A pair of aracari toucans on the edge of the Pantanal in Brazil. Known for their bright markings and large bills, chestnut-eared aracaris are social creatures, typically travelling in groups of up to 15
Photograph: Paul Goldstein/SWNS
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Someone let me design art figurines 🐦
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OHHH THE CURLY FEATHERS!!!
do you have any more curly-feathered friends????? :DDDD
OH oh oh yess yes i do!! here's a couple...
Wattled Curassow (Crax globulosa), male, family Cracidae, order Galliformes, from northern and NW South America
ENDANGERED.
photograph via: Wattled Curassow - White Oak Conservation (whiteoakwildlife.org)
Curl-crested Araçari (Pteroglossus beauharnaisii) eat a tasty fruit!!!, family Ramphastidae, order Picidae, from West-central South America
photograph by Jim Frazee
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Leucistic Yellow-throated Toucan
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#ToucanTuesday:
Handle Spout Vessel in Form of a Toucan
Moche culture, North Coast Peru, 100 BCE–500 CE
Ceramic & pigment
22.9 × 17.2 cm (9 × 6 3/4 in.)
The Art Institute of Chicago 1957.406
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chirp chirp!!
Trade with victilly_arts 🐣
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Marchirp day 26: Rainforest. Rainforests were 4th grade me's favorite biome, and the toco toucan (the biggest toucan) was my favorite bird (red eyed treefrog was my favorite frog/animal but that's a different art challenge).
[Image ID: a toucan, a black bird with an orange beak the same length as its body, with its head turned upward sitting at the top of a tree on a partly cloudy day. End ID]
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Black-billed Mountain-Toucan (Andigena nigrirostris) returning to the nest, family Ramphastidae, order Piciformes, Colombia
photograph by marcello galleano
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