It's called a hide, it is rough, covered with short bristles of hair and grey in colour when dry
No, hippos do not have spots on their skin. Their skin is mostly smooth and hairless, with a grayish-brown color.
Hippos and birds have a symbiotic relationship in the wild. Birds often perch on hippos to feed on parasites and insects on their skin, while hippos benefit from the birds' cleaning services. This mutually beneficial interaction helps both species stay healthy in their natural habitat.
A person with a lot of melanin in their skin will typically have a darker skin color, ranging from light brown to deep black. Melanin is a pigment that gives skin its color and helps protect against the sun's harmful UV rays.
Porcelain skin refers to skin that is very fair, smooth, and flawless in appearance, resembling the smooth texture and pale color of porcelain. This term is often used to describe skin that is clear and has a translucent quality, with a lack of visible imperfections such as blemishes or dark spots.
No, you would not get lighter than your original skin color, unless you became vitamin malnourished thus making you pail. But that is not a direct cause of lack of sunlight that is just being unhealthy.
No, hippos do not have spots on their skin. Their skin is mostly smooth and hairless, with a grayish-brown color.
da no
Hippos just simply love being wet it helps there skin is they were to stay in the sun all day the would get loads of dry skin and flies on them. they also love mud as it sooths the skin :) hope this helps you babe x
Hippos are hunted mainly for their teeth, known as hippo ivory.
A hippos skin probably feels like leather.
it has spiky skin with bubble gum on their spikes
to keep their skin moist
Hippos do not need protecting from much. Their thick skin helps to protects them from the sun and a variety of insects.
Pachyderm would be a nickname for an African elephant.
Hippos have a thick skin covering, to protect their body. Practically hairless, its smooth skin very delicate. The hippo's skin excretes an oily liquid (red in colour), which keeps the skin moist and protected from the sun, when it is out of water.
spotted
No, that's hippos. Hippos do it because they have very fair skin, and the red pigment in their sweat acts as a sunscreen and stops them from burning up.