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Join Patreon to access exclusive images: https://www.patreon.com/ImitationalismAI

#onepiece #anime #beautiful #manga #ai #aiart #

Music by Howie Xo from Pixabay

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Hot Girls in Hot Bath: Al Art Lookbook [4K] #ai #aigirl #lookbook #love #aimodel #ailookbook #ai


Al Art Lookbook: Hot Girls in Hot Bath... [4K]



DISCLAIMER: This professional video is dedicated to art and fashion for the purpose of demonstrating an artistic image and also to demonstrate clothing in an appropriate setting, and is not intended for sexXual gratification.


Explore the fusion of fashion and Al as virtual models showcase a variety of stylish looks. Each frame highlights the creativity behind the designs. Immerse yourself in a world of design and elegance in stunning [4K] quality!


#aigirl #aibeauty #aimodel #aiart #ailookbook #lookbook #aifashion #virtualbeauty #aigirlfriend #aiartfashion #digitalmodel #aiartstyle



©️ Created by Ai X Pose

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14 Views · 4 months ago

4k Ai art lookbook, A beautiful lady in shorts, #aimodal #ailookbook #aigirl #ai #aiart #aibeauty


Ai X lookbook: A beautiful lady in shorts, [4K] #aimodal #ailookbook #aigirl #ai #aiart #aibeauty



EXCLUSIVE CONTENT https://www.patreon.co...



#ailookbook #aigirl #ai #aiart #aibeauty #aigirlfriend #aiwoman #aimodel #aimodelgirl #aifashion #ailady #aigallery #aiartgallery #fashion #aifashion

©️ Created by Al X Pose

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14 Views · 4 months ago

The Barrier Reef is a tough place to live, even for a shark. Extreme tides and high temperatures leave the reef as a series of rockpools at low tide. Bigger sharks are forced into deeper water, leaving the Epaulette shark alone to exploit the riches of the reef undisturbed. Unlike any other shark, the Epaulette has an uncanny ability to walk. It uses its fins as prototype legs to crawl over the exposed reef between rockpools that contain its prey. But no shark can breathe out of water. This is not a problem for the epaulette shark though, as it can survive 60 times longer without oxygen than humans can! In order to do this the little shark slows its breathing and heart rate and powers down its brain. These incredible physiological changes mean the Epaulette shark has more time to hunt on the reef before the tide rises and the bigger sharks move back in. This shark is truly the master of the intertidal environment.

#CalmingMusic #CoralReef #Shark

vxtube
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The tasselled wobbegong is a flat, well-camouflaged shark that sits motionless on the seafloor, waiting for unsuspecting prey to swim a bit too close. It is a member of the carpet shark family, named for their seafloor-dwelling behavior.
With its blotchy coloration and the highly branched skin flaps that disguise its mouth and head, the tasselled wobbegong perfectly blends in to its surroundings on coral reefs along the northern shore of Australia and throughout the islands of New Guinea and Indonesia.

#CalmingMusic #Shark #CoralReef

vxtube
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The South American population of this species migrates in large numbers, though no one yet knows where those birds spend the winter.
Very little is known about where and why birds migrate at tropical latitudes, as well as what the risks to survival are during such movements.
Increasing threats to these birds' survival, such as urbanization, hunting and pesticides, combined with a lack of information about their annual cycle.
#Hummingbirds
#Toucans
#Manakin
#Tanager
#Hoatzin
#Macaw
#Motmots
#Woodpeckers
#Resplendent Quetzal
etc

#CalmingSound

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14 Views · 4 months ago

The red-billed hornbill (Tockus erythrorhynchus) are native to Africa, order Bucerotiformes, live in the savanna. Southern Mauritania to Somalia is the range of the northern red-billed hornbill. The red-billed hornbill's habitat is in arid savanna, open woodlands, and thorn scrubs. Even though they are relatively large birds, they are one of the smaller hornbill species, measuring about 42 cm in length, including the long tail. Zazu is an African red-billed hornbill species that appears in the animated movie, The Lion King.

The underparts and heads of this species are white. On the forehead, there is a smokey stripe that extends over the crown. Dark brown is the color of the back, with a white stripe running along the middle. The wings are mostly a deep brown color with prominent white spots. The long tail is a dark brown color. They have characteristic orange-red jaws and are slightly curved. Female has smaller red bill than male. However, the female's red bill is smaller than the male's. Adults are duller, although juveniles are comparable. It owns a red bill that is straighter and smaller than adults. These peculiarly curved bills are used for courtship behaviors, foraging, and breaking out of the mud-sealed nest holes.

