The ant will eat humman meat and anny type of meat if it is raw
Technically and biologically there is nothing stopping you putting a giraffe in your circus. However, legally you'll start to run into problems.
In the US, they're classed as dangerous animals, and even if you get an ownership licence, there are public insurance problems due to the animal's proximity to the audience. The sale and import of giraffes is a legal minefield and let's be honest, most people are impressed enough by lions.
How long can an adult giraffe's neck become?
How do you describe a African Giraffe's habitat?
Giraffes are widely found in Africa. Their habitat range extends from Chad in the north to South Africa in the south. It usually inhabits Savannas and grasslands of Africa. They prefer forests with lots of acacia trees which are its main source of food. They are found in large numbers and conservation wise, they are of "Least Concern"
What are the natural predators of Giraffes?
Due to their sheer size, adult Giraffe's are not vulnerable to predators like leopards, hyenas, wild dogs etc. However, large lion packs headed by large Adult Male lions have been known to hunt down a full grown giraffe. But, this is very rare. On the other hand, calf's are very vulnerable to predators. A lion pack can easily kill a giraffe calf or even an adolescent. Hyena and wild doc packs too are known to prey on giraffe calves.
How will you put the giraffe inside the refrigerator?
Elephants go in the fridge, NOT giraffes.
step1:take elephant out
step2:refill the ice blocks
step3;put the giraffe in
Open the door and puch it in. This is a trick question designed to test you thinking outside the box- or inside the box depending on how you look at it :P
Why dense forest is a disadvantage to giraffes?
Dense forests are not a disadvantage to giraffes. Giraffes prefer savannas, open plains and dense forests where they have the room to freely roam around.
Is there anyway to get taller faster?
this depends on you age. if you are below 20 then you can give it a try. drink plenty of water. take a brisk walk for about half an hour very early in the morning. practice deep breathing exercises preferably learnt from a practitioner. make a mark a little higher than you can reach say the doorway, then everytime you pass through it or see it try and stretch to reach that mark and when you do try marking a little higher. you must be able to do this atleast ten times a day preferably on an empty stomach. works better in youngsters. see that you are free of constipation by eating a balanced fruit and vegetable high diet
Classically wolfs, but if anybody has a better answer I am all ears, well eyes.
Leslie Cope was a prolific artist dedicated to his work and committed to the simple virtues of rural life, seascapes and landscapes in the United States and in his native England. He has been selling his art since the 1930's.
Popular among his works are subjects that deal with the common work horse, country scenes, barnyards, coal mining from the early 1930's, bridges, rural landscapes, village sketches, fair and carnival scenes, and canal studies to mention a few. Cope faithfully recorded southeast Ohio and loved to return often to Mt Hope and Millersburg.
He drew from memory and old sketches to bring to life scenes from his native England depicting pottery towns, the tall bottle kilns of Stoke-on-Trent where he was born, canal and street scenes from the turn of the century England in its industrial heyday, and simple rustic moments of a familiar past with a country he never abandoned.
Cope returned annually to Gloucester Massachusetts to paint seascapes, harbor scenes, and rows of fishing boats with his wife Velma. They also made frequent trips to western states, reveling in the sights of small herds of roaming mustang and wild horses they found and sketched. Cope painted desert towns as well as Indian encampments.
Not commonly known are Cope's numerous sketches of his active duty during WW2 while stationed in Guam. Cope was a camouflage expert with the U.S. Air Force then.
His works are in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, Library of Congress, and Capitol University.
He has had one-man shows in the Library of Congress and The Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C.
Honors and awards have been given him in juried shows at the National Academy, the Society of Graphic Artists, and the Society of Academic Artists.
Copes works have been recognized in England and Paris, and in 1975 he was named to Who's Who in America.
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