Coats of arms are assigned to individuals, not families. Even if they were assigned to families, there are many unrelated families named Souther, so there could be many different coats of arms. Therefore it is not possible to answer this question until a particular person named Souther is specified.
For this CoA (coat of arms), I'm seeing a jaguar on top of the helm - the shield itself is argent (white) with an azure bordeure (blue border around the outside edge). In the bordeure, there are 8 argent crosses, spaced equally.
Coats of arms do not themselves have surnames.
Coats of arms are assigned (held by) individuals not surnames or whole families.
A coat of arms, historically, was associated with a particular individual and his descendants, not a surname. There are many, many families with the surname Hansen. There is no coat of arms that belongs to all of them.Of course, you should have no trouble finding an on-line merchant who will gladly sell you a bogus coat of arms that he says belongs to your surname.Besides, Hansen is a Scandinavian name--it simply means "son of Hans" (Hans is short for Johan). Scandinavian families used patronyms, rather than surnames, until relatively recently. For instance, Magnus Hansen may have been the son of Hans Petersen, who was the son of Peter Neilsen, and so on. It was only when they switched to using surnames that the family "stuck" with the Hansen surname. That probably happened about 150 years ago, long after a coat of arms would have had any real significance.
A Coat of Arms granted to a Parsons family is red, with three gold leopard's faces.
An Irish harp appears on the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom to represent Ireland's place in the UK. The shield is quartered, with the guardant lions of England filling the first and forth quarters, the the rampant lion and double tressure flory-counterflory of Scotland in the second, and the Irish harp in the third. The Irish harp is the featured element on the coat of arms of Ireland.
lion
Coats of arms do not themselves have surnames.
Babes in Arms (1939).
Coats of arms are assigned (held by) individuals not surnames or whole families.
The animal on the Polish coat of arms is a white eagle.
The African lion is the official national animal of Kenya
It is important to understand that most surname are not associated with Coats of Arms for the simple reason that Arms were something that only the nobility had any use for, and the vast majority of people were not nobles. In addition, Arms were specific to an individual, not to a family. Since Mexico is a republic and has not modern nobility, it is unlikely that there would be a list of the arms associated wit surnames.
Starfish have five arms and no brain.
At the time of his reign, from 1603 to 1625, Ireland was under British rule, so it featured on his coat of arms.
Coats of Arms are associated with particular people or families of prominence, such as royalty and nobles, not with a surname.
snake
gorilla