These birds have short wings and fly with a flap-and-glide flying pattern. While clinging to a tall tree trunk around a nest site, the long tail can be employed as a brace.

These birds are omnivorous, feeding insects, seeds, fruit, bird’s eggs as their diet. Small rodents are also included in their diet. Because the tongues are too small to manage food trapped at the point of the beak, they throw it back towards the throat with a twist of the head. They feed mainly on the ground. Outside of the breeding season, they graze primarily mostly on the ground and establish flocks. It eats in flocks of 40-80 birds or pairs on the ground. These gregarious and territorial birds, hunting for ground-dwelling insects, live in small family groups or pairs. These birds play a crucial part in sustaining a healthy ecosystem by helping to prevent the increase in the population of insects.
It does most of its foraging on the ground, rarely hawking prey aerially.

Mongooses and red-billed hornbills or and yellow-billed hornbills hunt together; the mongooses smell out and expose insects, whereas the hornbills keep an eye out for predators and emit alarm sounds. Red-billed Hornbill has predators, such as large raptors and adders.

These birds will defend their territory against members of their own species, but they may have overlapping territories with other hornbill species.

The red-billed hornbill nests in natural tree cavities. Females usually lay three to six eggs. These birds have an interesting parental strategy. She seals herself and the nest off with a cement-like substance made of mud, droppings, and fruit pulp. A narrow opening allows the male to transfer food to her, and later to her and the chicks as they remain sealed inside.

The female will incubate the two to seven eggs for around 24 days and she will remain in the nest with the chicks until the nest becomes too small. At this point, the female will let herself out and reseal the nest with the chicks inside. Then both parents feed the chicks together. Chicks fly well on emerging from the nest and never return to it, although they may remain with their parents for six months. The lifespan is about 15 years.

Their population is stable but they are vulnerable to habitat destruction. Population The global population size has not been officially quantified, but the species is reported to be widespread and locally common. Status IUCN: Least Concern.

#Wildlife #ParentalStrategy #YellowBilledHornbill

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14 Views · 4 months ago

Costa's hummingbird (Calypte costae) is a bird species in the hummingbird family Trochilidae. It breeds in the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts of California and Arizona. While it naturally occurs in the western United States and Mexico, it is known to wander towards the east and north as far as Alaska and Canada. It leaves the desert at the peak of summer and moves to chaparral, scrubs, or woodland habitat.

This species is very small, a mature adult growing to only 7.6–8.9 cm in length, a wingspan of 11 cm, and an average weight of 3.05 g for males and 3.22 g for females. The male Costa’s Hummingbird has mostly green upper parts, its back, sides, and belly. It has an iridescent violet crown and white patches under its gorged throat and tail. The throat patch extends to the sides of the throat. Its wings are small and have black tails and wings. Its vibrant purple cap and throat, with throat feathers flaring out and back behind its head, is cited as its most remarkable feature. The female, which is comparably larger in size, is not that remarkable as male. It has a greyish-green crown and back, and a white belly and breast. Its flanks are ‘buffy’ and the tips of its outer tail feathers are white. Sometimes, its throat has some dark feathers. The juvenile Costa’s Hummingbird closely resembles the adult female, with tray-buff edging on the feathers of the upper body. Also, instead of having a singly rounded tail, juvenile Costa’s Hummingbird has a doubly rounded tail.

Like all other hummingbird species, Costa's hummingbird feeds on flower nectar and any tiny insects that it happens to find in the flower petals. At flowers, usually feeds while hovering. They would visit desert natives like agave, chuparosa, desert honeysuckle, and fairy-duster. To catch small insects, may fly out and capture them in midair, or hover to pluck them from foliage.

The male Costa's hummingbird's courtship display is a spirited series of swoops and arcing dives, carefully utilizing a proper angle to the sun to show off his violet plumage to impress prospective mates. Males perform a looping dive display to entice females to mate with them and also to threaten intruding hummingbirds. They fly straight towards the female, make several loops around her and then fly straight up into the air, returning in a broad U-shaped dive. During the dive, they sing a high-pitched whistle. They continue to loop around and perform dives for the female without pause, sometimes for up to 4 minutes, but usually, the display lasts for about 35 seconds. If that was not enough to attract the female’s attention, they also hover directly in front of her with their gorget flared.

