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Showing posts with label Camel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camel. Show all posts

8/19/12

Rabbit Short History And Verry Beautiful Images Collection

Short History Of  Rabbit:

Rabbits are small mammals in the family Leporidae of the order Lagomorpha.It found in several parts of the world. There are eight different genera in the family classified as rabbits including the European rabbit . The male is called a buck and the female is a doe.A young rabbit is called a kitten or kit. Rabbit habitats include meadows, woods, forests, grasslands, deserts and wetlands. Rabbits live in groups. A group of burrows is called a warren.

The rabbit's long ears which can be more than 10 cm long. They have large powerful hind legs. The two front paws have 5 toes the extra called the dewclaw. The hind feet have 4 toes. They are plantigrade animals.They move around on their toes while running. Wild rabbits do not differ much in their body proportions or stance with full egg-shaped bodies. Their size can range anywhere from 20 cm in length and 0.4 kg in weight to 50 cm long and more than 2 kg.weight. The fur is most commonly long and soft with colors such as shades of brown, gray, and buff. The tail is a little plume of brownish fur.

Rabbits are hindgut digesters. This means that most of their digestion takes place in their large intestine and cecum. In rabbits the cecum is about 10 times bigger than the stomach and it along with the large intestine makes up roughly 40% of the rabbit's digestive tract. The unique musculature of the cecum allows the intestinal tract of the rabbit to separate fibrous material from more digestible material. Cecotropes, sometimes called "night feces", are high in minerals, vitamins and proteins that are necessary to the rabbit's health. Rabbits eat these to meet their nutritional requirements, the mucous coating allows the nutrients to pass through the acidic stomach for digestion in the intestines. This process allows rabbits to extract the necessary nutrients from their food.

Rabbits have a very rapid reproductive rate. The breeding season for most rabbits lasts 9 months. Normal gestation is about 30 days. The average size of the litter varies but is usually between 4 and 12 babies. A kit (baby rabbit) can be weaned at about 4 to 5 weeks of age. This means in one season a single female rabbit can produce as many as 800 children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. A doe is ready to breed at about 6 months of age, and a buck at about 7 months. Courtship and mating are very brief, lasting only 30 to 40 seconds. Courtship behavior involves licking, sniffing, and following the doe. Spraying urine is also a common sexual behavior. Female rabbits are reflex ovulators. The female rabbit also may or may not lose clumps of hair during the gestation period.

Images:
 Rabbit  Photo
 Rabbit Image


 Rabbit  Picture
 Rabbit Image

 Rabbit Image
 Rabbit Image

 Rabbit  Picture
 Rabbit Beaupicturetiful 

 Rabbit  Photo
 Rabbit Image

 Rabbit  Picture
Cute Rabbit

8/15/12

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak

The yak is a wild animal .It is a long-haired bovine found throughout the Himalayan region of south Central Asia, the Tibetan Plateau and as far north as Mongolia and Russia.

The English word "yak" derives from the Tibetan or gyag , in Tibetan this refers only to the male of the species, the female being called a dri or nak. In English, as in most other languages which have borrowed the word,'yak' is usually used for both sexes. 

Wild yaks are among the largest bovids and are second only to the gaur in shoulder height. Wild yak adults stand about 1.6 to 2.2 m (5.2 to 7.2 ft) tall at the shoulder and weigh 305–1,000 kg (670–2,200 lb). The head and body length is 2.5 to 3.3 m (8.2 to 11 ft), not counting the tail of 60 to 100 cm (24 to 39 in). The females are about one-third the weight and are about 30% smaller in their linear dimensions when compared to bull wild yaks.

Yaks are heavily built animals with a bulky frame, sturdy legs, and rounded cloven hooves. They are the only wild bovids of this size with extremely dense, long fur that hangs down lower than the belly. Wild yaks are generally dark, blackish to brown, in pelage coloration. However, domestic yaks can be quite variable in color, often having patches of rusty brown and cream. They have small ears and a wide forehead, with smooth horns that are generally dark in colour. In males, the horns sweep out from the sides of the head, and then curve forward; they typically range from 48 to 99 cm (19 to 39 in) in length. The horns of females are smaller, only 27 to 64 cm (11 to 25 in) in length, and have a more upright shape. Both sexes have a short neck with a pronounced hump over the shoulders, although this is larger and more visible in males. Yaks are highly friendly in nature and can easily be trained. There has been very little documented aggression from yaks towards human beings, although mothers can be extremely protective of their young and will bluff charge if they feel threatened.

