My guess is for heat efficiency--having more blood in the core and less flowing out to extremities would probably conserve heat, and therefore the amount of energy used.
In general, smaller animals tend to live shorter lives than larger animals. This is known as the "rate-of-living theory," which suggests that animals with higher metabolic rates tend to have shorter lifespans. However, there are many exceptions to this rule, and lifespan can be influenced by a variety of factors such as genetics, environment, and evolutionary adaptations.
Temper
Make the length shorter; make the cross section bigger; choose a material with a low resistivity.Make the length shorter; make the cross section bigger; choose a material with a low resistivity.Make the length shorter; make the cross section bigger; choose a material with a low resistivity.Make the length shorter; make the cross section bigger; choose a material with a low resistivity.
Mansion. It is shorter but is wider.
Bigger than Bumblebee (WAY bigger) shorter than Omega Supreme (WAY shorter) and head and shoulders above Ratchet....a head shorter than Headmaster Bulkhead. Does that help?
Yes, stuffed animals are bigger then elephants.
Because all cells are roughly the same size. This means that bigger animals are made of more cells than smaller animals. (If bigger animals had the same number of cells as smaller animals then the cells they were made of would have to be bigger in proportion to those that smaller animals were made of - and they are not)
No.
The bigger and hotter a star is, the shorter its lifespan will be. This is because higher temperatures cause stars to burn through their fuel more quickly, leading to a faster depletion of their energy source and a shorter overall existence.
As a general rule, yes.
A lot of bigger animals
cuz the tail have more pop that why it shorter