Sunday, May 29, 2016

OC Rhinco Typus Underwear

This is my whale shark OC Rhincodon Typus has been bound and gagged in her underwear.  This is continuing development as a artist (loosest use of the term) maybe in a hundred years I will be Rembrandt.

Rhincodon "Rhinco" Typus is  a whale shark exotic dancer,  she is a member of the seedier side of New Portaferry.  She was an exceptionally tall girl, she is 6' 5'' and was always in the back of her class photos.  She starting dancing o make ends meet.  She is also a adult video star to make her life comfortable.  She knows she can't keep doing this forever.  She still practices at dance.  She tends to dress in a provocative manner and assets tend to be on display.   Though she publicly state what she does for a living, she is not ashamed if confronted. 
She like all whale sharks she is vegetarian, the whale sharks eat plankton like most whales.  She is a gentle person and is friends with  Zenyatta Dressage, Zenyatta teaches her more formal dance moves.  Rhinco teaches some her dance steps in stripping.


As the largest fish in the sea, reaching lengths of 40 feet (12 meters) or more, whale sharks have an enormous menu from which to choose. Fortunately for most sea-dwellers—and us!—their favorite meal is plankton. They scoop these tiny plants and animals up, along with any small fish that happen to be around, with their colossal gaping mouths while swimming close to the water's surface.
The whale shark, like the world's second largest fish, the basking shark, is a filter feeder. In order to eat, the beast juts out its formidably sized jaws and passively filters everything in its path.  The mechanism is theorized to be a technique called “cross-flow filtration,” similar to some bony fish and baleen whales.
The whale shark's flattened head sports a blunt snout above its mouth with short barbels protruding from its nostrils. Its back and sides are gray to brown with white spots among pale vertical and horizontal stripes, and its belly is white. Its two dorsal fins are set rearward on its body, which ends in a large dual-lobbed caudal fin (or tail).
Preferring warm waters, whale sharks populate all tropical seas. They are known to migrate every spring to the continental shelf of the central west coast of Australia. The coral spawning of the area's Ningaloo Reef provides the whale shark with an abundant supply of plankton.
Although massive, whale sharks are docile fish and sometimes allow swimmers to hitch a ride. They are currently listed as a vulnerable species; however, they continue to be hunted in parts of Asia, such as the Philippines.

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