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Animals

Do Bears Really Give Bear Hugs?

May 1, 2020 by Karen Hill

Many species of bears are scattered throughout the world. Since they are the largest of the carnivores, or flesh-eating mammals, they do not have too many enemies, except man. Bears avoid people and are not ordinarily considered to be as dangerous as other groups of animals. But bears will kill, though not by hugging. It […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Is the Lion Known as the King of Beasts?

August 4, 2020 by Karen Hill

The lion is probably the most famous member of the cat family, and the male most likely became known as the “King of Beasts” because of his royal appearance and bearing. The adult male is the only member of the cat family to have a mane, the long hair on the neck and head which […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Elephants Have Trunks?

April 10, 2020 by Karen Hill

The elephant uses its trunk in more ways than any animal uses any part of its body. The trunk is both amazingly strong and very delicate. With it, an elephant can pull down a mighty tree or gently take a peanut from a child’s hand. The elephant smells, drinks, and feeds itself with its trunk. […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Are White Elephants?

June 15, 2020 by Karen Hill

People who buy or own something that costs a great deal of money to keep up, without serving any useful purpose, are said to own a “white elephant.” But there are actual Asian elephants whose skin is so light that that they are considered white. These white elephants were worshipped as gods by the people […]

Filed Under: Animals

Are Elephants Really Afraid of Mice?

June 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

Elephants are the largest living land animal, and they have no reason to fear mice. In fact, elephants do not fear mice. A healthy elephant does not fear any animals. Danger comes only from man and, when elephants are in the wild, from natural disasters such as drought or fire. Why then is it commonly […]

Filed Under: Animals

Do Elephants Really Have Good Memories?

July 19, 2020 by Karen Hill

The elephant’s memory has been greatly exaggerated. It does remember many things, but the statement, “An elephant never forgets,” is not true. Some people used to think that elephants particularly remembered an injury, but this does not seem to be true either. Well-trained elephants can learn and remember about thirty spoken orders. Once they have […]

Filed Under: Animals

Where Does Ivory Come From?

July 12, 2020 by Karen Hill

Ivory comes from the tusks of elephants and from mastadons and mammoths, ancient ancestors of our modern-day elephant. Mastadons lived until the end of the last Ice Age, about 8,000 years ago. Many mammoths lived in Siberia, and for a long time, most of the ivory came from there. Men dug up the skeletons of […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Zebras Have Stripes?

May 24, 2020 by Karen Hill

Zebras have stripes to make them blend in with the scenery and to keep them safe from attack. This is very much like what soldiers do in wartime, as they cover their helmets with leaves and attempt to hide their artillery by drawing leaf-covered nets over them to blend them in with the scenery. This […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Do Beavers Build Dams?

June 22, 2020 by Karen Hill

beavers build dams

Beavers are water animals whose diet is tree bark. They are excellent swimmers and wood cutters, and they use the trees they chew down not only for food, but also for building lodges and dams. Beavers live together in groups. They cut down trees together, one beaver chews while the other rests, and then the […]

Filed Under: Animals

Which Animal Helped To Settle North America?

June 27, 2020 by Karen Hill

Don’t think of an animal that Europeans brought with them when they landed on the East Coast. Think, instead, of an animal those people hunted. The animal which helped to settle many areas on the North American continent was the beaver. Its soft, shiny, durable fur was an item that became the basis of a […]

Filed Under: Animals

From What Animal Do We Get Cashmere?

July 19, 2020 by Karen Hill

The goat may be the most laughed-at animal, but people do not laugh at the cashmere goat, for it gives us the softest, most expensive wool in the world! The cashmere goat, named for Kashmir, a region of India, lives in the Himalaya Mountains of Tibet, India, and China. People have tried to bring it […]

Filed Under: Animals

Does a Camel Store Water in its Hump and Do Camel Humps Shrink if it Does Not Get Enough Water?

April 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

a bunch of dirty camels standing around

Many people think the camel does store water in its hump, but it does not. Instead, the camel stores something else there, food. The camel’s hump is really a hump of fat. When the camel, often called a “ship of the desert,” is not traveling and is in a place where there is plenty of […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Long Can a Camel Go Without Drinking Water?

