Posts Tagged With: environment

WATERY WEDNESDAY # 6

WATERY WEDNESDAY #6

It’s another Watery Wednesday and we’ve found a very helpful little fish living in the coral reefs.  They love to eat things that are not good for other fish! What a great guy! Come meet the…

MEET THE CLEANER WRASSE!

Range/Habitat: Indo-pacific oceans/coral reefs

Diet: Carnivore: parasites and zooplankton (tiny small animals)

Length: up to 4 ½”

Conservation Status: Common

Fun Facts:

  • Cleaner Wrasse are very important part of a coral reef community.
  • They eat parasites off of other fish.
  • Cleaning stations are maintained by one to two fish (both females) or a male and two females. Other fish (also called “clients) come to the stations and have the wrasse eat the parasites.
  • You’ll often see the wrasse eating out of the mouths of other fish or out of the gills.
  • Cleaner wrasse sleep in rocks and crevices of the coral.

Can you imagine if you had to have a little fish help keep you clean while you took a bath? We bet it would probably tickle!

Categories: Animals, Children, education, Environment | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Mammmal Monday #6

MAMMAL MONDAY#6 (sort of…)

We had a holiday last Monday, so we didn’t post a mammal. In order to make it up for our fans we picked one of our favorite mammals. This shy, reclusive and hard to spot mammal is quite the climber, which is a good thing since they live in the trees. Who is this special mammal? Let’s find out…

MEET THE CLOUDED LEOPARD!

Range/Habitat: South/Southeast Asia (China/India/Nepal/Malaysia)/foothill mountains

Diet: Carnivore: birds, boars, monkeys, deer

Length/Weight: 23- 43”/ 33-50lb

Conservation Status: Vulnerable

Fun Facts:

  • The Clouded leopard is the smallest of all big cats.
  • Clouded leopards are nocturnal (they are active at night) and arboreal (they live in the trees).
  • They have some great adaptations for living in trees. Their back ankles can rotate, allowing them to grip on branches and trees. They can also hang upside down off branches.
  • Clouded leopards can also climb down trees head first, kind of like a squirrel.
  • Their tails are as long as their bodies which help them balance while climbing.
  • They get their name from the cloud like spots that they have on their bodies.
  •  Because they are so shy and reclusive, they are hard to study in the wild.
  • They have the largest canine teeth (those are the sharp pointy ones) compared to their body size, of all the wild cats.

These shy and special cats are one of our very favorites. We think they have such beautiful coats. We met one who lives at Zoo Atlanta, his name is Moby.  He’s a great climber too!

 

 

 

 

 

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ALEX the African Grey Parrot

Today’s Feathery Friday animal is the African Grey Parrot and the most famous one ever was a bird named Alex. He was very adept at language and counting and picking out shapes and colors. Dr Irene Pepperberg worked very hard with Alex and learn all kinds of cool stuff about how birds think and behave! We’ve found some great videos that will give you a better idea of just how special Alex was! Check them out!

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2011/05/a-new-take-on-bird-brains.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+pbs%2Fnewshour-headlines+%28newshour-headlines%29

 

 

 

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Animals go Back to School…

We’ve got another post today for Super Surprise Thursday! It’s all about how animals learn in zoos and aquariums in honor of all the kids going back to school!

Well, it’s that time of year again- BACK TO SCHOOL; time for kids pack up their backpacks and lunch boxes and head into a classroom. It’s time to pull out the pens, pencils and crayons and learn all kinds of fascinating information. We hope kids learn all about animals and nature during the year!

We know that kids get very excited about the beginning of the school year, but what about animals? Do you think they learn? Would it be unusual to see an orangutan sitting at a desk or a crow with glasses on, solving math problems? Well, maybe not! Animals learn too! Has anyone ever taught their dog to sit or shake hands? If you have taught your dog some of those tricks, then they learned something. Cool!

