Carcinus maenas - Green shore crab
Alca torda - Razorbill
Porcello scaber - Woodlice
Bufo bufo - Common toad
Scyliorhinus caniculus - Dogfish
Wolf - Canis lupus
Bear - Ursus arctos
Falcon - Falco peregrinus
Trout - Salmo trutta
Cat - Felis domestica
Animals indeed get nose bleeds .It is as common as a human nose bleeds .And most house pets get nose bleeds and some wild animals as well.
There are probably both practical and sentimental reasons for this. Practicaly speaking, there are other animals that are anatomically closer to humans and less expensive to breed, like pigs (and mice, for earlier stages of research). For sentimental reasons, since dogs are such a common pet, there would probably be a public outcry if they were used for research where there was any potential for harm to them.
No there are not any animals that have not been named. When people find them, they should be named...I think! No there are not any animals that have not been named. When people find them, they should be named...I think!
Animals that are active at night are called nocturnal.
Yes, but only a few animals have mucus.
No. The reason behind giving an animal a scientific name is to be able to easily identify it. It helps us not to get confused as people sometimes do with common names that are common to multiple species of animals.
no
things are given scientific names by their charactertics and it is important because scientist can talk about same species without Any confusion
The scientific name for mash, the common crop, is Vigna mungo.
Nope. none.
The scientific name for ragworms is Hediste diversicolor.
an orange....
The Sun does not have any scientific name like the names of plants and animals. Our Sun is a star of spectral class G2 and luminosity class V (main sequence). So, we can say "scientifically" that the Sun is a G2V star.
Any number of animals within the suborder Zygoptera.
The only common name for the hedgehog is "hedgehog".
an outdoor stage haha
Panther