Elephant
Small Dog - 140-160 beats per minute Medium Dog - 120-140 beats per minute Large Dog - 60-80 beats per minute This is vague, so allow for 10bpm inaccuracy either side of each band.
Dog heartbeats vary depending on size and age of the dog. Puppies and toy breeds can have heart rates between 100-220 beats a minute. Adult dogs and large breed dogs have slower rates between 60-120 beats per minute.
The resting heart rate of a jaguar typically ranges from 50 to 70 beats per minute. This can vary based on factors such as age, health, and activity level. Jaguars, being large carnivorous felids, have a slower heart rate compared to smaller mammals, which reflects their larger body size and metabolic needs.
The average osprey weighs 1.5 to 2kgs and their diet is fish. They have 30 heart beats per minute.
28 beats per minute at rest (see www.thaifocus.com/elephant/heartbeat.htm)
9 times per minute, or every 6.7 seconds 9 times per minute, or every 6.7 seconds
One large four chambered heart.
While in general, the larger the animal the lower/slower the heart rate, large whales have a variable heart rate between 10- 30 beats per minute. Humpbacks lower their metabolism and heart rate when they dive to conserve oxygen. The rate rises as they themselves rise again to the surface.
a creature such as a whale or elephant has a slower heartbeat than that of a mouse or rabbit. in fact, a mouses heart beats so many times per minute that it sounds more like it's humming! the general rule is the bigger the creature, the slower its heart beats. hope this helps, have a nice day (or night, depending on what time zone your in!)
13 hours ago
Coyotes, like humans, are mammals. Mammals have 4-chambered hearts. Even whales, which are technically mammals and not fish, have large 4-chambered hearts like humans do.
About 180 for puppies & 60 for grown dogs