Animals

Saturday, 15 November 2025
19 facts about snails
19 facts about snails
Also called gastropods
Snails are mollusks and are one of the most numerous animal species in the world. In terms of species diversity, they are second only to insects. Even ...

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Earthworms
They belong to invertebrates and the hydroskeleton is responsible for supporting muscles in their bodies.
This form of stabilization relies on the production of adequate hydrostatic pressure, which, by pushing against the cell walls, allows muscles to be supported.
Insects
Most insects reproduce sexually and by laying eggs.
They are fertilized internally using external genitalia. The design of the genitalia can vary signif ...
Portuguese man-of-war
The number of their population is currently unknown.
Dodo bird
We can only determine the appearance of the dodo bird from subfossils - not fully fossilized.
Subfossils are the remains of living organisms that died on the geological scale more recently, in t ...
Amur leopard
The first mention of the Amur leopard dates back to 1857.
Hermann Schlegel, a German zoologist, discovered its pelt while on a survey in Korea.
Hyacinth macaw
The legs of this parrot are gray.
There are four toes on each leg - two pointing forward (third and second) and two pointing backward ...
Southern cassowary
Cassowaries are the closest living relatives of dinosaurs.
They appeared on Earth about 60 million years ago, 6 million years after the Cretaceous-Paleogene ex ...
Spiders
The vast majority of spiders reproduce sexually. Semen is not introduced into the female's body through the genitals, but stored in special containers located on the pedipalps.
Only after these containers are filled with sperm does the male set out to look for a partner. Durin ...
Dodo bird
Realistic illustrations of the dodo bird were recorded on the ship’s log by the sailor Gelderlandt in 1601-1603.
The diary contained seven sketches of living birds. Ornithologist Alfred Newton published them in 18 ...
American robin
There are about 320 million of this birds, so they are not an endangered species.
IUCN lists robins as LC (least concern).