Both sexes have long shaggy hair with a dense woolly undercoat over the chest, flanks, and thighs to insulate them from the cold. Especially in males, this may form a long "skirt" that can reach the ground. The tail is long and horselike rather than tufted like the tails of cattle or bison. Wild yaks typically have black or dark brown hair over most of the body, with a greyish muzzle, although some wild golden-brown individuals have been reported. Domesticated yaks have a wider range of coat colours, with some individuals being white, grey, brown, roan or piebald. The udder in females and the scrotum in males are small and hairy, as protection against the cold. Females have four teats.

Yak physiology is well adapted to high altitudes, having larger lungs and heart than cattle found at lower altitudes, as well as greater capacity for transporting oxygen through their blood due to the persistence of foetal haemoglobin throughout life. Conversely, yaks do not thrive at lower altitudes and begin to suffer from heat exhaustion above about 15 °C (59 °F). Further adaptations to the cold include a thick layer of subcutaneous fat, and an almost complete lack of functional sweat glands.

The diet of wild yaks consists largely of grasses and sedges, such as Carex, Stipa, and Kobresia. They also eat a smaller amount of herbs, winterfat shrubs, and mosses, and have even been reported to eat lichen. Historically, the main natural predator of the wild yak has been the Tibetan wolf, but brown bears and snow leopards have also been reported as predators in some areas, likely of young or infirm wild yaks.

Wild yaks are found primarily in northern Tibet and western Qinghai, with some populations extending into the southern most parts of Xinjiang, and into Ladakh in India. Small, isolated populations of wild yak are also found farther afield, primarily in western Tibet and eastern Qinghai. In historic times, wild yaks were also found in Nepal and Bhutan, but they are now considered extinct in both countries, except as domesticated animals.

Images:

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

Short History Of Yak And Images Collection

8/9/12

Camel Large and Hoofed Domestic Animals Details History And Images Collection

Short History Of Camel:

The Camel is a large hoofed animal that is most commonly found in the hot deserts of Northern Africa and the Middle East. Thought to have been first domesticated by native people more than 5,000 years ago.These hardy animals have proved vital to the survival of humans in these areas as they are not just used for transporting both people and goods but also provide a good source of milk, meat and wool. The Camel is one the most unique mammals on the planet and has adapted perfectly to life in the desert where food and water can often be scarce and the temperature changes rapidly from the scorching-hot days to the cooler nights. However, although they would have once been found freely roaming the Arabian deserts.
Images:
Camel Animals Picture
Camel Animal Picture

Camels have a number of adaptations to help them to survive the most successfully in such dry and arid climates starting with their cream to brown coloured, short but thick fur which not only protects their skin from the sun during the day, but also helps to keep them warm when the temperature plummets at night. Their long legs keep their body high above the hot ground and their two toes on each foot are able to spread widely apart to prevent them from sinking into the sand. The bottoms of their feet are also padded to help them when in rocky or stony regions. Camels have large eyes and nostrils which give them good sight and smell. They have a double layer of long eyelashes and can close their slit like nostrils to protect them from dust storms. Camels are able to survive for long periods of time without either food or water as they store fat in their hump which can be used to give the Camel energy when resources are scarce.

 Camel Cute Picture
Image Of Camel Wild Animal

Today Camels are no longer found in the wild but still exist as domestic animals in these areas and provide both transport and an important source of food for the local people. Their ability to go for so long without both food and water along with being able to carry heavy loads has meant that they have allowed people to travel further across the desert. Today, millions of domestic Camels exist in the desert along with a feral population that can be found in the deserts of Central Australia.

Camel  With Baby Animal Image
Camel With Baby  Pictures
Camels are able to breed by the time they are between three and four years old for females and five years old for males, when the dominant male of the herd has breeding rights with the females. Both female and male Camels come into heat during the breeding season which usually lasts between November and March. 
Camel Beautiful Photo
 Camel Beautiful Photo
After a long gestation period that can last for up to thirteen months the female gives birth to either a single calf or occasionally twins which can already weigh as much as 40kg at birth. Within eight hours the young calf is able to stand and is then nursed by it's mother in the protection of the herd until it is big and strong enough to become independent. Young Camels begin to eat grass when they are between two and three months old and are weaned at roughly four months of age.
Camel Indian Animals  Pics.
Camel In Rajasthan India

 Camel Walk Picture
Image Of Camel
Tags: Camel wild animals picture stills, Domestic animal camel photo, camel very beautiful picture, camel large and hoofed animals photo, camel descriptions and details, camel history and where to find,
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