Animal RecordsSterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2008 - 256 páginas Did you know that the powerful jaws of a crocodile can be kept closed with a mere rubber band? Or that the polar bear can smell food from up to 40 miles away? The animal kingdom is absolutely astonishing--and this riveting reference from Britain’s esteemed Natural History Museum shows kids the wonder of it all. Packed with thousands of fascinating facts and stunning photographs throughout, it features world record holders from each of the main animal groups--including mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians, fishes, and insects. Find out which marsupial can jump safely to the ground from 100 feet high, why it’s almost impossible to swat a fly, and what creature regularly gives birth to quadruplets. Intriguing stories throughout reveal both the brilliant and the bizarre, from the most colorful to the most resourceful.
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Conteúdo
CONTENTS Foreword | 4 |
Mammals 6 | 70 |
Birds | 114 |
Reptiles | 148 |
Amphibians | 180 |
Fishes | 194 |
Invertebrates | 208 |
252 | |
256 | |
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Termos e frases comuns
adult Africa African bush elephant African wild dog Aldabra giant tortoise animals Arctic Asia attacks Australia average bats bear Ursus birds bite blue whale body length breeding captivity crocodile Crocodylus deer dive EARLIEST eggs emperor penguin extinct FASTEST feed female fish flying fossil frog genus gestation period giant giant panda gorilla grey head-body length heaviest human Indian individual insects Islands killed km/h km² known LARGEST The largest legs lizards LONGEST LIVING male mammals maximum measured miles million years ago monotremes nest Nile crocodile normally North northern northern elephant seal pinniped polar bear population predators prey probably range reach record-holder recorded salamander saltwater crocodile shark skin snake South America southern species specimen speed spider survive tail length temperature toad tortoise tropical turtle venom venomous snakes weight whale wild wingspan