this is a dessert!
minty chocolate mousse with cookie crumble and a water cake

Love Begins
Three Goblin Art
Today's Document
One Nice Bug Per Day
Noah Kahan

titsay
untitled
Cosmic Funnies

Kaledo Art
Misplaced Lens Cap
Fai_Ryy
🪼
Claire Keane
No title available
art blog(derogatory)

No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
noise dept.
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
seen from Germany
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@xmadison-taylorx
this is a dessert!
minty chocolate mousse with cookie crumble and a water cake
Zoos prevent extinction. This is why I support zoos. This is why the world should support zoos.
Meme credit goes to the zookeepers at www.facebook.com/ZoosSavingSpecies @zoossavingspecies
Good zoos save species!!!
students from hong kong, san francisco and san diego are raising awareness about the state of ocean wildlife, which is threatened by ocean acidification from climate change, unsustainable fishing practices, habitat destruction, and pollution.
according to a recent study published in the journal science, ocean life faces mass extinction. a team of scientists, in a groundbreaking analysis of data from hundreds of sources, have concluded that humans are on the verge of causing unprecedented damage to the oceans and the animals living in them. (x, x, x)
In Honor of Earth Day 2017: PBS Nature’s Ask Box is now open for the next round of Tumblr’s IssueTime on Conservation and Climate Change!
NATURE is so excited to work with Tumblr and the wonderful scientists, biologists and filmmakers who’ve agreed to be on our panel so that you can learn more about the environmental issues we’re currently facing. Dig deeper into the issues with full episodes of NATURE, now streaming!
The Panelists:
Arnaud Desbiez is a conservation biologist who has been conducting research in the Brazilian Pantanal since 2002. He has worked on topics ranging from sustainable use of resources to species ecological research and community development programs. In the Brazilian Pantanal, his work focused on the interaction between native and alien species, the sustainable use of forage resources and the ecology of several mammal species. In 2010 he started and now coordinates the Pantanal Giant Armadillo Project. Arnaud is featured in our most recent episode, Hotel Armadillo.
Patrick Gonzalez is Principal Climate Change Scientist of the U.S. National Park Service and a Visiting Scholar at the University of California, Berkeley. A forest ecologist, he conducts applied research on climate change and works with national parks to adapt resource management to climate change. Patrick has conducted and published field research on climate change in Africa, Latin America, and the United States and has served as a lead author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the organization awarded a share of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. Watch our recent episode about the challenges facing Yosemite, now streaming!
Chris Morgan is an ecologist, conservationist, educator, TV host/narrator and film producer specializing in international bear research and conservation. For more than 20 years, he has worked as a wildlife researcher, wilderness guide and environmental educator on every continent where bears exist. Chris has narrated 13 films for Nature and was host and narrator for Siberian Tiger Quest as well as being the featured character in Nature’s three-part series ‘Bears of the Last Frontier.’ In 2015, he was also host and narrator for Nature’s Three-part ‘Animal Homes’ series and was featured in ‘The Last Orangutan Eden.’ Learn more about Chris’ story with this interview we conducted with him.
Learn More about Chris
Joe Pontecorvo is an award-winning producer, writer, and cinematographer. For the past two decades, he has traveled the globe; tracking Siberian tigers in the Russian Far East, living among grizzlies in the wilds of Alaska, and following orangutans through Indonesia’s peat swamp forest. All told, he has produced 14 broadcast documentaries for multiple networks, including National Geographic, Discovery Channel, and PBS. For his most recent project before ‘Yosemite,’ PBS Nature’s ‘Snow Monkeys,’ Joe and his wife, Nim Pontecorvo, spent nearly two years filming a troop of Japanese macaques in Japan’s Shiga Highlands. Go behind-the-scenes into the making of that film here.
Learn More about Joe
Happy Earth Day! Check back Saturday for answers!
Coloring to the OST of Power Rangers has been the best de-stresser I have had in years
Ummm
I may or may not have come home with a pet snake. . .
Screaming.
It took me almost 15 minutes to pose this toad for this one shot. . . Pretty sure my mother thinks I was murdering someone outside
Leisure.
I sleep too much to be this tired
i wonder if you ever talk about missing me to anyone.