Berlo UPRISE NFT collection
Choose your avatar from various species you’re helping to save!
Your NFT not only proves the authenticity of the watch but also grants you a membership with the Berlo Club.
Introducing the Berlo Uprise NFT Collection: Imagine embracing a digital masterpiece that’s uniquely yours, just like your personal style. Our Uprise NFT Collection seamlessly blends art and technology, allowing you to possess exclusive digital artworks securely stored on the blockchain. These artworks are thoughtfully paired with our fashionable Berlo watches, creating a mesmerising fusion of physical elegance and digital allure. Just like possessing a rare work of art, our Uprise NFT Collection empowers you to exhibit your distinctiveness and enthusiasm for both fashion and cutting-edge digital trends. It’s an innovative means to express yourself while possessing something genuinely extraordinary.
Giant Panda
A vulnerable animal that plays a crucial role in China's bamboo forests by spreading seeds and helping the vegetation grow.
What’s interesting is that pandas will do a full handstand to mark their scent on a tree! They climb a tree backwards with their hind feet until they're upside down to leave their scent higher up.
You wouldn’t believe the range of vocalizations they use to socialize. Not only do they honk, bleat, chomp, and bark, but they also chirp!
Red Panda
Did you know that the red panda, often called a "firefox" or a "lesser panda", is the original panda, the ancestor of the giant panda? However, they’re not closely related.
Nowadays, the red panda is the only species remaining in its taxonomic family — a true relic of the past!
Red pandas are skilled climbers and spend most of their time in trees. Remarkably, it is a carnivore that has adapted to eating 95% bamboo.
Pangolin
Pangolins, the only mammals covered in scales, are guardians of the forest from termite destruction, maintaining a balanced ecosystem. Despite this noble function, they are the most trafficked mammals in the world due to the high demand for their scales and claws in traditional medicine.
When threatened, they will curl up into a tight ball, using their scales as armor to protect themselves from predators.
Sloth
Did you know that sloths snooze for 15-18 hours a day and can rotate their heads up to 270 degrees? The three-toed sloth hides an entire ecosystem on its body. They move so slowly through the rainforest that green algae grow in their fur, creating an ideal environment for microorganisms, bacteria, and fungi, which provide a cure for some diseases.
While eating leaves from trees, they let the sunshine into the rainforest, fertilize trees, and are food for predators such as jaguars.
Tiger
As top predators, tigers help keep their habitats balanced. Too many herbivores would lead to overgrazing and the degradation of the ecosystem.
Being the largest member of the cat family, they’re solitary hunters and can leap up to 6 meters (20 feet) in a single bound. Their striped fur helps them blend into their surroundings and stalk prey unnoticed.
Forests in which tigers are protected are known to store more carbon than other habitat types, which helps mitigate climate change.
Lemur
These red-listed endangered primates live in Madagascar and nowhere else. They’ve been around for over 60 million years, making them the world’s oldest living primates. Once they were considered sacred and honored animal, but lately, people have been hunting them and serving lemur dishes in local taverns, despite being illegal.
There are over 100 species of lemurs, and they come in all sizes, from the tiny mouse lemur to the largest lemur, the indri, which can weigh up to 9 kg.
Spider Monkey
Spider monkeys are important seed dispersers, spreading tree species from central Mexico in the north to Bolivia in the south.
Despite their name, spider monkeys do not spin webs or eat spiders. They were named for their long, thin limbs, resembling a spider's legs. They are among the most acrobatic of all primates - they can jump up to 9 meters (30 feet) from one tree to another.
Amur Leopard
The Amur leopard is one of the rarest big cats in the world, with only around 100 individuals remaining in the wild. It is a "silent killer" and can take down prey up to three times their size, keeping the right balance of species in the area. That affects the health of the forests and the wider environment.
And what's special about the spots on the fur? Like humans have unique fingerprints, Amur leopards have unique spot patterns, which means that we can identify them individually.
Bornean Orangutan
Bornean orangutans are the largest tree-dwelling animals on the planet. They spend most of their lives in trees, rarely descending to the ground, and are well-adapted to this lifestyle with long, strong arms and grasping hands and feet. They’re highly intelligent and use tools like sticks, to obtain food and create shelters.
They are seed dispersal heroes, as they consume a wide variety of fruits, are capable of ingesting large seeds and travel long distances over which they deposit the seeds.
Grevy's Zebra
The largest of the wild equids. Acting as ecosystem engineers through
their dust bathing, creating a habitat conducive to a small community of
organisms. They minimize insect and reptile infestation while ensuring new growth for the next herbivores to wander through the lands.
Their stripes serve as camouflage, communication, and temperature regulation. They help zebras blend in with their environment, making it harder for predators to single them out.
Poison Dart Frog
Poison dart frogs come in a variety of colors. They maintain the health and balance of the forests by controlling the insect population and acquiring and collecting toxins from insects they eat.
Indigenous South Americans used frog secretions on the arrow and blow dart tips for hunting. Poison-coated darts could kill a jaguar in minutes and finish off smaller animals instantly. They are known for their complex courtship and parenting behaviors, for example, carrying their tadpoles
on their backs.
African Wild Dog
The African wild dog is known by many names, including the Cape hunting dog or the painted dog. They are the largest canids in Africa and the 2nd largest in the world after wolves.
Remarkably, they are excellent hunters and can run as fast as greyhounds with a speed of 44mph (71 km/h) while chasing prey. African wild dogs play a significant role in eliminating sick and weak animals, thereby helping maintain the natural balance in the wild.