After hundreds of years of biological studies, people keep searching and finding new species of animals, birds, fish, and insects. Some of these creatures look so extraordinary that it’s difficult to believe we live on the same planet. It is incredible that these people don’t give up.
As indicated by certain researchers, Earth is home to around 8.7 million plant and creature species while 91 percent of ocean species and 86 percent of land species are yet to be found. It appears nature won't ever quit astounding us with its inventiveness and testing our creative mind. Here we have some novel creatures that look so excellent. Appaloosa, shading variety of pony famous in the United States. The variety is said to have dropped in the Nez Percé Indian region of North America from wild broncos, which thusly slid from Spanish ponies got by pilgrims. The name gets from the Palouse River of Idaho and Washington. The Appaloosa has a few particular shading examples and the entirety of the normal coat tones. A few Appaloosas have a strong tone aside from a white fix over the hips, scattered with little, round spots of a similar tone as the body. Others have an essential strong tone with white specks over the whole body or are white with hued spots.
Royal flycatchers can boast colorful crests giving them a distinctive "hammerhead" appearance. Uncommon, medium-sized, overall brown flycatcher of humid tropical forest in lowlands. Note the hammerhead crest—very rarely fully raised to reveal spectacular, flame-red and violet-blue fan, long bill, and pale cinnamon rump and tail. Usually found as singles or pairs in open mid-level canopy, where flutters actively after insects. Nest is a straggly mass of dead vegetation up to 3 feet long that hangs from the tip of a branch, often along streambeds.
The blue parrot fish is a colorful aquatic animal that lives in coral, in a symbiotic relationship with its ecosystem. The coral provides it with protection, and the parrot fish consumes the coral's excess algae. The blue parrot fish (Scarus coeruleus) is a marine species belonging to the Perciformes order of the Scaridae family. It is known for its colorful blue body. They are related to wrasse, and are found in abundance in the tropical reefs of the oceans around the world. There are some 90 species grouped into ten genera, and one of these is the blue parrot fish.
A red face is a distinctive feature of the bald uakari, monkeys with an unusual appearance. The bald uakari, or bald-headed uakari, is native to the Western Amazon—residing in the countries of Peru and Brazil, and possibly Colombia. Their rainforest habitat is in the Amazon River Basin, which often floods. Specifically, the bald uakari lives in várzea forests, seasonal floodplain forests that are inundated by whitewater rivers in the Amazon biome. Flooding occurs most often in the rainy season. To avoid the high water, these comely New World monkeys live in the trees alongside small tributaries or lakes.
The giraffe weevil got its name because of its long neck. The giraffe weevil (Trachelophorus giraffa) is a weevil endemic to Madagascar. It derives its name from an extended neck, much like that of a giraffe. The giraffe weevil is sexually dimorphic, with the neck of the male typically being 2 to 3 times the length of that of the female. Most of the body is black with distinctive red elytra covering the flying wings. The total body length of the males is just under an inch (2.5 cm), among the longest for any attelabid species. The extended neck is an adaptation that assists in nest building and fighting. To breed, females roll and secure a leaf of the host plant, Dichaetanthera cordifolia or Dichaetanthera arborea (a small tree in the family Melastomataceae), then lay one egg within the tube, before snipping it from the plant.
The blanket octopus is a true masterpiece of nature. Just look at its colorful "blanket" with unbelievable patterns. The oddest among the creatures undersea, there cannot be any other apt introduction for the blanket octopuses than this. These creatures have intrigued the scientific community, unlike any other species, and they are still on the hunt to know more about these magnificent creatures. Blanket octopuses are not easy to find because, for most of their life, they remain hidden between the nooks and crannies or on the ocean bed.
Don't get scared, it's just a pink fairy armadillo. It's adorable if you take a closer look. The smallest of the armadillo family, the Pink fairy armadillo is endangered. It lives in parts of Argentina and other areas in South America and is currently threatened by destruction of its habitat and by domestic dogs. It is the only armadillo which has a dorsal shell that is almost completely separate from the body. It digs so fast it can bury itself in its burrow in seconds when threatened, the armor plate functioning as a cork to seal the entrance to the burrow.
Red-lipped batfish could star in a lipstick commercial! They look perfect. Red lipped batfish is unique in the world with a feature. This fish is only fish species in world that can walk with 4 feet. Although its fins are designed to walk, sometimes it can swim as shaking its tail but this doesn´t happen everytime. Maybe its discontented facial expression is because it has to walk over.
Meet Umbonia Spinosa: thorn-shaped bugs that look extraterrestrial. he thorn bug is an occasional pest of ornamentals and fruit trees in southern Florida. During heavy infestations, nymphs and adults form dense clusters around the twigs, branches and even small tree trunks. Some hosts that have been severely damaged include Hibiscus sp., powder-puff (Calliandra spp.), woman's tongue tree (Albizzia lebbek), and Acacia spp. Young trees of jacaranda (Jacaranda acutifolia) and royal poinciana (Delonix regia) with a diameter of 1.5 to 2 inches have been killed by thorn bugs in the Tampa area. The trunks were so heavily infested that is was difficult to place a finger anywhere on the trunk without touching a specimen.
Meet the barreleye fish, small deep-sea fish with barrel-shaped eyes and transparent heads. They look stunning. In this image, you can see that, although the barreleye is facing downward, its eyes are still looking straight up. This close-up "frame grab" from video shows a barreleye that is about 140 mm (six inches) long.