A cheetah's spots are part of the pattern formed by the colours of its hair.
Hair colour can change over time, fading or greying as an animal or human ages or is ill, but it doesn't change from natural causes from time to time in the course of a short period.
There are always tales of someone who's suffered a terrible shock turning grey overnight, but they aren't true. Once the hair has grown a certain colour, that's the colour it stays. When a person or other creature goes grey they do so by growing new hairs which are grey, not by the existing hairs changing colour.
No, the spots on a cheetah do not change color when the animal is hungry.
Lion spots fade away when they start to mature.
lighter
They will fade away.
No...But cubs have spots that fade as they grow.
To fade means to become lighter or less noticeable. If you keep losing weight, you will fade away. The dark spots fade when you use this cream.
Yes, as they age bobcats do tend to lose their spots. However, the spots do not completely diminish. Instead, they fade in color.
Objection, question assumes facts not in evidence. In other words: it's not necessarily true that lighter colors DO fade more than darker colors.
The number of spots identifies the type of ladybug. As ladybugs age, the color of the spots fade.
The black panther, is actually a black leopard! So yes panthers do have spots but we can't see them from far away. And I wouldn't recomend getting close enough to look :S
it blends it into the skin and has a special formulae
As cubs they do. But these fade as they become adolescents.
Honey does help dry spots up and makes the spots fade and makes the redness or irritation go down. I would recomend honey for that purpose, but i dont think it will completly get rid of spots. Hope this was helpfull x