One male may mate with several females. Nest site is in rather open or sparsely left shrub or small tree, sometimes in yucca or cactus, usually 2-8 feet above the ground. Placed on a horizontal or diagonal branch. The female constructs a small cup-shaped nest out of plant fibers, down, and at times spider silk, coated with lichen to hold it together. The nest is situated on a yucca stalk or tree limb. The female lays just two eggs, which are white in color, which she will incubate for 15 to 18 days before the young hatch. The young leave the nest after 20 to 23 days. Amazingly, the mother Costa can survive without water throughout the nesting period. Egg and nest predation is the major source of mortality at most sites. Important predators are snakes, small mammals, jays, orioles, and lizards. Adults may be preyed on by Greater Roadrunners and thrashers.

All hummingbirds have a super-fast metabolism and can die quickly if their body temperature isn’t maintained. In the desert at night, the temperatures sometimes dip low. They have a special adaptation called Torpor, a semi-hibernation-like state which allows the body temperature to reduce and the heart rate to slow to 50 beats per minute. A normal heartbeat is 500 to 900 beats per minute. Slowing down their metabolism in this way allows these birds to survive the cold nights.

The Costa’s Hummingbird has a ‘Least Concern’ status under the IUCN Classification System. The IUCN says that the species appears to have a stable population trend and a very large range, which signifies that it does not approach the thresholds for vulnerability. Of all the states in the US where the Costa’s have been observed, only New Mexico has listed the species as threatened.

The most serious threat to the species is loss of habitat, primarily coastal scrub and Sonoran desert scrub. A lot of these areas have been converted for human uses, such as agriculture and residential development.

#Wildlife #SonoraDesert #Mating

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14 Views · 4 months ago

The lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) is a species of shark from the family Carcharhinidae. The Lemon shark lives in the tropical and subtropical waters of the coastal areas of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Lemon sharks are named for the yellow-brown skin that helps them camouflage in the sandy, tropical waters they inhabit. They stay in moderately shallow water, normally going no deeper than 80 meters. They are often found in shallow waters near coasts and islands, by coral reefs, mangroves, bays, and sometimes even river mouths.

The lemon shark commonly attains a length of 2.4 to 3.1 m and a weight up to 90 kg by adulthood. They are slightly smaller in size than the whale shark, which is considered to be the biggest of the shark species.

Lemon sharks have a flattened head along with a short broad snout. They have two equal-sized dorsal fins and their yellow coloring serves as a camouflage when they are swimming on the seafloor filled with sand.

Like any other species of shark, have electroreceptors concentrated in their heads, called the ampullae of Lorenzini. These receptors detect electrical pulses emitted by potential prey and allow these nocturnal feeders to sense their prey in the dark. The skin of female lemon sharks is almost three times thicker than that of males.

The lemon shark is viviparous, meaning it gives birth to live young rather than eggs. Embryos develop inside the mother for up to 12 months until the female seeks shelter in a shallow nursery during spring or summer to give birth. A litter of lemon sharks may be as large as 17 pups. Pups remain in the nursery for several years, sheltered from larger predators, and feed on nutrients from nearby mangroves.

The mangrove areas that lemon sharks inhabit are often referred to as their nursery sites. Nursery grounds can be defined generally as habitats that enhance the growth and survival of juveniles. A nursery site is best defined as the most common area sharks are encountered, the location sharks tend to remain after birth or frequently return to, and the habitat used by shark groups repeatedly for several years. Lemon sharks display natal philopatry, whereby a mother will return to where she was born to have her own pups.

One theory is that lemon sharks select mangrove habitats due to the abundance of prey that resides there, while another theory posits that mangroves provide a safe haven from adult lemon sharks that occasionally feed on juvenile sharks and are unable to enter the shallow waters.

Lemon sharks reach sexual maturity at around 6 years of age and may live for up to 27 years. Female sharks deposit their pups in shallow, coastal waters, and they live in these reef and mangrove nurseries for up to four years. As adults, they move to deeper waters of up to about 90 meters deep.

When it comes to hunting, the Lemon shark is known to be very patient. They are able to use their yellow coloring to help them successfully hide in their natural habitat. They are often found swimming along the sand of the bottom of the water so they blend in easily. This makes it easy to hide from predators and also to be able to find prey.