May 5, 2020 by Karen Hill

camels can survive a long time without water

The camel is well suited to its life on the desert. It is one of the few animals who can go without water for fairly long periods of time. Exactly how long depends on several factors: the temperature, the kind of work the camel is doing, and the food it is eating. A camel in […]

Filed Under: Animals

Did Centaurs Ever Live?

June 26, 2020 by Karen Hill

A centaur is an imaginary animal which existed only in the mythology of the ancient Greeks. It was a kind of monster which was half-human, half-horse. The top half of the centaur’s body was that of a human, and the bottom part was the body of a horse. According to the myths, centaurs lived in […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Is an Iguana?

June 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

Iguanas are a kind of lizard. They live in the hot portions of North and South America. Iguanas are very fierce-looking whether they are large or small, but they are actually peaceful, timid creatures. They like to lie in the sun and eat flowers, berries, and insects. Some iguanas grow to be 6.5 feet long, […]

Filed Under: Animals

Can Parrots Really Talk?

May 18, 2020 by Karen Hill

Although some parrots have been known to learn to speak as many as 50 words, the fact is that parrots are excellent mimics. When they speak, they are really only mimicking words and do not understand what they are saying. Don’t be fooled by the parrot who shrieks “Hello” when you come in, it might […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Does a Woodpecker Peck Wood?

April 6, 2020 by Karen Hill

woodpeckers peck wood

The woodpecker pecks, or beats its strong bill, into tree trunks or limbs for several reasons. First, this rapid drumming is used as a mating call. Second, the pecking creates a hole for a nest, with the wood chips it leaves forming a cushion for the woodpecker’s eggs. But most of the woodpecker’s pecking is […]

Filed Under: Animals

Which Animal Plays Dead?

June 23, 2020 by Karen Hill

Playing Possum is a common expression which has its origin in fact. When faced with danger, the opossum, the animal’s real name, sinks to the ground and closes its eyes, as if dead. In this temporary coma, its breathing slows and it appears dead. But the opossum is not playing. That is the way it […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Does the Kangaroo Have a Pouch?

June 19, 2020 by Karen Hill

The kangaroo, now the national symbol of Australia, belongs to the group of mammals called marsupials, meaning “pouched.” Female kangaroos have a pouch, like a bag with an elastic top, in which they keep their young for eight to nine months after they are born. Marsupials are mammals; all female mammals give birth to living […]

Filed Under: Animals

Can Ground Hogs Predict Weather?

February 21, 2020 by Karen Hill

Even though the ground hog, or woodchuck, has been given a special day, February 2, on which to make a weather prediction, this member of the squirrel family cannot predict the weather. In fact, the ground hog probably would rather not be awakened from its winter sleep. There is a widely held belief that the […]

Filed Under: Animals

Was There Ever Such a Bird as a Dodo?

April 10, 2020 by Karen Hill

The dodo was a large, handsome bird, about the size of a large turkey. It once lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. The dodo had a large, rounded beak and a silly plumelike tail. Portuguese sailors discovered the dodo on the island in the early 1500s, but as a species, it […]

Filed Under: Animals

Does the Giraffe Have a Voice?

May 25, 2020 by Karen Hill

Most people think the giraffe is mute. But the giraffe does have a larynx, or voice box. Compared to other animals, though, the giraffe’s larynx is not very well developed. However, sometimes giraffes will grunt or bleat, or make other soft sounds. Giraffes in zoos have been heard to moo. Females sometimes moo when they […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Tigers Have Stripes?

April 2, 2020 by Karen Hill

tiger stripes

Along with lions, tigers are the largest members of the cat family. One of the most feared animals of the jungle, the tiger has no enemies except man. Tigers are native to the Asian continent. Although many peoples have legends to explain the tiger’s stripes, the reason is really the animal’s adaptation to its environment. […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Don’t Spiders Get Caught in Their Own Webs?

June 17, 2020 by Karen Hill

Spiders use two different kinds of threads to spin their webs. One kind is sticky, and is used to catch the flies and insects spiders like to eat. The other kind of thread is a non-sticky, or silky, thread. It is on the non-sticky threads that the spider walks when it wants to get to […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Do Spiders Spin Webs?

May 22, 2020 by Karen Hill

All spiders produce silk threads which are used to construct their webs. The silk is produced in the spider’s silk glands with the help of organs called spinnerets. By using different spinnerets, the spider can decide whether the thread will be thick or thin, dry or sticky, beaded or smooth. When the silk is first […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Is a Shrew?

