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The Animals of Environmental Education

The Animals of Environmental Education. Great Horned Owl. Bubo virginanius “Aldo” is 24 yrs. Old, imprinted male life expectancy over 40 years in capivity Note the facial disk, feathered feet, blunt wings, talons. head will swivel 270 degrees. Great Horned Owl.

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The Animals of Environmental Education

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  1. The Animals of Environmental Education

  2. Great Horned Owl • Bubo virginanius • “Aldo” is 24 yrs. Old, imprinted male • life expectancy over 40 years in capivity • Note the facial disk, feathered feet, blunt wings, talons. • head will swivel 270 degrees

  3. Great Horned Owl • Eyeballs as large as ours, fixed • visual acuity 100X ours in dim light. (5-7 X in normal light) B & W vision only. • hear animal sounds at 1/4 mile. • No sense of smell • Aldo is an imprint. • Great horns are crepuscular.

  4. Bull Snake • Largest snake in KS • Keeled scales, grow to 6 ft plus • Habitat is open grassland, open woodland and edge. • hiss and bluff, won’t usually strike • Diurnal • Primarily a rodentivore, will take birds/eggs • worth over $1000 to a farmer in less rat damage

  5. Chinchilla • Thick furred Andean member of the rodent order. • Needs occasional dust baths to keep fur clean • 60 hairs per folicle • ranched for their fur • thin ribs, hold by the tail

  6. California King Snake • king snakes are so named because they eat other snakes • many are lizard eaters as well • very popular pet snake • banded and striped phases • Maximum 4 feet • after a good meal it can go several more months without any food • immune to the venom of other snakes

  7. Rosy-Haired Tarantula • arachnid, spider, primitive wandering spiders • most common pet tarantula • females live up to 20 years • males only 1 year • covered with utricating (irritating) hairs • All spiders are venomous but only two local ones are dangerous

  8. Mexican Red-kneed Tarantula • Most popular tarantula pet • Extremely docile and unlikely to bite • Formerly common in desert SW • Now a threatened species because of collectors. • We currently do not have one

  9. Leopard Gecko • docile, easy to handle, • captive bred • segmented tail • nocturnal • insectivore

  10. Cockatiel • originally from Australian interior • great whistler, poor talker • males more brightly colored • numerous breeds, found in parrot order. • diet of nuts and seeds, approximately 8 in. tall, life expectancy 15-20 yrs.

  11. African Pygmy Hedgehog • very popular exotic pet • insectivore, will also rob ground bird nests. • live 3-5 years • nocturnal • cannot shoot quills which are glued hairs • will jump or twitch to poke a predator with quills

  12. Ferret • Domesticated European Polecat • domesticated 300 BC - Egypt • member of the weasel family • brought to America for rodent control • very strong musk glands, flexible back bone • predator, preys on mice

  13. Piranha • carnivore, not as dangerous as portrayed • evolved from fin-nipper parasites • razor sharp teeth • 15 different species, this is a red-bellied.

  14. Texas Long-nosed snake • On the Ks state endangered species list • primarily a lizard eater, noses around in leaf litter • We no longer have one

  15. Rabbit • not a rodent, a lagamorph • lagamorphs are rabbits, hares and pikas • originally from Southern Europe and North Africa • live in “warrens” except cottontail

  16. W. Painted Turtle • formerly sold as pets by the 1000s • source of salmonella • males with long front claws for courtship • basking turtle • carnivore/omnivore

  17. Red-eared Slider • Chrysemys scripta • red or yellow patch behind eye • most common local pond turtle • also called pond slider • strong swimmers

  18. Sulcata Tortoise • “Jackson” is only 14 years old • 3rd largest species in the world • from sub-saharan africa

  19. Guinea Pig • No longer classed as rodents • bred for food in tropics • can live without water if fed vegetables • also called cavy • require little attention and care to keep them happy • We currently don’t have one

  20. Zebra Finches • Most common of the society finches • Sexual dimorphism, males more brightly colored • Often used to study social structure, organization

  21. Gerbil • originally a desert dweller • one of the least likely to bite rodent pets • elongated back legs • good hopping and jumping ability • live in dry, sandy, or sparsely vegetated areas of Africa and Asia

  22. Bearded Dragon • Native of Australia • Common pet lizard, grow to by 2 feet in length • carnivore/omnivore that will eat prepared food

  23. Desert King Snake • predator of the rattlesnake

  24. Gopher Snake • from SW U.S. • relative of the bull snake

  25. Prairie King Snake • Most rodentivorous of the local king snakes • Blotched pattern is common camoflage pattern among snakes

  26. Plated Lizard • Native of the Sudan • Gentle, easy to raise lizard • Member of the race-runner lizard family, fold along the body is distinctive

  27. Fire-bellied Toad • From Asia • The warning coloration on the belly indicates it is distasteful • Not toxic to us like a poison arrow frog would be

  28. Corn Snake • Named because of the pattern on the belly, not necessarily found in corn fields • Good climber, member of the rat snake family

  29. Rats • belong to the largest family of rodents • responsible for more deaths than any other animal • raised for snake food, owl food • nocturnal

  30. Ball Python • Small member of python family • Also called Royal Python • Curls in a ball when threatened

  31. Mice • small domesticated rodent • raised for snake food • important as a research animal

  32. Tiger salamander • Found state-wide • hibernate and estivate • state amphibian

  33. Iguana • Common green iguana Iguana iguana • “chicken of the trees” • common food in Central America • was endangered but rescued by breeding programs • will dive from trees into water to escape a predator • up to 6 feet long (mostly tail) • 700 species • they are a source of salmonella • Vegetarian • Poor pet because they grow too large

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