in rainforest you can touch tree bark animal fir leaves
crocodiles make splashes in the water to communicate with each other.
Ants have antennae to help them navigate their environment, communicate with other ants through pheromones, and detect changes in their surroundings such as food sources or predators. The antennae are sensitive to touch, taste, and smell, allowing ants to gather vital information about their surroundings.
Tigers have a well-developed sense of sight, hearing, and smell. Their eyesight is particularly acute, allowing them to see well in low light conditions and detect movement from a distance. They also have a strong sense of smell, which they use for communication and hunting.
Dogs have a more developed sense of smell than hearing. They have up to 300 million olfactory receptors in their noses, compared to about 6 million in humans. While dogs can hear a wider range of frequencies than humans, their sense of smell is their most powerful sense and is essential to how they experience the world.
Some animals can hear and small things that people cannot because they have more nerves in their nose and ears, a better structure in more or ear for gathering the sound or smells, and devote more of their brain to the sense of smell or hearing than to people.
If you can touch feel smell touch and or hear
* touch * feel * smell * hear * see
there are 5 sight hear touch taste smell
1. touch 2. taste 3. feel 4. hear 5. smell
see hear smell taste touch
Touch
#1 Sight #2 Smell #3 Touch #4 Hearing #5 Taste he 5 senses. not the 9. sight smell feel hear and taste
they have smell , touch ,taste,see,hear
touch _ taste _ smell _ hear _ sight
In a wetland, you may see a variety of aquatic plants, waterfowl, and insects. You may hear the sounds of birds chirping, frogs croaking, and the rustling of reeds. You may feel the squishy ground under your feet and the coolness of the water. You may smell the earthy, organic scent of the wetland.
Its antenna
yes of course