How is a coral reef formed?

Coral reefs consist of skeletons of small animals, called madrepores, and stacked one on top of the other for centuries. These corals obtain minerals from the seawater and build a hard structure of limestone. These hard portions of dead corals form the actual coral reefs, the corals that are alive are found on the surface of the reef. 


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Which animals and plants live in the tropical seas?

The tropical seas with their colourful coral reefs are one of the most conspicuous habitats of the world. The bizarre-shaped coral reefs provide home to many colourful fish, snails, sea urchins, prawns, and shells. Other inhabitants are also present in the water—sea turtles, whose armour is flatter than that of the land turtles, hammerhead sharks with their hammer-shaped broad head, and some other animals that are even more dangerous than sharks. 




How do fish and jellyfish swim?

Fish move by flapping their fins or through wriggling movements of their body. In addition, they have an air bladder, which they can fill with gases when needed. These features make them lighter and they can float in the water like a submarine. Jellyfish usually drift. To move forward, they pull together their cap and push the water downwards—a same recoil principle that is used in jet fighters and octopuses. 

Why do pelicans have a sack in their beaks?

Pelicans use the sack for catching fish. Interestingly, different species of pelicans use different hunting methods. Some hunt in a semicircular formation and drive the fish from deep to shallow water so that the fish cannot dive down. The pelicans then immerse their long beaks in the water and scoop the fish in their sacks. The baby pelicans feed by taking the fish from the sack of the parents. Another species, the brown pelicans, does a vertical nosedive in the water from a height of 10-20 m and fills its sack with fishes from the deep water.





 


 


How do frogs develop?

The growth rate of the frog’s population is the same in ponds near the coast or in the garden at home. Tadpoles develop from fertilized gelatinous eggs. These are larvae of frogs, which have gills and move forward with the help of a tail. Gradually, they go through a transformation to become a frog. The process is called metamorphosis. The tadpoles develop front and back legs, cartilages become bones, the tail retracts, lungs develop, and the gills regress. Now, it can move on land as well as water. Such a metamorphosis takes place in other animals too, for instance in butterflies or beetles.

 


What are salt meadows?

Salt meadows are area at the sea coast that are not flooded daily by sea water like the tidelands or the beaches. They are flooded only by the high tide at regular intervals. The soil in these areas contains salt and is poorly ventilated; therefore, only a few plants can survive. Plants having an affinity for salt, like the beach lilac and the beach aster, grow here. Since the meadows sink completely in the strong sea at high tides, the plants of the salt meadows have resistant stalks and leaves to withstand the forces of the wine and the sea.

Who lives along the coasts?

Frogs croak in freshwater ponds, and a few metres ahead, fish and jellyfish swim in the salt water of the sea. The narrow coastal land between the land and the sea could contain steeply falling coastal cliffs or flat coastal regions, which are flooded regularly like the sensitive tideland and salt meadows.  Continue reading "Who lives along the coasts?"

Which animals live in the Himalayas?

The highest mountain peak of the world is Mount Everest with a height of 8850 m. Animal do not live on ice-covered mountain peaks and in the areas where even mountaineers can manage only with an oxygen flask. Animals that have adapted themselves to the rough conditions live below a height of 6000 m - goat-like animals such as Himalayan tahrs, ibexes and cashmere goats, the pikas with their small ears and the endangered snow leopard. Yaks are also found here, which the local people use for carrying loads. 

Are there camels in the Andes?

There are two wild species of camels in the highlands of the South American Andes: vicunas and guanacos. Contrary to their Asian and African counterparts, the two-humped Bactrian camel and the single-humped Arabian camel respectively, vicunas and guanacos do not have any humps and are also much smaller. Guanacos live in open grasslands at a height of up to 4000 m, and vicunas live in higher regions. About 5000 years ago, humans started breeding animals in the Andes, which gave rise to the species of lama and alpaca. The smaller alpacas provide very soft wool.




What is the tree-line?

The term ‘tree-line’ describes the height above which trees can no longer grow in the mountains. The main reason for this is the very low temperature in these places. If we climb a mountain, we find a temperature drop of about 6°C for every kilometre. In addition, the temperature fluctuations between day and night as well as summer and winter are very high. The soil cover is thin so the roots of trees do not get a firm hold. Only small pine trees, cedars, grass, and moss grow above the tree-line before the start of the rocky and icy area. 

Why do groundhogs whistle?

Groundhogs live in widely branched burrows below the ground, but come out on the surface every day to collect grasses, seeds, and insects. A few species live in colonies in high mountains. They divide work amongst them—when a few animals have gone out in search of food, the others are on guard. If they sense danger from approaching enemies, they emit a shrill whistle to warn the others. In the summer, the animals must feed enough to put on a thick layer of fat so that they can survive the 6-9 months long winter sleep. 

Are ibexes and chamois related to each other?

Both animals have adapted to their mountain habitat. The chamois live in the upper mountain forests and fields and climb higher only in summers. The ibexes, on the other hand, live in icy and rocky regions and look for food in mountain meadows. They never go down to the forest. Species of ibexes are found in the mountain regions of Europe and Asia, on the Arabian Peninsula, and in north-eastern Africa. Chamois, on the other hand, are found only in the mountains of Europe: in the Alps, Carpathian Mountains, and Pyrenees as well as in Caucasus Mountains. 

Which animals and plants live in the mountains?

Steep slopes with very little soil cover; rugged rocks, snow, and ice are the habitat in high mountains. Although the plant cover above the tree-line is scanty, you can still find animals living there. In the Alps, we find the climbing chamois, ibexes, and groundhogs. 


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How do forest ants live?

Most of the forest ants build hills at sunny forest edges from needles, twigs, and moss. The well-organized huge colonies of ants are called ‘hills’. Several hundred queens live with their ‘community’ in these hills. The ants divide the work among themselves. While the queens lay eggs, the soldier ants must provide protection for the eggs and the worker ants get food for the larvae. In the month of June, the winged male and female ants hatch. The males die after the nuptial flight. The impregnated young queens look for a new ground or return to the old one to lay eggs.

 


Why do we need to protect ourselves against ticks?

Ticks transmit dangerous diseases so we should be on the look out for them while walking in the forest or in a large field. If they have bitten and are still attached to the blood in the skin, they should be removed carefully by forceps. The ticks release food remains in the blood of the ‘host’ when they bite. Sometimes disease-causing germs are transferred to our blood in this way. Ticks are responsible for many diseases such as Lyme disease, Colorado tick fever, tularemia, tick-borne relapsing fever, babesiosis, ehrlichiosis, tick-borne meningoencephalitis, and bovine anaplasmosis.