The Lemon shark's diet consists mainly of bony fish and crustaceans. Catfish, mullet, jacks, croakers, porcupine fish, cowfish, guitarfish, stingrays, eagle rays, crabs, and crayfish make up most of the Lemon shark's diet. Also, this species will eat sea birds and smaller sharks. Lemon sharks will eat until full with the rate of digestion depending on the amount of food consumed at a single time. Intraspecific predation, or cannibalism, of juvenile lemon sharks by larger conspecifics, has also been documented.

They also tend to prefer prey when it is more abundant and available. Lemon sharks feed selectively on species that are slower and more easily captured by using a stalking technique.

Lemon sharks are known to be social creatures, who move in groups or loose aggregations. They form groups based on similar size or sex. Living in groups helps to enhance their communication further and intensifies courtship and predatory behavior.

Since Lemon sharks can blend into their surroundings so well. they are able to do fairly well in captivity. That is not usually the case with species of sharks.

Lemon sharks do not represent a large threat to humans. The International Shark Attack File lists 10 unprovoked lemon shark bites, none of which were fatal.

Lemon sharks are listed as a 'near threatened' species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The destruction of the mangrove, which is one of their primary habitats, and the practice of 'shark finning, a practice where their dorsal fins are used to make fin soup and eaten by several communities, have decreased their number form the world gradually. They have also been killed for their meat which is considered a delicacy in several communities and their skin which is used for leather by humans.

#Nature #Mangrove # #NurseryGrounds

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14 Views · 4 months ago

Polymita is a genus of large, air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Helminthoglyptidae. These snails are endemic to Cuba.

Polymita inhabits the subtropical hardwood forests growing on the coastal plains and mountains of the Eastern end of Cuba. The Polymita displays a marked preference for certain tree species. The preferred or host tree is; Hicaco (Chrysobalanus icaco). Other host trees are varieties of Poisonwood (Metopium toxifera, brownei ), Gumbo Limbo (Bursera simarouba), Hicaquillo (Coccoloba retusa), and other smooth-barked hardwoods.

The Polymita snails feed on the confervoid algae, fungi, sooty molds, and lichens which grow on subtropical hardwood trees and shrubs. Polymita does not eat the leaves or bark of the host tree. Feeding paths may be seen where the snail has scraped the algae and lichen growths with their radula. The quality of the habitat, that is, the amount of food and type of food, affects the shell growth of the Polymita. The Polymita is a welcome guest in the Coffee and Guava orchards of the Oriente province as they eat the sooty molds on the leaves and branches of the trees.

It’s no surprise that land snails like Polymita would be so successful on an island. With the ability to secrete a mucus seal around their shell openings, these invertebrates can go dormant for long periods without drying out. This makes them good travelers, hardy enough to survive a trip at sea on vegetation that comes loose from the mainland during a storm or flood.

The beauty of these striped snails is a many-splendored thing, and differences in color occur not just between species, but also within individuals of a single species. Some scientists suggest that the variations might confuse predators, preventing them from homing in on these snails as a predictable meal, but the question is far from settled.

Polymita is preyed upon by a variety of vertebrates and invertebrates; birds, rats, and the most destructive enemies of all; bulldozers and the ensuing destruction of habitat. Habitat destruction is by far the greatest threat to the Polymita.

If Cuba is the paradise for land-shells, Polymita must be Adam and Eve's Apple. It has such a beautiful species that it seduces the human mind. Both for good (well-illustrated and emblematic for the Cuban malacofauna) and for worse (because of its beauty its species are being over-collected and used as souvenirs). The threats by human activities have plagued these species and eventually may drive them into extinction.

#Wildlife #BeautifulSpecies #Cuba

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The Fake Human Evolution Theory.🤯
Stellar Realities Shorts
#shorts #youtubeshorts #shortsvideo #shortsfeed #conspiracy #theory #evolution

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The Simpsons predicted 2025!🤯 #shorts #simpsons #predictions2025

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What People Think Satan Looks Like? 🤯 #satan #shorts #god #viral

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The Simpsons predicted 2025!🤯 #shorts #simpsons #predictions2025

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The Simpsons predicted 2025!🤯 #shorts #simpsons #predictions2025

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2025 Might Be the end of the world?😳
Stellar Realities Shorts
#shorts #youtubeshorts #shortsvideo #shortsfeed #extinction #2012 #endoftheworld #massextinction #solarstroms #solarsystem




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