the species occurs in eastern North America, including northern Florida where Safari Ltd. is headquartered. Other North American Lucanus species do not have mandibles this large in relation to the rest of their body.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Eastern North America
Habitat: Hardwood forests, parks, cemeteries
Diet: Larvae develop in rotting hardwoods; adults feed on plant juices, tree sap, overripe fruit
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated [NatureServe status Apparently Secure]
Miscellaneous Notes: The life cycle of L. elaphus may take one or more years to complete. Gravid females lay eggs in the crevices of moist, decaying hardwood. Larvae feed on the decaying wood and can take anywhere from one to several years to mature a last-instar larva. Pupation lasts approximately 7-9 months. Adults emerge in May or June and live for 1-3 months, on average.

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landrover

landrover


Country/State : colombia
Age : 66
Joined : 2010-11-04
Posts : 5879

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyFri Jan 26, 2024 3:24 pm

I like very much this PNSO prehistoric figure.

Congratulations cheers cheers cheers

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyFri Jan 26, 2024 5:22 pm

cheers cheers cheers

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rogerpgvg

rogerpgvg


Country/State : UK
Age : 54
Joined : 2016-04-29
Posts : 3869

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyFri Jan 26, 2024 7:53 pm

Great that Safari made the complete life cycle.

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySat Jan 27, 2024 12:04 pm

Species: Locusta migratoria (Linnaeus, 1758)
Common name(s): migratory locust

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Takara Tomy A.R.T.S.
Series: Insect Wars
Year of Production: 2022
Size/Scale: Body length (including wings) approximately 8.0 cm for a scale of 2.2:1-1.5:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the fourth time we've seen L. migratoria in the Museum. This is a repaint of a sculpt used in 2018 and 2020 for the B.I.G. Insects line, the former of which was seen in the Museum on May 6, 2022. Unlike the previous two versions, which were painted after the stationary phase, today's model is painted after the migratory phase. Some assembly is required. I don't normally quantify figures within my collection, but this may be my favorite of the nine figures of this species I have!

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Much of the Old World, including much of Africa (outside of the Sahara Desert), Europe, much of Asia, Japan, northern Australia, New Zealand
Habitat: Highly variable, including lowland forests, river deltas, grasslands, deserts, disturbed areas, and agricultural fields; usually in open areas
Diet: Grasses
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: The most severe swarms of L. migratoria can have upwards of 40-80 million individuals per square kilometer and cover several hundred square kilometers. Swarms can cover up to 130 km a day. Large swarms can be detrimental to agricultural fields.

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Roger
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Roger


Country/State : Portugal
Age : 50
Joined : 2010-08-20
Posts : 35776

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySat Jan 27, 2024 1:22 pm

I remember in 1986 when in my hometown there was talk of an imminent locust plague. As an 11-year-old boy at that time, in an era without the internet and with little interest in television, the stories from the elders about swarms of locusts blocking out the sunlight were somewhat enchanting to me. The truth is, I never witnessed those "clouds", but one day I stepped out of my house and saw the same tree as always, but this time it was teeming with locusts. They weren't the usual locusts; they were larger and seemed somewhat more intimidating. I never had a fear of insects, but I felt something strange, like when we receive visits from people who are completely different from what we're accustomed to.
I can see on the internet that the most recent locust plague in my region was caused by desert locusts, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was this species during my childhood. Since I was a child, I used to catch grasshoppers to keep them as pets for a while, but they were naturally very restless and panicky creatures, and I would end up releasing them. I didn't realize that it was a form of torture for the poor creatures; I just wanted to have a bouncy friend. Fortunately, I never had the bad habit of killing them, and everything I caught was returned to nature.
My only grasshopper figure is the Safari Smythsonian Insects one.

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySat Jan 27, 2024 2:56 pm

cheers cheers cheers

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Kikimalou
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Kikimalou


Country/State : Lille, FRANCE
Age : 60
Joined : 2010-04-01
Posts : 21139

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySat Jan 27, 2024 3:12 pm

Roger wrote:
I remember in 1986 when in my hometown there was talk of an imminent locust plague. As an 11-year-old boy at that time, in an era without the internet and with little interest in television, the stories from the elders about swarms of locusts blocking out the sunlight were somewhat enchanting to me. The truth is, I never witnessed those "clouds", but one day I stepped out of my house and saw the same tree as always, but this time it was teeming with locusts. They weren't the usual locusts; they were larger and seemed somewhat more intimidating. I never had a fear of insects, but I felt something strange, like when we receive visits from people who are completely different from what we're accustomed to.
I can see on the internet that the most recent locust plague in my region was caused by desert locusts, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was this species during my childhood. Since I was a child, I used to catch grasshoppers to keep them as pets for a while, but they were naturally very restless and panicky creatures, and I would end up releasing them. I didn't realize that it was a form of torture for the poor creatures; I just wanted to have a bouncy friend. Fortunately, I never had the bad habit of killing them, and everything I caught was returned to nature.
My only grasshopper figure is the Safari Smythsonian Insects one.

