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Wildlife & Railway Art - Frédérique Lucas

@namu-the-orca / namu-the-orca.tumblr.com

Art and other miscellaneous ramblings. I wish the railway to wildlife balance was even, but I have to admit it's mostly wildlife for now. If you want trains and nothing but trains, see my sideblog.
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The Bottlenose Whales

Happy new year everyone! Sorry for the quiet, I’ve been busy finishing two big projects. One of the things I loved about both of them is how many beaked whales I got to paint! I’ve never had much chance to illustrate them, so it was high time to make up for that. And what better way to start off 2022 than with some big, thick, and CHONKY bottlenose whales?

The Northern bottlenose is the biggest - adults can reach almost 10 metres in length and weigh some 6 to 7 tons! While male beaked whales are famous for their tusks, Northern bottlenoses’ are tiny. Their huge, square heads are far more prominent, and indeed this is their choice of weapon: males will use it to headbutt each other in fights. Male Southern bottlenose whales appear quite different. Their melons are smaller and more forward facing - not quite the battering ram the northerners wear - and their bodies are completely covered in rake marks, revealing a different fighting strategy. Theirs is the traditional beaked whale way of going tusk-to-tusk. It’s been said that males can bear so many scars they look almost white from a distance.

And then comes the Longman’s beaked whale - not really a bottlenose whale pur sang, but rather a namesake based on looks. They are a surprisingly recent discovery: they were only identified in the early 2000′s! Before then mysterious tales of Southern bottlenose whales in tropical waters had intrigued scientists. Longman’s beaked whale was already known, but only from two skulls. No one knew what they looked like. It wasn’t until 2003 when two stranded whales were identified through DNA, and the species’ appearance was first described. People turned to the sightings of “tropical bottlenose whales”, and concluded they were one and the same.

It is often said Longman’s look like Southern bottlenose whales: both have a light-coloured melon. However this only goes for immature Longman’s, adults look very different. Females become uniform grey, with a lighter, often orange-tinged face. Males are more of an enigma - one study observed a few ghostly light grey animals surfacing amongst a pod. They assumed these could be adult males. Sadly I can’t find any photos besides the grainy black-and-white ones this paper holds, and to my knowledge no adult male has ever stranded. So until then their appearance (and my illustration) is something of a guess. There’s still so much to learn about these animals.

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orkyydorky

Hyperoodon ampullatus

What strange creatures. I couldn't find any photographs of a baby bottlenose whale, so this is my artist interpretation. Genuinely want to see an actual photograph of a newly-born bottlenose whale tho

What a wonderful piece, I love those colours. Gives a real mystical feel to it.. this should be in a book or something ♥ As for the baby bottlenose whale - there are pictures!

This is what a fresh newborn looks like (photos © Vicki Thayes)

Note that there’s some discoloration due to post-mortem darkening. Here’s a cute little live baby, swimming with mom! You can really see how much more starkly marked they are than the adults, especially with their cute creamy melons (photo © Sascha Hooker)

When they get a bit older they turn to the ‘chubby baby’ phase; the neonate twofold colour pattern fades in favour of a more adult-looking plain brownish grey (photo © Gudmann on Flickr)

Note though that while they are still babies, they are already 5 metres (16.5 ft) long and weigh some two thousand kilos (4400 pounds). These guys are HUGE.

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I’ve been so busy with the illustrations.. I all but forgot to keep you guys updated on them! Six new cetaceans have joined the ranks of the MARS (Marine Animal Response Society) commission: five bulb-headed friends and one beauty ;) Although, they’re all beautiful if you ask me.

Most species will be by represented by a single image, but a few have separate illustrations for males and females, when the sexes differ significantly from each other. The northern bottlenose whales here are the first example of such a species. Today it’ll be the turn of another beaked whale pair, and a third illustration featuring another species.

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“Diversity”

Compared to other groups of animals, there aren’t all that many mammal species. But Cetacea, the order of the whales, with its mere 80-90 species is unusually small, even by mammal standards; primates for example have almost 400 species, and the order of the rodents has about 2200! And yet, despite their small numbers, there is such an incredible diversity between the whales, from the big and mighty bowhead whale to the small and sleek harbour porpoise. Not only do the depicted species illustrate this broad diversity in shapes and sizes, they also occur in a single geographical location for at least part of their ranges.

This is a really old drawing, but I still quite like it!

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