Can we get a group picture of the research coyotea?
These are both full of coyotes, I do not desire dragging them all out m'friend
Fine. Here’s the tub squad, not including more that I do not feel like pulling out

Can we get a group picture of the research coyotea?
These are both full of coyotes, I do not desire dragging them all out m'friend
Fine. Here’s the tub squad, not including more that I do not feel like pulling out
I was looking up javelina skulls and
another ‘pig’
Are police dogs like.. good. W regard to apprehension, detection, etc. Like are they a net positive for the community 😬 those dogs in the hands of People Like That makes me a little nervous tbh
So my opinion on this distinguishes amongst apprehension dogs and narcotics detection dogs and the misc other dogs
when sending in pets for tanning, sometimes owners will request that i don’t make an incision on the tail so that the leather doesn’t show and it looks more like it did in life. unfortunately, it is necessary for the tail to be completely split down to the tip in order to flesh off all the fat (there can be a lot more fat in a tail than you’d think!), and ensure proper degreasing, tanning, and softening of the skin. however, what can be done in lieu of leaving it unsplit is to sew up the incision after tanning! that way, the tail can both be properly tanned and the incision be invisible. the left is the underside of a cat tail with the incision not sewn, the right is the underside of a cat tail after it was sewn up.
*September 1st on Tumblr*
You can only reblog this once a year
Three male coyote skulls at varying ages. First one was only a few days old, second was about 5-6 months old, and the third is about a year and a half old.
Planet Earth II (2016) Episode 03 “Jungles” Directed by Emma Napper
Mega fauna and little mega fauna
a moose and two mini meese
Meeses pieces
a huge water monitor i tanned for a client. the first reptile i ever tanned, and quite a challenge! shaving it was a pain in the ass with all the ridges in the skin- i couldn’t just smoothly shave off the flesh in one swipe. and their skin isn’t very stretchy due to the hard scales so the leather didn’t turn out nearly as soft as a mammal. but it was a very interesting experience and i’m still pretty happy with how it came out!
Coyotes of East and West. The top coyote is a Mountain Coyote (Canis latrans lestes), and the bottom is an Eastern Coyote (Canis latrans var.). You can see how distinct Eastern Coyotes are compared to thier western cousins due to the hybridization with dogs, gray wolves, and Eastern wolves over the last few hundred years. When wolves were eradicated during early colonization, and pushed on more by the beaver fur trade, cattle ranching, and the gold rush, coyotes moved eastward, filling open food niches and hybridized with the other canids they met. This resulted with the current Eastern Coyote which have morphological traits similar to small Eastern wolves, though genetic analysis has shown traces of gray wolf and dog as well.
Pristine skull of Eucyon khoikhoi from Langebaanweeg (South Africa).
Eucyon khoikhoi marks a critical moment in the evolution of African jackals 5Ma, the moment when they began to diversify outside North America, becoming more diverse and common later in the Pleistocene, until they culminated in the four living species on the African continent: the side-striped jackal (Schaeffia adusta), the black-backed jackal (Lupulella mesomelas), the African golden wolf (Canis lupaster) and the Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis),”
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This poor bad.ger had its infraorbital foramen torn open like a ripped out earring. Bite, possibly.
New skulls 💖 there's a fox one and the two birds (I can't really tell what they are. I thought they could be black headed gulls since they had black feathers on their head left when I found them).
why do the seals pulls their heads into their body’s?? is it for warmth?? is it just to be cute ??? also. what do their neck bones look like? do they have bones ?!!?! do the bones stretch ?!?!
the ever-adorable Seal Neck Scrunch is a pretty unique feature to seals, but they don't actually need any special equipment to pull it off!
see, like all mammals, seals have the traditional seven neck vertebrae, but their necks ARE surprisingly long!
but we don't notice this in practice, because the natural resting position of a seal neck is in sort of an "s" shape:
this makes the seal neck look shorter than it really is, but their RIDICULOUSLY thick layer of blubber smooths their neck into a streamlined shape no matter what position the neck bones are in!
so when a seal has it's neck "in" and has entered Blob Mode, basically their actual neck is all coiled up in there like a heron's:
and when the neck is "out", the seal has just extended it to its actual length:
you can actually see this happening in motion if you know what to look for! THERE'S BONES MOVING IN THERE.