Nice model Blaine and impressive story Rogério Very Happy
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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySun Jan 28, 2024 1:29 pm

Species: Oophaga lehmanni (Myers & Daly, 1976)
Common name(s): Lehmann's poison frog; red-banded poison frog

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Kitan Club
Series: Nature Techni Colour - Poison Dart Frogs Vol. 1
Year of Production: 2011
Size/Scale: Snout-to-vent length approximately 3.3 cm, within scale 1:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Uncommon
Miscellaneous Notes: This figure was released as both a magnet and strap figure. The sculpt was used for other species in the set as well as additional species in Poison Dart Frogs Vol. 2 in 2013.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Colombia (Anchicayá Valley)
Habitat: Rainforest; usually on the ground but occasionally in low bushes and trees
Diet: Tadpoles eat unfertilized eggs provided by the female parent; adults feed on small insects and arachnids
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Critically Endangered
Miscellaneous Notes: At the end of seasonal rains, males seek out appropriate places for the female to lay eggs, and attract females by a series of calls. Once the female chooses a male, she deposits a few large eggs within the area that the male selected. The male fertilizes the eggs and continues to look after them. He periodically rotates the eggs so they receive enough oxygen. In approximately 2-4 weeks after fertilization, the male carries the eggs on his back via a sticky mucous. Because tadpoles can be cannibalistic, he takes each one to a different site; common sites are water that has collected in bromeliads, hollow trees, and bamboo stalks. Tadpoles are fed unfertilized eggs provided by the female. Tadpoles become adults in approximately 2-3 months.

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Roger
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Roger


Country/State : Portugal
Age : 50
Joined : 2010-08-20
Posts : 35776

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySun Jan 28, 2024 1:37 pm

Kikimalou wrote:
Roger wrote:
I remember in 1986 when in my hometown there was talk of an imminent locust plague. As an 11-year-old boy at that time, in an era without the internet and with little interest in television, the stories from the elders about swarms of locusts blocking out the sunlight were somewhat enchanting to me. The truth is, I never witnessed those "clouds", but one day I stepped out of my house and saw the same tree as always, but this time it was teeming with locusts. They weren't the usual locusts; they were larger and seemed somewhat more intimidating. I never had a fear of insects, but I felt something strange, like when we receive visits from people who are completely different from what we're accustomed to.
I can see on the internet that the most recent locust plague in my region was caused by desert locusts, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was this species during my childhood. Since I was a child, I used to catch grasshoppers to keep them as pets for a while, but they were naturally very restless and panicky creatures, and I would end up releasing them. I didn't realize that it was a form of torture for the poor creatures; I just wanted to have a bouncy friend. Fortunately, I never had the bad habit of killing them, and everything I caught was returned to nature.
My only grasshopper figure is the Safari Smythsonian Insects one.

Nice model Blaine and impressive story Rogério Very Happy

Thanks Christophe! cheers

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Kikimalou
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Kikimalou


Country/State : Lille, FRANCE
Age : 60
Joined : 2010-04-01
Posts : 21139

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySun Jan 28, 2024 3:15 pm

bmathison1972 wrote:
Species: Oophaga lehmanni (Myers & Daly, 1976)
Common name(s): Lehmann's poison frog; red-banded poison frog
About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Kitan Club

I chose this one for my 1/1 Lehmann's poison frog, it has a great sculpt and painting
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sunny

sunny


Country/State : uk
Age : 34
Joined : 2019-08-09
Posts : 2060

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySun Jan 28, 2024 4:48 pm

what a beautiful model frog this is!
I really like the pose
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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptySun Jan 28, 2024 5:12 pm

cheers cheers

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyMon Jan 29, 2024 11:42 am

Species: Pediculus humanus Linnaeus, 1758
Common name(s): human head-and-body louse

