Whoever edited my answer is almost right, but not quite. :) Yes the bat has fabulous hearing but out of the entire animal kingdom it does not have the best hearing, as far as being able to hear on a large decibel scale. The moth still holds that record as they can detect sounds in a gigantic range of frequencies from 1,000 and 240,000Hz. Given scientific parameters though it's not certain what would qualify as far as acuteness of hearing, sharpness, range of frequency, etc.
What IS certain is that there really is no way that these "concepts" can be proven in such a way to tell you definitively that there is a "BEST".
The eagle does.
Penguins don't have a high range off hearing but they pick up on vibrations. Their sense of sight and smell make up for what they miss with their low hearing range. They can see very far distances and have a strong sense of smell.
Ocelots are large cats, so they are land animals.
The biggest animal on land is the Elephant AND The biggest animal in water is the Blue Whale
The fastest running land animal is the Cheetah.
Dog
Land mammals have ears, noses and eyes to help them sense changes in the surroundings. They also have the sense of touch and taste to help them make more inferences.
Not in the same sense as a land animal. But yes.
It would depend on what you see in the animal.
No, Frogs have no ability to sense changing weather or water patterns, in fact no known land animal can sense a tsunami before it occurs.
Pretty much any animal can sense a natural disaster before it even happens. Say there's a tsunami coming to land in about 1 day, animals would start to go to high land such as big hills and mountains before the tsunami hits.
The fennec fox is the smallest member of the fox family, but it has the biggest ears.
The eagle does.
A cheetas best sense is it's sight. A cheeta can see a gazzelle off springin the grass from 500 meters away. a cheeta has claws that do not retract. and also can jump incredibly high. A cheeta is also the fastes land animal current or extinct theres has never beenanother animal faster.
A land animal.
A koala's strongest sense, as with many animals, is its sense of smell. When a joey is first born it is blind and deaf. It uses its sense of smell and pure instinct to find its way to its mother's pouch. Koalas also have acute hearing, but their sight is not as keen as that of many other marsupials.
Penguins don't have a high range off hearing but they pick up on vibrations. Their sense of sight and smell make up for what they miss with their low hearing range. They can see very far distances and have a strong sense of smell.