Animals

Monday, 8 December 2025
27 facts about turtles
27 facts about turtles
The only vertebrates so armored
The first turtles appeared on Earth at the end of the Permian about 240 million years ago. Although the first ones had neither plastron nor carapace, ...

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Kiwi bird
Kiwi birds are the smallest ratites in the world.
Their length ranges from 30 to 65 centimeters, and they weigh up to 3,5 kilograms.
Otters
Followers of Zoroastrianism believed otters to be sacred.
They considered otters sea dogs, helping with purifying water by eating dead animals before they sta ...
Snails
The snail shell has four basic functions.
It is an armor that protects the snail's soft body against external threats, protects it against excessive water loss, provides an attachment for muscles, and accounts for calcium storage.
Red panda
Red pandas can undergo embryonic diapause.
The gestation can last for 93 days but can be delayed up to 156 days until the conditions are suitable enough to give birth to cubs.
Coyote
Coyotes use urine to mark their territory.
They urinate with their leg raised, marking the area and scratching the ground at the same time.
American robin
They are migratory birds and can travel a long distance.
Flying a 400 km (250 mi) a day a robin can travel up to 5000 km (3100 mi) during spring migration. M ...
Alligator snapping turtle
There are two species of snapping turtles: alligator snapping turtle, and common snapping turtle.
Northern pike
They are territorial and aggressive.
Aggression within the species is common and is caused by fighting for space and food. It happens that larger individuals steal prey from younger pikes.
Axolotl
Axolotls are carnivorous.
They feed on mollusks, insects, arthropods, and small fish. They locate their prey using their sense of smell, and since having vestigial teeth, their primary feeding method is suctioning.
Syrian brown bear
The Syrian bear is the smallest subspecies of the brown bear.
An adult animal weighs up to 250 kg and has a body length of approximately 101-140 cm (from nose to tail).