Birds deserve better and more descriptive names than the honorific and eponymous ones many of them have. This southwest oriole is closely associated to the yucca plant, making this a much better name!
Birds deserve better and more descriptive names than the honorific and eponymous ones many of them have. This sparrow can be identified in part by the buff-colored band across its breast, making this a much better name!
Birds deserve better and more descriptive names than the honorific and eponymous ones many of them have. This warbler is a specialist of mesquite habitat, making this a much better name!
Another in the series of pop art, Warhol inspired pieces. This time, Grackles! Included are the 7 species of the genus Quiscalus (including a couple subspecies!) Top Row (L to R): Boat-tailed Grackle, Common Grackle (Florida Subspecies), Carib Grackle. Middle Row (L to R): Nicaraguan Grackle, Common Grackle (Coastal Subspecies), Great-tailed Grackle. Bottom Row (L to R): Greater Antillean Grackle, Common Grackle (Bronze Subspecies), Slender-billed Grackle (Now Extinct)
This Atlantic coast duck holds the dubious distinction of being the first endemic North American bird to go extinct after the Columbian Exchange, with the last known sighting in 1878.
Another in the series of pop art, Warhol inspired pieces. Included here are 6 species of Chickadee (1 with three geographic variations!) Top row (L to R): Gray-headed Chickadee, Black-capped Chickadee (Eastern), Black-capped Chickadee (Rocky Mountain) Middle Row (L to R): Black-capped Chickadee (Pacific), Chestnut-backed Chickadee, Mountain Chickadee, Bottom Row (L to R): Carolina Chickadee, Mexican Chickadee, Boreal Chickadee
Birds have some of the weirdest and coolest collective nouns! A shimmering of hummingbirds is fitting for these metallic, colorful birds! Show off your inner bird nerd with one of our collective noun shirts!
All birds are dinosaurs, but not all dinosaurs are birds. Regardless, Deinonychus was almost certainly feathered. Modern hawks provided coloration inspiration.
Another in the series of pop art, Warhol inspired pieces. Included here are 5 subspecies of Yellow Warbler!
Top row (L to R): Northern, Northwest, Mangrove
Bottom Row (L to R): Golden, Southwest, Female
12 of these elegant seabirds come together in this Warhol-inspired piece.
Top Row (L-R): Sandwich, Caspian, Royal
2nd Row (L-R): Forster's, Sooty, Elegant
3rd Row (L-R): Gull-billed, Black, Roseate
Bottom Row (L-R): Arctic, Common, Least
The genus Aphelocoma comes together in this Warhol-inspired piece!
Top Row (L-R): California Scrub-jay, Woodhouse's Scrub-jay (Juvenile), Florida Scrub-jay
Middle Row (L-R): Mexican Jay (Arizona sub.), Unicolored Jay, Mexican Jay (Texas sub.)
Bottom Row (L-R): Woodhouse's Scrub-jay, Transvolcanic Jay, Island Scrub-jay
Tags:
warhol style, scrub jay, warholesque, bird, jay
The four yellow-rumped warbler subspecies together in this Warhol inspired design!
Clockwise from Top Left: Myrtle, Black-fronted, Goldman's, Audubon's
A series inspired by Andy Warhol and the numerous subspecies of some birds. Here we have the four Fox sparrow subspecies.
Clockwise from Top Left: Red, Sooty, Thick-billed, Slate-colored