July 8, 2020 by Karen Hill

If you see a shrew in a field or marsh, you might mistake it for a mouse until you spot its long, sharp nose. The shrew is one of the smallest mammals, only 3 to 6 inches long, with some weighing no more than a penny. Shrews are covered with short, dark hair and live […]

Filed Under: Animals

Are Moles Blind?

April 3, 2020 by Karen Hill

Almost, but not quite. Since moles live in underground tunnels, which they burrow, or dig, themselves, they have no need to see well. Their eyes are small, and a layer of fur and skin droops over them. In other ways, too, the mole’s body is suited for burrowing. A mole’s large, strong front feet can […]

Filed Under: Animals

Will Wolves Attack Human Beings?

April 7, 2020 by Karen Hill

Although wolves do attack people, for the most part, they avoid them. However, these gray, black, or red dog-like animals are great hunters. First they howl to get their pack together. Sometimes a pack will consist of about six wolves, but together, they are enough to chase and tire a deer and then kill it. […]

Filed Under: Animals

Is the Rhinoceros Really Ill Tempered?

February 24, 2020 by Karen Hill

rhinoceros ramming a tree

It is not its temper that makes a rhinoceros charge an intruder, but its poor eyesight. If it cannot recognize something, it will take no chances, but rush at it like a living tank, fast and furiously, ready to bite. The “horn” at the end of the rhino’s long nose, which can vary from 1 […]

Filed Under: Animals

Do Scarecrows Really Scare Crows?

April 19, 2020 by Karen Hill

scarecrows are scary

Many farmers still use scarecrows in their cornfields and gardens to scare away crows, but while this “make-believe man” might keep the large black birds away for a while, crows are really not easily frightened and soon return to the fields and even perch on the arms and head of the scarecrow. The old custom […]

Filed Under: Animals

Is There a Difference Between a Rabbit and a Hare?

February 6, 2020 by Karen Hill

rabbit or hare

Although rabbits and hares belong to the same family and look so much alike that they are mistaken for each other, there is a difference between them. The easiest time to notice this difference is at birth. Rabbits are born blind, without fur, and cannot move about. Their eyes open in about a week, and […]

Filed Under: Animals

Who Is the Best Smeller in the Insect World?

March 16, 2020 by Karen Hill

best smeller insect

The keenest sense of smell in the insect world, and in fact in all nature, belongs to the male silkworm moth. This valuable moth uses its two antennae mainly to locate the female and can detect her signal, or smell, up to 6.8 miles away, amazing for an insect only about 1 inch long.

Filed Under: Animals

How Do Silkworms Make Silk?

June 9, 2020 by Karen Hill

silkworms eating leaves

The caterpillars of the silkworm moth are the remarkable creatures responsible for making the threads from which man manufactures shiny, beautiful silk cloth. Today, almost all silk is cultivated on silk farms in Japan, China, and other countries of the Far East, where mulberry trees grow, since it is the leaves of this tree which […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Moths Eat Wool?

May 11, 2020 by Karen Hill

why do moths eat wool

For the very sensible reason that they’re hungry and they like the taste of wool. The eaters are actually the larvae, or caterpillar stage the moths go through before they get their wings. The caterpillars have mouths with strong, biting jaws that can chew cloth and fur. When the caterpillar changes into a winged creature, […]

Filed Under: Animals

Which Animal Defends Itself By Spitting?

March 14, 2020 by Karen Hill

llama spitting

The llama is the animal which defends itself by spitting. Llamas spit bad-smelling saliva through their teeth when they are angry or annoyed, and also to protect themselves. They are said to have great accuracy in spitting. The camel, which belongs to the same family as the llama, also possesses this trait. Both camels and […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Are Antlers and Which Animals Have Antlers?

August 5, 2020 by Karen Hill

antlers on a deer

Antlers are bony growths on the heads of more than 60 kinds of deer, including moose, reindeer, caribou, and elk. Antlers grow only on male deer, moose, and elk, who use them as weapons to fight other males for leadership of the herd or for possession of a mate. However, in the caribou and reindeer […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Do Flies Walk on Ceilings?

March 18, 2020 by Karen Hill

fly walking on ceiling

The amazing but deadly little insect we know as a house fly actually has a remarkable body. Even though that body is responsible for spreading diseases, it is so wonderfully made and can do such unusual things that it is an insect to be marveled at. Most amazing of all is probably the house fly’s […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Did the Praying Mantis Get Its Name?

