alligators: congregation
antelope: herd
ants: nest, army, colony, swarm
apes: troop, shrewdness
asses: pace, herd, drove
baboons: troop
badgers: cete
bears: sloth, sleuth
beavers: family, colony
bees: grist, swarm, nest, hive
boars: sounder, singular
buffalo: herd, troop, gang, obstinancy
butterflies: flutter
buzzards: wake
camels: train, caravan, flock
caribou: herd
cats: clowder, cluster, glaring, pounce
caterpillars: army
cattle: drove, herd
chickens: brood, peep
cockroaches: intrusion
cormorants: gulp
cows: kine
crocodiles: bask, float
crows: murder
deer: herd
dogs: pack
doves: arc, dule, flight, pitying
ducks: paddling, flock, raft
eagles: aerie, convocation
eels: bed, swarm
elephants: herd, memory
elks: gang, herd
emus: mob
ferrets: business
finches: charm
fish: school, shoal, haul, catch
flamingos: stand, flamboyance
flies: swarm, cloud, business
foxes: leash, skulk, troop
frogs: army
geese: gaggle, skein
giraffes: herd, corps, tower
gnats: swarm, cloud, horde
goats: flock, herd, tribe, trip
goldfish: troubling
gorillas: band, troop
grasshoppers: cloud
gulls: colony
hares: down, husk
hawks: boil, cast, kettle
herons: sedge, siege
hippos: bloat
horses: herd, band, string, team, stable
hounds: mute, brace, pack
hyenas: cackle
jays: band, party, scold
jellyfish: smack, brood
kangaroo: mob, herd, troop
larks: exaltation
leopards: leap
lions: pride
lizards: lounge
mice: nest
moles: labor
monkeys: barrel
moose: herd
mules: barren, span
otters: romp
oxen: team, yoke, drove
owls: parliament
oysters: bed
parrots: company, pandemonium
peacocks: ostentation, pride
pelicans: pod
penguins: rookery, colony
pheasants: bouquet, nye
pigs: drift, drove, sounder
porcupines: prickle
porpoises: school, crowd, shoal
prairie dogs: coterie
quail: bevy, covey
rabbits: nest, warren
raccoons: gaze
rattlesnakes: rhumba
ravens: unkindness
rhinoceroses: crash
sardines: family
seabirds: wreck
seals: pod, rookery
sharks: school, shoal
sheep: flock, pack, hurtle
snakes: bed, knot, den, pit
sparrows: host
Spiders: clutter
squirrels: dray, scurry
starlings: chattering, murmuration
storks: mustering
swallows: flight
swans: bevy, herd, bank, wedge, flight
swine: sounder, drift, herd
tigers: ambush, streak
toads: nest, knot
trout: hover
turkeys: rafter
turtles: bale, dole
walruses: pod, herd
weasels: pack, colony
whales: school, pod, mob, gam
wolves: pack, rout
wombats: wisdom
woodpeckers: descent
zebras: herd, zeal
Almost all animals fall into one of two groups. Adult vertebrates have a spinal column, or backbone, running the length of the body; invertebrates do not. Vertebrates are often larger and have more complex bodies than invertebrates. However, there are many more invertebrates than vertebrates. Vertebrates
- From: Rey Tristan Joshua B. Unay, 1st Year, Philippines
The old system of Biology used to be what was called the 5 kingdom system. They are still present, but pointless to use for actual biological usage. They are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera. Current biologists that distinguish between types of life use what is called the 3 domain system. It is Prokarya, Eukarya, and Archea. One can get more specific and use kingdoms, but that cannot answer any questions, which is why there is no study of kingdoms, but rather say within a kingdom (for example, Animalia, the study is called zoology) there are 30some [arguable number] phyla of which a biologist picks to study and usually gets as specific as a genus (often even a species) to study.
The five different classes of vertabrates are Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds and Mammals.
'' Monera, ''Protists,'' ''Fungi, '' ''Plantae,'' ''Animalia.''''
Mammals (humans, elephants), Fish (stingrays, eels) Amphibians, (frogs, toads) Reptiles (snakes, tortoises), Birds (chicken duck)
chimpanzees
Animals that live in groups can defend themselves better than the animals live in solitary. Animals live in solitary means animals live alone by themselves.
He divided animals into two groups- those with red blood and those without it.
Aristotle made three groups of animal which is Terrestrial- where LAND animals live Aquatic- where AQUATIC animals live Aerial- where AIR animals live
There are two groups of animals that are called a bed. Oysters and clams are both called beds when they are in groups.
some stingrays "like" to live in groups, there social animals when young.
In the English language, there are a huge variety of names for groups of animals and groups of plants and groups of people.See the "What are the names for various groups of animals?" for some of them.Typically such groups have members that are related to each other.The special case of a group of organisms that are genetically identical to each other -- which happens in the wild with many kinds of plants and bacteria, and a very few species of animals -- is called a clonal colony.
Animals that live in groups can defend themselves better than the animals live in solitary. Animals live in solitary means animals live alone by themselves.
Which of the following groups of animals lacks cephalization? Question 4 options: Arthropods Cnidarians Roundworms Annelids
i only know three and there are :carnivore,omnivore and herbivore i hope you can get it right good luck
The collective names for a group of monkeys is troop and barrel. Groups of animals have their own collective noun, for example, a prickle of porcupines.
There isn't an exact definition for a group of animals. However, there is different names for certain groups of animals. Like a like a group of dogs or wolves is called a pack. Or, for another example, a group of lions is called a pride.
No, animals that live in groups, or packs, actually tend to hunt larger animals. For example lions, they hunt in groups and take down some of the largest land animals in the world.
Most animals do not live in family groups. Some animals that do include horses, lions, and dolphins.
the extinct animals names in hidi
Kushites and Nubians were the names of the two groups the Egyptians traded with in Africa.
Kushites and Nubians were the names of the two groups the Egyptians traded with in Africa.
Kushites and Nubians were the names of the two groups the Egyptians traded with in Africa.