Monkey (animal), any of about 160 species of
primates that have grasping hands, forward-facing eyes, and highly
developed brains. Most monkeys also have tails, a characteristic that
distinguishes them from their larger primate cousins, the apes.
Monkeys are highly skilled climbers, and most spend much of their lives in
trees. Some have prehensile tails—that is, tails capable of grasping—that they
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Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Monkey
Monkey (animal), any of about 160 species of
primates that have grasping hands, forward-facing eyes, and highly
developed brains. Most monkeys also have tails, a characteristic that
distinguishes them from their larger primate cousins, the apes.
Monkeys are highly skilled climbers, and most spend much of their lives in
trees. Some have prehensile tails—that is, tails capable of grasping—that they
can use as a fifth limb while foraging for food or climbing.Monday, October 3, 2011
Dog
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| Dogs |

Sunday, October 2, 2011
Snake
Like all reptiles, snakes are cold-blooded, or more correctly, ectothermic—that is, they cannot produce their own body heat. Instead, they rely on the sun to heat their bodies and then regulate their temperature with behavior. Because they do not rely on energy from food to generate body heat, snakes can survive on an extremely meager diet. Some wait for months between successive meals, and a few survive by eating a single, large meal just once or twice a year. When they do eat, snakes swallow their prey whole rather than biting off small pieces. Many snakes have specialized jaws that enable them to swallow animals that are far larger than their own heads. Although uncommon, some snakes, such as the African rock python, have been observed eating animals as large as an antelope or a small cow.
With over 2,500 species belonging to more than 10 families, snakes are a large and successful group. They owe much of this success to their versatility—snakes occupy habitats ranging from underground burrows to the tops of trees to ocean depths as great as 150 m (490 ft). They are found on every continent except Antarctica, and although they are most abundant in tropical areas, many survive in regions marked by extreme cold. The range of the European adder, for instance, extends north of the Arctic Circle. The only places without snakes are parts of the polar regions and isolated islands, such as Ireland and New Zealand.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Although all snakes have a long, cylindrical body, many species boast unique modifications suited to particular habitats and lifestyles. Burrowing snakes, for example, have muscular, stout bodies and solidly built heads that they use to push through soil. Sea snakes have flattened, paddlelike tails for swimming, and the long, thin shape of many arboreal, or tree-dwelling, snakes provides agility when navigating between branches. Some snakes, including pythons, retain characteristics that reflect their evolution from lizards or from lizardlike ancestors. These snakes have traces of hind limbs called spurs, which are usually more prominent in males than in females.
The smallest snakes are the blind snakes. One member of this group, the Texas
slender blind snake, reaches just 13 cm (slightly more than 5 in) in length when
full grown and weighs less than 2 g (less than 0.1 oz). The largest snakes are
the anaconda and the reticulated python, both of which grow as long
as 10 m (about 33 ft) and can weigh up to 250 kg (about 550 lb). Among most
species of snakes, females are larger than males.Skin
Snakes share an internal anatomy similar to that of other reptiles, but modified
to fit within an extremely narrow space. The snake’s three-chambered heart can
move sideways to accommodate large prey animals traveling from the mouth to the
stomach. The snake’s respiratory system is also compact: Most snakes rely
exclusively on the right lung for respiration. In these animals, the left lung
is either very small or nonexistent. Snakes have two kidneys, which are
positioned so that the left one lies behind the right one rather than beside it.
Similarly, the reproductive organs—a pair of testes for males and a pair of
ovaries for females—are situated end-to-end. The snake has an extremely muscular
and flexible stomach, a narrow liver, and both large and small intestines.
Unlike the small intestines of many other vertebrates, those of snakes are
stretched out instead of coiled. Like other reptiles, snakes have a
cloaca, an internal chamber that receives wastes from the digestive
system and eggs or sperm from the reproductive system before they leave the
body. Snakes do not have a urinary bladder; instead, they excrete all their
wastes through the rectum. Senses
A snake obtains information about its environment primarily through the Jacobson’s organ located in the roof of its mouth. The snake continuously flicks out its forked tongue to collect scent particles from the air and the ground. When the tongue draws back into the mouth, the forked tips fit into cell-lined pockets in the Jacobson’s organ, which detects the odors of the particles it receives. This system is keenly sensitive, and snakes rely on it to locate both mates and prey.
