Animals

Monday, 1 June 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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Laughing kookaburra
Laughing kookaburras are family birds.
They pair for life and use the help of their grown younglings in the process of incubating the eggs, and feeding and protecting them from predators.
Basking shark
Basking sharks can reach enormous sizes.
As an adult, the basking shark usually reaches a body length of 6.70 to 8.80 meters, but can reach 1 ...
Amur leopard
They are rather average in length, reaching a maximum of 1,4 meters, with a tail approximately 90 centimeters long.
Aye-aye
A gestation period lasts for five months, after which one infant is born.
An infant does not leave the nest for a period of two months and stays with its mother for almost two years. It leaves once is ready to establish its own territory.
Insects
No insect can kill a person with its bite, but this does not mean that such a bite will not be unbearable.
The most venomous insect is the Pogonomyrmex maricopa ant, which lives in the southwestern United St ...
Jellyfish
There are several dangerous jellyfish species.
They mostly occur in northern Australia, and in the Indo-Pacific region. The most venomous is the Australian box jellyfish, whose sting can lead to paralysis, cardiac arrest, or death.
Earthworms
There are more than 670 species of earthworms.
Sea otter
Today, it is illegal to hunt sea otters, but the species is still threatened by human activities such as oil spills, pollution, and habitat degradation. 
Of all the threats, oil spills are the most deadly to sea otters, as contact with oil makes the otters' fur soak with water, leading to hypothermia.
Common Surinam toad
The incubation period lasts about 130 days.
After this time and complete resorption of the tail, the young leave the pockets in the mother’s ski ...
Gila monster
Its skin is black, with a pink, orange, or yellow pattern.