Nothing, unless you can think of one! :)
a animal grows hair in the winter normally but animals that shed their coat shed it because it is too hot.
Some shed all year long but spring is the worst time because they shed their winter coat. They also shed vigorously in the Autumn to prepare for their winter coat. In the spring they shed their thicker winter coat to put on a thinner summer coat. In the fall the process is reversed, they get rid of their summer coat to put on a warmer winter coat.
Qiviut is grown under the long guard hair coat of the musk ox. The musk ox shed this fine coat of underwool every spring, and grows a new coat in time for the next winter.
They are shedding their winter coat
every dog breed sheds, especially around winter time, they shed their spring / summer coat to a thick winter coat to stay warm. when spring / summer comes around again they shed their winter coat and so on.
Dogs do most of their shedding twice per year. As weather warms up they shed their winter coats in order to have a more comfortable lighter coat. When the weather begins to cool again, they shed their summer coat and get their winter coat.
A thick hide that enables the animal's organs to stay within the body cavity. The hide is covered in hair that allows the animal to regulate temperatures, in the fall season it will grow a thick coat while in the spring it will shed the winter coat out.
You dog may have stopped shedding because he or she has their new coat in and no longer needs to shed. Dogs shed during seasonal changes. They get a thinner coat in summer, and a thicker one in winter.
they normally shed their shells, like crabs or snakes. (except snakes shed their skin).
YES, at the start of summer they will shed some of their thick winter coat to stay cool.
Once the bean plant starts to develop its first pair of leaves, the seed coat will be shed.
They shed there summer coat off and grow a snow-white coat. This helps them camouflage when predator are near.