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Sbabam
Series: Piccoli Mostri
Year of Production: 2018
Size/Scale: Body length approximately 7.0 cm for a scale of 47:1-35:1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the second time we've seen P. humanus in the Museum. This is a rubbery 'bean-bag' style figure. Not something I would normally collect these days, but as a professional clinical parasitologist, I am somewhat of a completist for arthropod ectoparasites. I must thank my friend who let me photograph it on his head LOL.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Cosmopolitan
Habitat: Head lice (P. h. capitis) spend their entire lives living among human hair, especially on the scalp; body lice (P. h. humanus) primarily live off of the host on fomites (bedding, clothing, etc.) and only migrate to the human body to feed.
Diet: Nymphs and adults feed on human blood
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Not Evaluated
Miscellaneous Notes: There are two extant species of Pediculus, P. humanus, which infects humans, and P. schaeffi, which infects chimpanzees. It is believed the two species diverged approximately 5.6 MYA when the ancestor of modern humans and chimps diverged. There is a 'third species' of Pediculus on New World monkeys, P. mjobergi, but it is now believed that species is P. humanus capitis that made a host switch from humans to monkeys after humans migrated across the Bering Strait and settled in the Americas. It is generally believed the split between head lice and body lice occurred when humans started wearing clothing. Some molecular studies place this divergence some time between 83,000 and 170,000 years ago, although it has also been suggested that there was not a single historical divergence but instead an ongoing sequence of interactions between head and body lice.

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Jill

Jill


Country/State : USA
Age : 39
Joined : 2021-04-13
Posts : 2345

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyMon Jan 29, 2024 6:53 pm

The poison frog figure and the photo are both really nicely done, he looks quite alive. And the louse information was really interesting, I had never considered the evolutionary course of human specific parasites and how they would change with us, that's so neat! Though judging by the size of the louse in the photo, we are losing ground to them. Wink
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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyTue Jan 30, 2024 11:35 am

Jill wrote:
.... judging by the size of the louse in the photo, we are losing ground to them. Wink

Ha!


Next up:



Species: Bombyx mori (Linnaeus, 1758)
Common name(s): domestic silkworm moth

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Shine-G
Series: Larvae Moei
Years of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Larva approximately 6.5 cm long, for a scale of 1.3:1. Pupa approximately 5.7 cm and in relative scale with larva.
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: This is the third time we've seen B. mori in the Museum. The pupa is depicted out of it's silken cocoon, perhaps to represent a food item (see below)?

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Species originated in Southeast Asia; now bred throughout the world, especially in Europe, Asia, and Australia
Habitat: Broadleaf forests
Diet: Larvae feed primarily on Morus alba (white mulberry); adults do not feed
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Domesticated
Miscellaneous Notes: Bombyx mori is wholly domesticated, and cannot survive without human care. In addition to being raised for silk, B. mori is an edible insect in some cultures. In particular, pupae are eaten in India (Polu, leta), Korea (beondegi), China (jiang can), Japan (tsukudani), Vietnam (nhộng tằm), and Thailand (nhon mhai).

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bmathison1972

bmathison1972


Country/State : Salt Lake City, UT
Age : 52
Joined : 2010-04-13
Posts : 6683

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyWed Jan 31, 2024 11:35 am

Species: Esox lucius Linnaeus, 1758
Common name(s): northern pike

About the Figure:
Manufacturer: Replica Toy Fish
Series: 3 Inch Collection
Year of Production: unknown
Size/Scale: Body length approximately 8.5 cm for a scale of 1:2.9-1:16.1
Frequency of species in toy/figure form (at time of posting): Rare
Miscellaneous Notes: Replica Toy Fish produced this species in 3- and 6-inch versions. Esox lucius was also produced by Bullyland in 2002.

About the Animal:
Geographic distribution: Holarctic
Habitat: Freshwater lakes, ponds, reservoirs, montane rivers, sluggish streams; occasionally brackish water
Diet: Juveniles feed on aquatic invertebrates; adults are generalist predators on fish, invertebrates, small water birds. Cannibalism common.
IUCN Status (at time of posting): Least Concern
Miscellaneous Notes: Esox lucius is found in most any freshwater, and sometimes brackish water, habitat throughout its range, as long as adequate food and vegetation is present. The northern pike has a very broad range of tolerances for water temperature, clarity, oxygen content, and in some cases, salinity.

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widukind

widukind


Country/State : Germany
Age : 48
Joined : 2010-12-30
Posts : 45625

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PostSubject: Re: Mathison Museum of Natural History   Mathison Museum of Natural History - Page 6 EmptyWed Jan 31, 2024 1:11 pm

cheers cheers

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