We thought it would be fun to look at some ways that animals learn in honor of this awesome time of year! Zoos and aquariums often use training to teach animals! The training is a great way to give the animals enrichment and it also helps keepers take care of the animals. What’s enrichment? Well, enrichment is a way to teach and entertain animals. Here’s an example, gorillas in Africa spend much of their day foraging or searching for food, but they don’t have to do that in a zoo.  Zoo keepers will put food in objects or scatter it around the enclosure so the gorillas have to search for it. It keeps the gorillas busy and it’s more like what gorillas would do in the wild.  Here’s a great explanation from Zoo Atlanta on enrichment:  http://www.zooatlanta.org/home/enrichment

Training also helps keepers take care of wild animals. You can’t just walk up to a tiger and give them a pill or walk up to a rhino ask them to get on a scale! Keepers work to train animals using positive reinforcement! They can train animals to show their mouths, sit on scales, and even to be given shots.  We’ve found some great websites on training animals in zoos and aquariums! Let’s check them out!

The St Louis Zoo does a great job taking care of their animals through training! http://www.stlzoo.org/animals/enrichmenttraining/animaltraining.htm Who knew it takes 3 people to give a giraffe a manicure? And who knew they needed manicures?

Disney also has a great site all about enrichment and training! Tons of great info! http://www.animalenrichment.org/guests.html

The National Zoo has a list of the items they use for enrichment: http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/Primates/Enrichment/default.cfm

Here’s a great video about training:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7FE-UA2Z38&playnext=1&list=PLEF90075590A06F31

 

Animals have almost as much to learn as you do! Whew!  Did you know that there are chimpanzees that know sign language, that there are birds that can count and that there are animals that use tools? We’ll be writing about these amazing animals soon! Now it’s time to get back to your homework!

Categories: Animals, Atlanta, birds, Children, education, Environment, Local, mammals | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

REPTILIAN TUESDAY #5

REPTILIAN TUESDAY#5

Happy Tuesday! We hope everyone enjoyed Labor Day! We’re back with a funny looking reptile that has horns! What? Yep, we said horns! Some say it even looks like a dinosaur, but it’s not! Who is this awesome lizard? Let’s find out…

MEET THE JACKSON’S CHAMELEON!

Range/Habitat: East Africa-Kenya/Tanzania/ High altitude mountainous regions

Diet:  Carnivore: insects

Length: 8-12”

Conservation Status: Common

Fun Facts:

  • Male Jackson’s Chameleons have 3 bony horns on the front of their head.
  • They use the horns to fight other males for territory.
  • Female Jackson’s Chameleons do not have horns.
  • Like other chameleons, they can change their color depending on their mood, health and surroundings.
  • They are bright green. Their ability to camouflage with their habitat is their primary defense mechanism.
  • Jackson’s chameleons do not lay eggs; females incubate the eggs inside her body and give birth to live young.
  •  Baby chameleons are brown and turn green around the age of 4 months.

These crazy chameleon look kind of like triceratops or a rhino to us! We think they are fantastic! What do you think?

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FEATHERY FRIDAY #3

FEATHERY FRIDAY#3

We’ve made it to another Fabulous Feathery Friday! And you’ll need to put on your glasses to see this tiny little Bee…

MEET THE BEE HUMINGBIRD!

Range/Habitat: Cuba

Diet:  Omnivore: nectar and tiny insects

Length/Weight: 2 ¼“ / 1/16 oz (about the weight of a penny)

Conservation Status: Near Threatened

Fun facts:

  • The Bee Hummingbird is the smallest bird in the world! It weighs about as much as a penny.
  • It has a long tube-like tongue it uses to suck in nectar from flowers.
  • Male Bee Hummingbird’s heads are iridescent (kind of like glitter), the females are not.
  • They can beat their wings at 80x per second. It is so fast that it can’t be seen by the human eye! (It can’t be seen by the elephant or horse eye either.) 😦
  • They are just barely larger than a bee.
  • Bee Hummingbird nests are only about 1” in diameter (just slightly larger than a quarter).
  • Bee Hummingbird eggs are about the size of a pea.

This teeny tiny bird has made our Feathery Friday! We’d loved to see one and their eggs; pretty sure we’ll need to use our magnifying glass!

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