10 Amazing Animal Facts

Date: 2 Feb 2008 | Author: mesmerx | Category: News | Views: 25070 | Comments: 9

The animal kingdom has long been a mysterious one for humans and every day we learn something new about it. This is a list of ten little known facts about animals.

10. Crocodiles Eat Stones

crocodile

The stomach of a crocodile is a rocky place to be, for more than one reason. To begin with, a croc's digestive system encounters everything from turtles, fish and birds to giraffes, buffaloes, lions and even (when defending territory) other crocodiles. In addition to that bellyful-o'-ecosystem, rocks show up too.

The reptiles swallow large stones that stay permanently in their bellies. It's been suggested these are used for ballast in diving.

9. Whale Milk is 50% Fat

whale

Nursing a newborn is no "small" feat for the whale, whose calf emerges, after 10 to 12 months in the womb, about a third the mother's length (that's a 30-foot baby for the Blue whale).

The mother squirts milk into the newborn's mouth using muscles around the mammary gland while the baby holds tight to a nipple (yes, whales have them).

At nearly 50 percent fat, whale milk has around 10 times the fat content of human milk, which helps calves achieve some serious growth spurtseas much as 200 pounds per day.

8. Birds Recognize Landmarks

birds

Can you imagine a road trip vacation without missed exits, stubborn drivers or map-folding disasters? Of course note you're not a bird.

Pigeons can fly thousands of miles to find the same roosting spot with no navigational difficulties. Some species of birds, like the Arctic tern, make a 25,000 mile round-trip journey every year. Many species use built-in ferromagnets to detect their orientation with respect to the Earth's magnetic field.

A November 2006 study published in Animal Behaviour suggests that pigeons also use familiar landmarks on the ground below to help find their way home

7. Beavers have Longer Days in Winter

beaver

Beavers become near shut-ins during winter, living off of previously stored food or the deposits of fat in their distinctive tails.

They conserve energy by avoiding the cold outdoors, opting instead to remain in dark lodgings inside their pile of wood and mud. As a result these rodents, which normally emerge at sunset and turn in at sunrise, have no light cues to entrain their sleep cycle.

The beaver's biological sense of time shifts, and she develops a "free running circadian rhythm" of 29-hour days.

6. Mole-Rats are not Blind

mole rat

With their puny eyes and underground lifestyle, African mole-rats have long been considered the Mr. Magoos of rodents, detecting little light and, it has been suggested, using their eyes more for sensing changes in air currents than for actual vision. But findings of the past few years have shown that African mole-rats have a keen, if limited, sense of sight.

And they don't like what they see, according to a report in the November 2006 Animal Behaviour.

Light may suggest that a predator has broken into a tunnel, which could explain why subterranean diggers developed sight in the first place.

5. Baby Chicks are Altruistic

baby chicks

It's a mistake to think of evolution as producing selfish animals concerned only with their own survival.

Altruism abounds in cases where a helping hand will encourage the survival of genetic material similar to one's own. Baby chicks practice this "kin selection" by making a special chirp while feeding.

This call announces the food find to nearby chicks, who are probably close relations and so share many of the chick's genes.

The key to natural selection isn't survival of the fittest animal. It's survival of the fittest genetic material, and so brotherly behavior that favors close relations will thrive.

4. Many Fish Swap Sex Organs

fish swap

With so many land creatures to wonder at, it's easy to forget that some of the weirdest activities take place deep in the ocean. The strange practice of hermaphroditism is more common among species of fish than within any other group of vertebrates.

Some fish change sex in response to hormonal cycle or environmental changes. Others simultaneously possess both male and female sex organs.

3. Giraffes have Unique Blood Flow

giraffe

The stately giraffe, whose head sits some 16 feet up atop an unlikely pedestal, adapted his long neck to compete for foliage with other grazers.

While the advantage of reach is obvious, some difficulties arise at such a height. The heart must pump twice as hard as a cow's to get blood up to the brain, and a complex blood vessel system is needed to ensure that blood doesn't rush to the head when bent over.

Six feet below the heart, the skin of the legs must then be extremely tight to prevent blood from pooling at the hooves.

2. Elephants are Smart

elephant

Elephants have the largest brain, nearly 11 pounds on average of any mammal that ever walked the earth.

Do they use that gray matter to the fullest?

Intelligence is hard to quantify in humans or animals, but the encephalization quotient (EQ), a ratio of an animal's observed brain size to the expected brain size given the animal's mass, correlates well with an ability to navigate novel challenges and obstacles.

The average elephant EQ is 1.88. (Humans range from 7.33 to 7.69, chimpanzees average 2.45, pigs 0.27.) Intelligence and memory are thought to go hand in hand, suggesting that elephant memories, while not infallible, are quite good.

1. Parrots Understand

parrot

Parrot speech is commonly regarded as the brainless squawking of a feathered voice recorder. But studies over the past 30 years continually show that parrots engage in much more than mere mimicry.

Our avian friends can solve certain linguistic processing tasks as deftly as 4-6 year-old children. Parrots appear to grasp concepts like "same" and "different", "bigger" and "smaller", "none" and numbers.

Perhaps most interestingly, they can combine labels and phrases in novel ways. A January 2007 study in Language Sciences suggests using patterns of parrot speech learning to develop artificial speech skills in robots.

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Source: LiveScience


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    Comments: 9

    1. | 4 Feb 2008 - 13:07
    For the elephant there is another amazing thing: they understand the significance of death, an ability owned by one other animal: humans.

    2. Chomp | 5 Feb 2008 - 08:26
    Stomach bones inside crocodilians of all kinds are called osteoliths and are used to aid in digestion, in the same way a bird has rocks in its gizzard.

    The liver is used for ballast, as it can move it within its body cavity to alter its center of gravity within the water and therefore the amount of body that is floating near the surface.

    3. | 5 Feb 2008 - 09:12
    Uhm, that isn't a whale in that picture, it's an Orca. I know they're also known as killer whales, but they're actually a type of dolphin.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orca

    4. Aaron | 5 Feb 2008 - 13:25
    Jampy - what makes you think other animals don't understand death? Of course they do. It's most evident when a mother of nearly any species loses a child. For those animals that don't display emotion in a way we can detect, who are we to say they don't feel anything?

    1. Anna | 5 Feb 2008 - 16:16
    The prevailing theory of why giraffes have long necks is not because it enables them to reach higher food sources, but because of fighting. Male giraffes swing their heads and necks at one another while fighting. The longer and heavier the neck, the more momentum, and the stronger the blow.

    2. ljupa | 8 Feb 2008 - 03:40
    fucking great

    3. Sketch | 8 Feb 2008 - 17:49
    Actually Aaron, Elephants are the only other species that mourn death. For a typical animal it may panic if its young is snatched by another carnivore, but once they death has happened, they just go about their business. In the elephant world, once one dies, they actually hold a "memorial service" of sorts.

    They take the day, and have even been seen to "cry", to mourn the loss of one of their own. Elephants have been known to die from depression at the loss of an alpha, or mate.

    4. | 16 Feb 2008 - 17:28
    smile:

    5. Madelinee | 3 Apr 2008 - 14:55
    woah that is soo awesome
    I didnt know some of those things.wink

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