July 18, 2020 by Karen Hill

how the praying mantis got its name

The praying mantis got its name from its appearance. It is a long, slender, green and brown insect which stands with its front legs held folded up high in front of its body. This stance, however, is not spiritual; it is purely practical. The mantis’ front legs are spiked, and they are kept folded so […]

Filed Under: Animals

Does Catgut Come from Cats?

May 10, 2020 by Karen Hill

catgut made from cats

The tough, dried, twisted string used today in making violin strings, tennis racket strings, strings to thread looms, and thread for surgical stitches is NOT made from a cat’s guts and never has been. Most catgut is made from the intestines of sheep and hogs. These intestines are cut into long ribbons, then cleaned and […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Is the Fastest Animal on Earth?

April 4, 2020 by Karen Hill

Cheetah in Kenya

The top speed man has run is about 25 miles per hour; the fastest dog, the greyhound, reaches a speed of 40 miles per hour; racehorses have been timed at 50 miles per hour; and antelopes can go close to 60 miles per hour. But none of them can come close to the world’s fastest […]

Filed Under: Animals

Are Bats Really Blind?

March 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

blind flying bats

Bats are not blind. Like many animals, they are born blind, but gain eyesight from the time they are seven to nine days old. The saying, “blind as a bat,” probably arose because of the way bats fly around, darting here and there at night. Actually, the bat is hunting insects, which people cannot see […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Is a Sloth Called Lazy?

June 25, 2020 by Karen Hill

sloths are lazy

A sloth is a small South American mammal which moves about very slowly, when it moves at all. It is considered a sluggish, or lazy, animal because of this, but scientists say that this sluggishness is caused by the sloth’s very low body temperature. Sloths spend most of their time in trees and seldom come […]

Filed Under: Animals

Are There Really Such Animals as Ligers and Tigons?

February 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

ligers and tigons are real

Ligers and Tigons are creatures that really do exist. There are the cubs of rare crossings between lions and tigers. If the father is a lion and the mother is a tigress, the cub is called a liger. If the father is a tiger and the mother is a lioness, the cub is called a […]

Filed Under: Animals

Is It True That the World’s Largest Animal Feeds on the Smallest?

July 13, 2020 by Karen Hill

large animals feed on small animals

The whale is the world’s largest animal, yet it feeds on some of the sea’s smallest creatures, plankton, tiny ocean plants and animals that drift in the sea. There are two kinds of whales: toothed whales (with teeth) and baleen whales (without teeth). Toothed whales eat fish, squid, and other sea animals. They use their […]

Filed Under: Animals

Can Dolphins Talk?

June 3, 2020 by Karen Hill

can dolphins talk

Since ancient times, the dolphin has been considered a special animal. But it is only recently that research has discovered that the friendly, playful dolphin is highly intelligent. Some scientists consider the dolphin to be even more intelligent than the chimpanzee. Dolphins and porpoises belong to the same family as whales. They are all mammals. […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Does a Whale Spout?

July 16, 2020 by Karen Hill

why do whales spout

Though it lives in the sea, the whale is a warm-blooded mammal. It must breathe oxygen from the air to live. When surfacing, the whale takes in oxygen through the blowhole on top of its head. Then, filling its large elastic lungs which are connected to the blowhole, the whale dives to feed. While underwater, […]

Filed Under: Animals

Which Insect Lives the Longest?

July 9, 2020 by Karen Hill

The longest-lived creature in the insect world is the termite queen. She has been known to live for over 50 years. During that time, the queen can lay over 30,000 eggs each day, so in her 50 years of life, it is possible for her to give birth to half a billion children!

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Turtles Live For More Than 200 Years?

May 26, 2020 by Karen Hill

why do turtles live for so long

The turtle lives longer than any creature on earth, well over 200 years (and some scientists believe 300), for the very same reason that the tortoise won the race with the hare in the famous fable. The turtle takes things very easy. It moves slowly, grows slowly, eats slowly, and even breathes slowly. Some turtles’ […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Does a Turtle Get into Its Shell?

