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Thứ Tư, 31 tháng 8, 2016

Giraffes - Diet and offspring

Giraffes are the world's tallest mammals, thanks to their towering legs and long necks. As we know, a giraffe baby legs alone are taller than many humans.

Diet

Giraffes are herbivores, which means they eat only plants. Their long necks allow them to reach leaves, buds and branches high up in mimosa and acacia trees. They can eat hundreds of pounds of leaves per week, according to National Geographic.

Though these animals eat a lot, giraffes can go without drinking for weeks at a time. They get most of their moisture from the vegetation they eat.
Learn more: tiger facts                     



Offspring

As in cattle, female giraffes are called cows, while the males are called bulls. After mating, the cow will have a gestation period of around 14 months. During birth, the calf will drop to the ground, since mother giraffes give birth standing up. The fall can be as far as 5 feet (1.5 m), according to National Geographic.

New calves are quite large, at 6 feet tall (1.8 m), 100 to 150 lbs. (45 to 68 kg), according to the San Diego Zoo. They are also agile. At just an hour after birth, they can stand up and walk around. 

Giraffe mothers often take turns watching over the calves. Sometimes, though, the mother giraffe will leave the calf by itself. When this happens, the infant will lie down and wait for its mother to return.

At 3 to 6 years old, calves are fully mature. The animals can live up to 20 years.

Read more animal fun facts

Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 8, 2016

How much vitamin C should we take?

Whether for the purpose of keep healthy or loose weight, play an important role in our daily life. Learn more about how to get enough vitamin c to succeed at your goals below!

Kết quả hình ảnh cho vitamin c can help lose weight

Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid or L-ascorbate, is an essential vitamin to the human body. It could very well be one of the safest and most important vitamins you could take on a daily basis. Vitamin C is most known as the first thing people go for whenever they have a cold. It is a water-soluble vitamin that is necessary for normal growth and development. Since it is water soluble, extra amounts that the body doesn't use leaves the body through urine within 24 hours.

Now that we know you need vitamin C and why, we have to figure out how much you should take. The Food and Drug Administration set their guidelines for how much a person should take for general health. These are the FDA recommendations for each age group and gender.

Infants And Children

0 - 6 months: 40 milligrams/day (mg/day)
7 - 12 months: 50 mg/day
1 - 3 years: 15 mg/day
4 - 8 years: 25 mg/day
9 - 13 years: 45 mg/day

Adolescents

Girls 14 - 18 years: 65 mg/day
Boys 14 - 18 years: 75 mg/day

Adults

Men age 19 and older: 90 mg/day
Women age 19 year and older: 75 mg/day

Now these guidelines aren't designed for athletes. Those folks that are active obviously need more C than the non-active person would. It is believed that active people can benefit from taking anywhere from 500 milligrams to as much as 3,000 mg a day, depending on the person's daily activity level. If you are sick, you may need as much as eight grams a day for the duration of your illness.

Related to scotch whisky

Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 8, 2016

Basic tigers facts and information

Learn all basic tigers facts and information by this writing:

Diet

Tigers mainly eat ambar deer, wild pigs, water buffalo and antelope. Tigers are also known to hunt sloth bears, dogs, leopards, crocodiles and pythons as well as monkeys and hares. Old and injured tigers have been known to attack humans and domestic cattle.

Population

In the early 1900s, there were around 100,000 tigers throughout their range. Today, an estimated total of around 3,000-4,500 exist in the wild. Below is a breakdown of tiger numbers by subspecies.
  1. Bengal tiger: Less than 2,000
  2. Indochinese tiger: 750-1,300
  3. Siberian tiger: Around 450
  4. Sumatran tiger: 400-500
  5. Malayan tiger: 600-800
  6. South Chinese tiger: Extinct in the wild
  7. Caspian tiger: Extinct
  8. Javan tiger: Extinct
  9. Bali tiger: Extinct
Kết quả hình ảnh cho tiger facts

The Tale of the Tiger

Recognizing a tiger at the zoo is easy. But in their natural habitat, tigers are really hard to find. That’s because their unique orange, black and white stripe pattern helps them blend into the forests and grassy areas where they live and hunt.
Tigers are carnivores. They are quiet, patient hunters with large powerful paws and teeth to help them catch and eat their prey. Some of their favorite meals include pigs, deer, rhinoceroses, and even small elephants.
Tigers hunt for their food, but they are also hunted by humans for their valuable fur and body parts. Because of this, tiger researches think there may only be 3,500 tigers left in the world. This makes them an endangered species.

Also see elephant facts

Range

Historic tiger range ran from Turkey through South and Southeast Asia to the far eastern shores of the continent. Today, they are only found in South and Southeast Asia, China and the Russian Far East.

Behavior

Tigers occupy a variety of habitats from tropical forests, evergreen forests, woodlands and mangrove swamps to grasslands,savannah and rocky country. They are mostly nocturnal (more active at night) and are ambush predators that rely on the camouflage their stripes provide. Tigers use their body weight to knock prey to the ground and kills with a bite to the neck. They are also very good swimmers and have been known to kill prey while swimming.
Tigers essentially live solitary lives, except during mating season and when females bear young. They are usually fiercely territorial and have and mark their large home ranges.

