Gymnothorax undulatus
Undulated Moray
Image source
Status: Least concern
Distribution: Widely found in the warm, tropical waters of the Red Sea, Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean all the way to Central America.
seen from Hungary
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States
Gymnothorax undulatus
Undulated Moray
Image source
Status: Least concern
Distribution: Widely found in the warm, tropical waters of the Red Sea, Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean all the way to Central America.
American Oystercatcher with juvenile (Haematopus palliatus) - (c) SaritaWolf - please do not repost
"It wasn’t a picture of me as jesus it was a picture of me as a doctor because I help a lot of people." - Trump
Moonrat (Echinosorex gymnurus)
@ azriealliamat
Hello! I have a collection of rodents (pictures). Do you have any suggestions for additions
yknow, i keep forgetting that capybaras are rodents. i see them and i think that's gotta be some other type of thing but no! big rat.
look at them go, it's just like new york
[https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/48731150]
Capybara || Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris
Observed in Brazil
Least Concern in location of observation
West African lungfish (Protopterus annectens) Film: The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) IUCN Status: Least Concern Shown as captive in the film but presumably supposed to be wild-caught in the local area (Brazil), where they are not native but rather South American lungfish are, and the filming location (Florida & California) do not have native lungfish either. I'm not super confident in IDing lungfish species, especially in black and white, but its head shape seems more in line with mottled and West African lungfish than the South American lungfish, and the patterning (or what I can see of it) seems more like that of a West African than mottled lungfish
The Ides Of March
Conservation status: Least Concern
Classification: Non-native, non-invasive
This meme population has persisted in the pre-internet ecosystem since 44 BC, but for over a millennium the meme remained at very low population levels. Introduction to the theater habitats of England in approximately 1599 by an early meme ecologist (also notable for the introduction of such memes as Damned Spot and To Be Or Not To Be) caused a population boom that has led to the continued stable population of Ides of March despite the extinction or near extinction of the Ides of other months and all known Nones and Kalends.
The Ides Of March, like many other calendar memes such as April 25th (The Perfect Date), Thursday The 20th, and It's October 3rd, has a life cycle that can confuse amateur memeologists. These memes benefit greatly from the presence of scheduled posts in the ecosystem, appearing absent until their highly specific time, when the memes all bloom simultaneously and dominate the dashes of many users.