1. Dogs will sneeze to tell other dogs that they’re playing, so when they’re playing rough it doesn’t turn into a fight.
2. Gray squirrels bury nuts all over the place, and often forget them, growing new trees. This makes them more ecologically friendly than red squirrels, who store nuts in piles on the ground which don’t take root.
3. Infant Pygmy Marmosets babble to develop their language skills, similarly to the way human babies babble.
4. Two-toed sloths cannot shiver to stay warm like other mammals due to their low metabolic rates and little muscle tissue.
5. Yawning is infectious because it supplies a method for the most sleepy to forcefully communicate their need for rest and thus ensures that the group rests/sleeps together.
6. Crows are actually super smart. They even play pranks on each other just for fun.
8. The red panda uses its long bushy tail not only for balance, but also as a blanket during chilly winter nights.
13. Slow loris may be cute, but it’s the only venomous primate in the world. When it raises its arms, it’s performing a defensive stance, and preparing a venom.
9. The blue whale weighs as much as thirty elephants and is as long as three Greyhound buses.
10. A herd of sixty cows is capable of producing a ton of milk in less than a day.
11. A grasshopper can leap 20 times the length of its own body.
12. Baby Japanese Macaques make snowballs. They do not use them for any survival purposes, they just like to have fun.
13. Slow loris may be cute, but it’s the only venomous primate in the world. When it raises its arms, it’s performing a defensive stance, and preparing a venom.
14. At birth, baby kangaroos are only about an inch long – no bigger than a large water bug or a queen bee.
15. The smell of a skunk can be detected by a human a mile away.
16. There is a butterfly in Africa with enough poison in its body to kill six cats!
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