Animals

Saturday, 11 April 2026
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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American flamingo
Parents can easily recognize their chick by its appearance and the sounds it makes.
It is essential because flamingos do not feed the chicks of other birds. The young leave the nest af ...
Brittle stars
They live on many depths, can be even found 6 kilometers underwater.
Most of them live in shelf waters (over 1300 species), bathyal zone (over 1200 species). In the abyssal waters (below 4000 m) so far 100 species have been found.
Alligator snapping turtle
It is a carnivore and a scavenger.
Mainly, it feeds on fish and amphibians, but also mollusks and carrion.
Salamanders
Skin
Salamander's skin is moist, thin, water permeable and used for respiration. Glands located in the sa ...
Quokkas
Rottnest Island owes its name to the population of quokkas.
Willem de Vlamingh, captain of the Dutch fleet, upon arriving on the island in 1696, thought quokkas ...
Toco toucan
Toco toucans are considered a fairly common species.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature has recognized them as a species of least concern (LC), continuously since 1988.
Tawny frogmouth
Tawny frogmouths are native to Australia mainland and Tasmania.
Brittle stars
They use chemoreceptors in search of food.
Central bearded dragon
Young females with ZZ chromosomes resemble males, but as they grow up, they become similar to females with ZW chromosomes.
Their head is not as massive as that of males and they do not have such a strong jaw grip.
True seals
Ringed seals are the smallest of all species.
They inhabit the polar zones in the Arctic Sea, the coasts of Greenland, and Spitsbergen. An isolate ...