laitimes

Popular science animals that once dominated the headlines

author:Running rifles

Marmots are also known as marmots, meadow otters, belonging to the mammalian order, rodents, squirrels, marmots, also known as hala, snow pigs, quwa (Tibetan). It is the largest of the squirrel family, and is a herbivorous and hibernating wild animal that is terrestrial and burrowing. Marmots inhabit plains, mountainous grasslands and alpine meadows. Cluster cave dwelling, strong excavation ability, deep and complex tunnels, mostly dug under rocky slopes and gully shrubland. A large amount of sand and gravel pushed out of the cave is piled up near the mouth of the cave, forming a marmot mound. Active during the day, eat a large amount of food, nibble a large amount of excellent pasture grass every day, tolerate hunger, do not drink water, and prefer to eat succulent feed with large water content. She loves to eat after-rain grass and dew grass. Like to live in groups, easy to domesticate, not harmful, not resistant to heat, afraid of exposure. Attach an image with its own sound effects

Popular science animals that once dominated the headlines

Chinchilla is a rodent of the order Chinchilla, a family of chinchillas, a collective name for animals of the genus Chinchilla. The woolly rat is small and fat, and the hair at the tail end is long and fluffy. The whole body is covered with uniform fluff, which is dense and soft like silk, hence the name. It is a rabbit-sized chipmunk native to the Andes region of South America, known for its soft and beautiful fur, and is on the verge of extinction due to the large-scale hunting of humans. There are only 2 species in this genus, both of which are critically endangered (cr) species. Because the appearance of the chinchilla is similar to the protagonist of the Animation film "Totoro" by Japanese animation master Toshi Miyazaki, it was later called Totoro by Hong Kong and Taiwan, and then became the main name of the chinchilla in Chinese mainland.

Popular science animals that once dominated the headlines

The lynx (scientific name: lynx lynx) belongs to the cat family, similar in size but much larger than cats, with a thick body and a very short tail, usually less than 1/4 of the length of the head. The limbs are long and sturdy. The tips of the ears are covered with black towering tufts of hair. The cheeks have long, drooping hairs. The upperparts are light brown, earth yellow brown, light gray brown or hemp brown, or grayish white with a mixed light brown tone; the ventral surface is pale white, yellowish white or sand yellow. The tail end is black. It is a cold-loving animal with a highly diverse habitat, ranging from subarctic coniferous forests and mixed temperate coniferous and broad-leaved forests to alpine meadows, alpine grasslands, alpine scrub grasslands, and alpine deserts and semi-deserts. It lives in forested shrublands, and is more common in dense forests and mountain rocks. He likes to live alone, is good at climbing and swimming, has a strong hunger tolerance, can lie still in one place for a few days, brave the cold, feeds on rats, hares, etc., and also preys on small wild boars and fawns. Nests are mostly built in rock crevice caves or tree holes. 2-4 litters per litter. It is widely distributed in Europe and northern Asia. This kind of pet is afraid that only the fighting nation dares to be a pet

Popular science animals that once dominated the headlines

Read on