Monday, July 20, 2020

Sea Cucumbers

sea cumbers are sold according
to their weight and species.

      Sea Cucumbers
, or Holothuria, the name of a group of sea animals, belonging to the same branch of starfishes, sea urchins and sea lilies. They are covered with a tough, leathery skin which is perforated with holes, through which the foot-tentacles protrude. The animals are capable of contracting and extending themselves to several times their ordinary length, and they will reproduce to an extraordinary degree parts of the body which are cut away or destroyed. They abound along the eastern coast of Asia, and some species are edible.

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Echinodermata starfishes, etc...

Scorpion: 11 Elemental Facts

There are approx. 20 species
in the United States.
       Scorpion, the name of a group of animals belonging to the same class as the spiders.

11 Elemental Facts About Scorpion:
  1. They live in tropical and warm temperate regions, and are not found in America north of Nebraska.
  2. In the southern part of the United States there are about twenty species.
  3. The body consists of two parts, one containing the head and thorax and called the cephalothorax, and the other a long, jointed abdomen, the last five segments of which form a tail.
  4. Four pairs of legs and two pairs of mandibles or pincers are attached to the cephalothorax; the second pair of pincers resemble a lobster's claws.
  5. The abdomen contains breathing pores and the last segment of the tail is armed with a sharp poisonous sting, the poison being secreted by two glands at its base.
  6. The eyes vary in number from six to twelve, according to the species.
  7. Scorpions are usually black or yellowish in color.
  8. The young are carried on the body of the mother for several days after birth. They cling to her body by the pincers.
  9. Scorpions remain hidden in crevices and under rocks by day, and are active at night.
  10. They feed upon insects and spiders, and are dreaded by man because their sting causes a serious and painful wound, though it is seldom fatal.
  11. The poison should be sucked from the wound as soon as possible, and the wound bathed with ammonia, which should be also taken internally. 
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Sepia Or Cuttlefish

Watch Kisslip Cuttlefish Changing Colors from
Monterey Bay Aquarium

       Sepia, the name of a cuttlefish, also of a pigment used by painters to produce a beautiful brown color prepared from the secretion of an organ in the cuttlefish, called the ink bag. The original black color is changed to brown by dissolving in caustic potash. This solution, after boiling and filtering, forms the sepia of commerce. The black coloring matter obtained from the ink bags is marketed, after undergoing several processes, as India ink. 
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Cheetah

Leopard on top, Cheetah on bottom.

       Cheetah is an animal of the cat family, found principally in Africa and India, and most commonly known as the limiting Jeopard. It derives this name from the fact that it can be trained to hunt antelopes and other like game. The cheetah has a little longer body in proportion to its size than the other cats, and its legs are slender. It can maintain a greater speed for a short distance than can any other land mammal. 

Chameleon: 5 Foundational Facts

Chameleon a genus of lizards, natives of the Old World, but found also in the Southern United States and the West Indies.

5 Foundational Facts About The Chameleon:
  1. The best-known species has a naked body six or seven inches long, and feet and tail all suitable for grasping branches.
  2. The skin is cold to the touch and contains small grains which in the shade are of a bluish-gray color, but which in the light of the sun become a grayish-brown or tawny color.
  3. The chameleon possesses the curious power, however, of changing its color, either in accordance with its surroundings or with its temper, when disturbed.
  4. Its power of fasting and habit of inflating itself gave rise to the fable that it lived on air, but in reality it feeds upon insects, taking its prey by rapid movements of a long, sticky tongue.
  5. In general habit chameleons are dull and sluggish. They are often kept as pets.
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Watch a Chameleon Chang Its Colors by 
The Animal Box Office.

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Whose Eyes Are These?

       Teachers or parents may print out the animal eye chart to quiz their kids about whose eyes are these. Here are the answers:
  1. Eye of Solitary Frog
  2. "stalk eye" of Crab
  3. Eye of the Toad
  4. Whirligig Beetle Eyes
  5. The Chameleon's Eye
  6. Eyes of the Snail on Stalks
  7. Cat's Eye
  8. Moth's Eye
  9. Eye of A Dog
  10. Spider Eyes
  11. Eagle's Eye
  12. Grasshopper's Eye
  13. Sheep's Eye
  14. Eye of the Fly
  15. The Cow's Eye
Numbers 4, 8, 12, and 14 are all compound eyes!

Take the Nature Check Animal Eye Quiz!
and visit them to play more animal games.

Weasel

Cute But Deadly Weasel by Casey Anderson
Weasels that have white coats are called Ermine.

       The weasel is a small, carnivorous animal, a native of almost all the temperate and cold parts of the northern hemisphere. The body is extremely slender, the head small and flattened, the neck long and the legs short. It preys upon mice, birds and other small animals and is very destructive to poultry. The weasel is usually nocturnal in its habits. It is a fine hunter, having a very keen scent and sharp sight, and, being unwavering in pursuit of its victim, it often wears to exhaustion animals larger than itself. Several species are common in the United States, and others are found in. most parts of the temperate zones. The long-tailed, or New York, weasel is one of the most familiar species in North America. It is dark brown above and white beneath, and in winter in cold climates it turns pure white, except for the tip of the tail, which is black.

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Draw the cunning little weasel step-by-step.