June 13, 2020 by Karen Hill

turtle outside its shell

That’s like asking how you got into your skin. The turtle is born with its shell on. A turtle’s shell is part of its body, half on top attached at the sides to the half underneath. The shell has two layers: the outer layer is a shell of hardened skin tissue, and the inner layer, […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Does a Chameleon Change Colors?

May 14, 2020 by Karen Hill

chameleon changing colors

Chameleons are lizards known for their ability to change colors. But contrary to popular belief, the chameleon does not change its color to match its background. It changes as a result of its mood, the temperature, or light conditions. Most chameleons have brown or green as their main color, but they can turn to an […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Is a Mammal?

April 8, 2020 by Karen Hill

what is a mammal

Mammals are one of the classes of animals. Scientists have classified, or divided, all animals into groupings according to the ways in which they are alike. All mammals have one characteristic that no other animal have, mammals are the only animals whose females produce milk to feed their young. The word mammal comes from the […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Raccoons Wash Their Food?

February 29, 2020 by Karen Hill

a raccoon washes its food

There is some truth to the story that raccoons wash their food before eating it. A raccoon may dip its food in water before eating it, but this habit does not indicate cleanliness, for the water may be dirty. And raccoons will eat most anything, whether it is washed or not. Some people believe that […]

Filed Under: Animals

What Makes a Skunk Smell?

March 28, 2020 by Karen Hill

why do skunks smell

The bad-smelling odor of skunks is contained in a liquid which the animal produces and then discharges if it is frightened or in danger. The liquid is called musk. Musk is produced by two glands near the base of the skunk’s tail. The scent glands produce enough musk for six consecutive discharges. Until more liquid […]

Filed Under: Animals

Why Do Mosquitoes Bite?

April 1, 2020 by Karen Hill

Why Do Mosquitoes Bite

While the male mosquito is content to live on juices he gets from plants, the female is not. She gets her nourishment from the blood of people and animals. The female mosquito has a sharp beak which she uses to prick human or animal skin. Then she pokes a hollow tube, her mouth, into the […]

Filed Under: Animals

Which Insect Sips Its Dinner Through a Straw?

July 4, 2020 by Karen Hill

Which Insect Sips Its Dinner Through a Straw

Poor Butterfly! This beautiful, colorful insect does not have a mouth with which to chew like other insects have. But nature has given the butterfly another way to nourish itself. The butterfly has a long, thin tube, called a proboscis, through which it can suck up the sweet nectar from flowers, the same way you […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Does a Caterpillar Become a Butterfly?

May 20, 2020 by Karen Hill

how does a caterpiller become a butterfly

It may be hard to believe that a beautiful creature like a butterfly was once an ugly, worm-like creature like a caterpillar, but this is exactly how the colorful, graceful butterfly’s life cycle works. There are four stages in a butterfly’s life. The process of going from one stage to another is called metamorphosis. The […]

Filed Under: Animals

Do Cats Really Have 9 Lives?

February 9, 2020 by Karen Hill

do cats have 9 lives

Most cats live for about 14 years, although some have been known to live to the age of 30 and even beyond. The myth that a cat has 9 lives probably came about because of its ability to escape from many dangerous situations without harm. Cats have good memories, keen eyesight, and exceptional senses of […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Does a Cat Purr?

June 5, 2020 by Karen Hill

how does a cat purr

This remains an unanswered question. Although the sound of a cat’s purr is familiar to all, how the cat does it still remains a mystery. Scientists do know, however, that cats have two sets of vocal chords in their throat, one above the other. Each set produces different sounds. Many scientists believe that the lower […]

Filed Under: Animals

Do Cats Eyes Really Shine In the Dark?

July 14, 2020 by Karen Hill

do cats' eyes shine in the dark

Have you ever walked into a darkened room and seen a cat staring at you with its eyes blazing? Scary, but beautiful! There are no lights in a cat’s eyes. What you see is simply a reflection of light. A cat’s eyes are no different than yours in responding to light. In bright light, you […]

Filed Under: Animals

How Does a Firefly Make Its Light?

February 22, 2020 by Karen Hill

how does a firefly make its light

Sitting outside on summer evenings, you may have wondered how fireflies make those bright little flashes of light. To begin with, the firefly is not a fly, it is a beetle. And inside that beetle’s stomach are five chemicals. When oxygen enters the firefly’s body, it stimulates a nerve reaction which causes those five chemicals […]

Filed Under: Animals

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