Feeding
Snakes have a wide range of food preferences. Many snakes eat worms, insects, lizards, small mammals, birds, and frogs. Some snakes, such as the Australian bandy-bandy, feed only on other snakes. Several groups of snakes, including the egg-eating snakes of Asia, prefer the eggs of other animals; these snakes have modified teeth and vertebrae in the throat for breaking eggshells. These teeth snag the shell as the egg, swallowed whole, starts down the digestive tract; the broken shell is regurgitated. Among some species, males and females eat different types of food. For example, male Arafura filesnakes eat small fish that inhabit shallow water, while females of the same species eat larger fish that live in deeper water. Many snakes change their diet as they grow larger, as in the reticulated pythons. When young, these snakes feed mostly on rats. When they reach about 4 m (13 ft) in length, they switch to larger prey, such as wild pigs, monkeys, and small deer.
Snakes use diverse strategies for capturing their prey. Slender and agile snakes actively pursue their prey, but snakes with thicker bodies, such as pythons, are more likely to wait in a coiled position and ambush their prey as it passes by. Many snakes begin to swallow their prey while it is still alive. The teeth of snakes point backward and are not designed for chewing—instead, snakes use their teeth to pin down their prey to prevent its escape. Others kill prey animals before eating them.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Dinosaur
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| Dinosaur |
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| give the egg |
Friday, September 30, 2011
Honey Bee
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| Honey bee in the field |
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| Honey Bee From Egg to Adult |
In addition to the familiar European honey bee, there are six other recognized species of honey bees, including the Indian honey bee, Koschevnikov’s honey bee, the dwarf honey bee, the andreniform dwarf honey bee, the giant honey bee, and the mountain giant honey bee. The European, the Indian, and to some extent the dwarf honey bees are the species that have been domesticated, although the European honey bee is by far the most widespread domesticated bee and the only species kept in North America. There are many races of the European honey bee. The ones most popular in modern beekeeping are the Italian, Carniolan, and Caucasian. Most honey bees used in hives today are mixtures of these and sometimes other races. Africanized honey bees, also known as killer bees, are a hybrid of African and European races naturalized in the western hemisphere.
III. SOCIAL ORGANIZATION
The honey bee is a social insect that can survive only as a member of a community, or colony. The colony inhabits an enclosed cavity, its nest. Domesticated colonies are kept in artificial containers, usually wooden boxes, known as hives.
Castes
The honey bee community consists of three structurally different forms—the queen (reproductive female), the drone (male), and the worker (nonreproductive female). These castes are associated with different functions in the colony; each caste possesses its own special instincts geared to the needs of the colony.
| 1. | The Queen |
Workers bee
| 3. | The Drone Bee |
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Human Nutrition
ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS
| WATER |
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Common Chemistry Equations
CAT
ORIGIN OF SPECIES
Debate has surrounded the origin of the domestic cat. A common theory held that cats were first domesticated by ancient Egyptians perhaps as early as 2500 bc from the African or Near Eastern wildcat Felis silvestris libyca, also called the Caffre cat. Crusaders then transported the cat to Europe, where it interbred with the indigenous smaller wildcats Felis silvestris silvestris. The idea that domestic cats in different parts of the world had originated from, or interbred with, populations of local wildcats and other small cat species was proposed by a number of experts. For example, the longhaired breeds of domestic cats were said to come from the Asian Pallas’s cat, Felis manul.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Heliophysics
We live in the extended atmosphere of an active star. While sunlight enables and sustains life, the Sun's variability produces streams of high energy particles and radiation that can harm life or alter its evolution.
Under the protective shield of a magnetic field and atmosphere, the Earth is an island in the Universe where life has developed and flourished. The origins and fate of life on Earth are intimately connected to the way the Earth responds to the Sun's variations.
Understanding the Sun, Heliosphere, and Planetary Environments as a single connected system is the goal of the Science Mission Directorate's Heliophysics Research Program. In addition to solar processes, our domain of study includes the interaction of solar plasma and radiation with Earth, the other planets, and the Galaxy. By analyzing the connections between the Sun, solar wind, planetary space environments, and our place in the Galaxy, we are uncovering the fundamental physical processes that occur throughout the Universe. Understanding the connections between the Sun and its planets will allow us to predict the impacts of solar variability on humans, technological systems, and even the presence of life itself.
We have already discovered ways to peer into the internal workings of the Sun and understand how the Earth's magnetosphere responds to solar activity. Our challenge now is to explore the full system of complex interactions that characterize the relationship of the Sun with the solar system. Understanding these connections is especially critical as we contemplate our destiny in the third millennium. Heliophysics is needed to facilitate the accelerated expansion of human experience beyond the confines of our Earthly home. Recent advances in technology allow us, for the first time, to realistically contemplate voyages beyond the solar system.
There are three primary objectives that define the multi-decadal studies needed:
- To understand the changing flow of energy and matter throughout the Sun, Heliosphere, and Planetary Environments.
- To explore the fundamental physical processes of space plasma systems.
- To define the origins and societal impacts of variability in the Earth-Sun System.
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