starting off the next hybrid: a weasel
TOPIC | Draw Hybrid Creatures
@Fr0stBites
@scrim
@SilverSong92
[img]https://i.imgur.com/7AFCJBF.jpg[/img]
I seem to have ended up with some sort of chunky pastel weasel?
[b]Mustela Lucecoloratum[/b]
Bonus animal: Nymphapolypa Hemipteronata, the Pearly Whisp (I was really feeling the Octopus/kiwi/Pom combination)
[img]https://i.imgur.com/YX8HhNu.jpg[/img]
@Fr0stBites
@scrim
@SilverSong92
I seem to have ended up with some sort of chunky pastel weasel?
Mustela Lucecoloratum
Bonus animal: Nymphapolypa Hemipteronata, the Pearly Whisp (I was really feeling the Octopus/kiwi/Pom combination)
@scrim
@SilverSong92
I seem to have ended up with some sort of chunky pastel weasel?
Mustela Lucecoloratum
Bonus animal: Nymphapolypa Hemipteronata, the Pearly Whisp (I was really feeling the Octopus/kiwi/Pom combination)
Hel || College Student || She/Her
I would love to see the result of whoever tackles that one :D
Skip ~
Skip ~
I would love to see the result of whoever tackles that one :D
Skip ~
Skip ~
@BirdBagel @SandBoa @LoversMasque @SilverSong92
May I introduce you to the Leaf-throated waterwader?
[img]https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/252240702665261056/690925086307516456/Leaf-throated_waterthreader.png[/img]
[i]An elusive creature, Leaf-throated waterwaders have puzzled scientists for years. Though initially skittish, these creatures are by no means odinary prey animals. When threatened they inflate their leaf-like throath sack and screech loudly, startling predators long enough to either flee or attack. Leaf-throated waterwaders have been observed to target a predator's eyes with their unusually long beaks.
The leaf-throated waterwader gets its name from the way it hunts. It can stand still with its talons in water for days, its beak only barely under. When an unsuspecting fish comes close to the leaf-like appendages growing from the creature's beak, the leaf-throated waterwader will quickly snatch the fish up and drag it to the shore, where it will proceed to kill its prey with a swift peck to the gills, strong enough to sever the fish's spine.
@BirdBagel @SandBoa @LoversMasque @SilverSong92
May I introduce you to the Leaf-throated waterwader?
An elusive creature, Leaf-throated waterwaders have puzzled scientists for years. Though initially skittish, these creatures are by no means odinary prey animals. When threatened they inflate their leaf-like throath sack and screech loudly, startling predators long enough to either flee or attack. Leaf-throated waterwaders have been observed to target a predator's eyes with their unusually long beaks.
The leaf-throated waterwader gets its name from the way it hunts. It can stand still with its talons in water for days, its beak only barely under. When an unsuspecting fish comes close to the leaf-like appendages growing from the creature's beak, the leaf-throated waterwader will quickly snatch the fish up and drag it to the shore, where it will proceed to kill its prey with a swift peck to the gills, strong enough to sever the fish's spine.
May I introduce you to the Leaf-throated waterwader?
An elusive creature, Leaf-throated waterwaders have puzzled scientists for years. Though initially skittish, these creatures are by no means odinary prey animals. When threatened they inflate their leaf-like throath sack and screech loudly, startling predators long enough to either flee or attack. Leaf-throated waterwaders have been observed to target a predator's eyes with their unusually long beaks.
The leaf-throated waterwader gets its name from the way it hunts. It can stand still with its talons in water for days, its beak only barely under. When an unsuspecting fish comes close to the leaf-like appendages growing from the creature's beak, the leaf-throated waterwader will quickly snatch the fish up and drag it to the shore, where it will proceed to kill its prey with a swift peck to the gills, strong enough to sever the fish's spine.