Biodiversity

Orca (Latin: Orcinus orca) — a marine mammal from the infraorder Cetacea, suborder Odontoceti (toothed whales), family Delphinidae (dolphins). The only modern representative of the genus Orcinus. Recognized as the largest member of its family and the only true predator among cetaceans, hunting warm-blooded animals.
Beluga (Latin: Delphinapterus leucas) — a species of toothed whales from the family Monodontidae.
The skin coloration is uniform. It changes with age: newborns are blue and dark blue, after one year they become gray and bluish-gray; individuals older than 3–5 years are pure white (hence the name).
The largest males reach 6 meters in length and 2 tons in weight; females are smaller. The beluga's head is small, "bulbous," without a beak. The vertebrae in the neck are not fused together, so unlike most whales, the beluga can turn its head. The pectoral fins are small, oval-shaped. The dorsal fin is absent; hence the Latin genus name Delphinapterus — "wingless dolphin."

Size: 100*120 
Materials: canvas, acrylic
Year of creation: 2020 
Style: stylization
Availability: in stock