Reproduction

Mating Season: In tropical climates, mostly from around November to April; during the winter months in temperate regions.
Gestation: 103 days.
Litter size: 3-4 cubs.
Cubs follow their mother out of the den at around 8 weeks and become independent at around 18 months of age. They leave their mothers at about 2 ½ years. Mothers guard their young from wandering males that may kill the cubs to make the female receptive to mating.

Thứ Năm, 18 tháng 8, 2016

Many interesting cockroach facts

Have you known about some following interesting cockroach facts before:

1. Cockroach Eating Contests

If a cockroach is beheaded it will never die because of the loss of its head. The only thing killing it will be the thirst as it can’t drink water without a head. Their respiratory system has nothing to do with the mouth as they can breathe through little pores in their body.
Cockroach Eating Contests


The Six Flags Great America theme park in Chicago came up with a very gag-worthy promotion for Halloween back in 2008. They offered park passes to the winner of a contest to eat the most live cockroaches in the space of five minutes. A doctor advised people against taking part because of the microorganisms that live inside the insects. Nevertheless, the parkresurrected the contest in 2011, citing “popular demand.”

The true risk of this sort of contest was shown in Florida. A competitor named Edward Archbold died shortly after a pet shop held a roach-eating competition with a python as a prize. He suffocated after choking on bits of cockroach that got lodged in his throat. Six Flags decided to call off their contest following the death.

2. A Cockroach Can Cause Many Diseases

Cockroaches love to live in filth and dirty places and in these interesting cockroach facts; this fact is about their contaminating abilities. A cockroach is usually completely enveloped in filth. They can move as fast as 3 miles per hour. It will take only a few minutes for a single cockroach to fully contaminate a house. That’s why they can cause many dangerous diseases among humans.


3. Cockroach Facts: German Cockroaches

German cockroaches are considered the most dangerous than others cockroaches. They are the most common type found in almost every nation. They can cause illness, allergy and in some severe cases breathing problems in humans. They can become fully adult within a time span of 36 days.


4. Cockroaches Like to Live in Small, Closed Places

There are many interesting cockroach facts and this fact will tell you about their habit of living in small and closed places. All the cockroaches are thigmotropic i.e. they are sensitive to touch from all sides. They like to crawl in small and tight places to fit in. They really seem to enjoy a place closed from all sides. A pregnant mother cockroach can even manage to fit in a place not wider than two vertically combined coins.


5. Cockroach Facts: Cockroaches Can’t Live Without Water

They are cold blooded and can survive for a month without any food. They usually don’t remain without food for that much long as they can eat anything in their way. Their real problem is the shortage of water. No water for a week can kill them. So primarily they need water to survive not the food.


6. Cockroaches are used as Food in Some Countries

In these cockroach facts, this fact is probably the weirdest of all. Even though they are hated by most people especially women but still there are places in the world where they are served as food. Countries like Ghana, Thailand, Mexico, China and even in some places of America they are served as food. In the November of 2012 a cockroach eating contest was held. But unfortunately the winner of the contest died soon after the competition. He choked to death on the small pieces of roaches in his throat.

Some Amazing Camel Facts

If you’re looking for the most interesting animal facts, you’re at the right place. Here are list of amazing facts about camel

Camel facts
  1. There are two species of true camel. The dromedary, is a single humped camel that lives in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa area. The bactrian, is a two-humped camel that lives in areas of Central Asia.
  2. There are four camel-like mammals that live in South America, llama and alpaca are called "New World camels", while guanaco and vicuna are called "South American camels".
  3. Camels have been domesticated by humans for thousands of years. Used mostly for transport or to carry heavy loads, they also provide a source of milk, meat, and hair/wool.
  4. Camels live on average for 40 to 50 years.
  5. Camels are 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) at shoulder level and 2.15 m (7 ft 1 in) at the hump.
  6. Camels are capable of running as fast as 65 km/h (40 mph) for a short period of time, and can maintain a speed of around 40 km/h (25 mph).
  7. Dromedary camels weigh 300 to 600 kg (660 to 1,320 lb) and bactrian camels weigh 300 to 1,000 kg (660 to 2,200 lb). 
  8. Camels do not actually hold liquid water in their humps. The humps contain fatty tissue reserves, which can be converted to water or energy when required. They can survive up to six months without food or water by using up these fatty stores.
  9. Camels are well suited to the hot sandy deserts they roam in. Their thick coat insulates them from heat and also lightens during summer to help reflect heat.
  10. A camels long legs help its body to be high from the hot desert surface and a pad of thick tissue called a pedestal raises the body slightly when the camel sits so cool air can pass underneath.
  11. A large camel can drink around 30 gallons (113 liters) in just 13 minutes, making them able to rehydrate faster than any other mammal.
  12. Long eyelashes, ear hair, and closable nostrils keep sand from affecting the camel, while their wide feet help them move without sinking into sand.
  13. Camels have long been used in wartimes. Romans used camels for their ability to scare off horses who are afraid of their scent, and in recent times camels have been used to carry heavy gear and troops across hot sandy deserts.