Animals that hibernate in the winter are called hibernators. This includes a wide range of animals. Marmots, a bird called Common Poorwill, bears, bats, lemurs, turtles, bumblebees, snakes, snails, and hedgehogs are all hibernators.
Hibernating animals primarily live off stored body fat during their deep sleep. Their metabolism slows down significantly, allowing them to conserve energy and survive on their fat reserves until they wake up in the spring.
They actually survive on nothing. They eat so much that all the food they eat will be enough for the hibernating winter. Especially bears and squirrels. They also depend on their fat from the food as heat and warmth.
You call animals that fly in the air aerial locomotion animals. Such animals include most birds, bats and certain insects.
It Sleeps! :D
by using a shovel and a hose
about 98.6 degrees typically but Ive heard of animals hibernating in degrees of 50 to 110
Neither. Not all animals need to be migratory or hibernating.
Warmblooded animals will avoid the cold by staying active, hibernating, or migrating. This is to keep their bodies in a heated environment.
They are called Hibernators :D
Different animals have different reactions before earthquakes. Animals that would be hibernating would stop hibernating and come out from their holes/burrows. Dogs would dig on the ground.
squirrel lady bird bear
global warming is killing the animals such as polar bears, hibernating animals and much more
What pops up in spring is flowers, animals stop hibernating,
Animals that hibernate do so to escape the cold weather. Sloths do not hibernate.
the environment can affect the feature of a living organism
Regarding hibernation, only animals such as bears do that and nobody wants to make a bear get treatment for hibernating. If you do have a friend or family member that is sleeping too often, he or she might suffer from depression.
No, when they hibernate they find someplace to sleep for 6 months during the winter. Animals travelling from one place to another are "migrating".