Animal Who Drink Water Once Time In A Year Then Died
This is my question?
Animal who drink water once time in a year then died
take me answer in few minutes
Animal who drink water once time in a year then died
take me answer in few minutes
Ant
Owls
Name the animal who drink after one year and agter dringking it it died
I thinks it RAt ,,,camel also but they keep drinking
evry animal have to die :P
evry animal have to die :P
Name of animal who drink water after one year
Turtle
Lund animal
There is no animal or insect that can go against nature.
Best regards
Best regards
Kangaroo rats do not drink so perhaps a drink (by an animal that does not drink) could be harmful; but how it would know a year has passed?
Marine mammals could be harmed by drinking sea water.
Your question, though, seems to suggest a singular, one-time event. Can your provide better details in a comment?
Marine mammals could be harmed by drinking sea water.
Your question, though, seems to suggest a singular, one-time event. Can your provide better details in a comment?
Owls
Insect
Owls
Kangaroos
Fish
Snake
This doesnt make any since can't help you
The right answer is the ENGRO POTS (an african animal)
ENGRO POTS (an african animal)
Kangaroo rat. These rodents can produce urine that is concentrated up to an osmolarity of almost 6,000 mosm/liter, which is five times more concentrated than maximally concentrated human urine at 1,200 mosm/liter. Because of this tremendous concentration ability, kangaroo rats never have to drink; the H2O produced metabolically within their cells during oxidation of foodstuff (food plus O2 yields CO2 + H2O + energy) is sufficient for their body. Also, kangaroo rats cannot lose water by perspiring, because they have no sweat glands. Kangaroo rats lose so little water that they can recover 90% of the loss by using metabolic water gaining the remaining 10% from the small amount of water in their diet.
Kangaroo rats lose water mainly by evaporation during gas exchange, and so have developed a behavioural adaptation to prevent this loss. As they spend a lot of time within their burrows to escape the heat of the day, the burrows become much more humid than the air outside (due to evaporative loss). When collecting seeds, they store them in the burrows rather than eating them straight away. This causes the moisture in the air to be absorbed by the seeds, and the kangaroo rat regains the water it has previously lost when it then consumes them.
Kangaroo rats lose water mainly by evaporation during gas exchange, and so have developed a behavioural adaptation to prevent this loss. As they spend a lot of time within their burrows to escape the heat of the day, the burrows become much more humid than the air outside (due to evaporative loss). When collecting seeds, they store them in the burrows rather than eating them straight away. This causes the moisture in the air to be absorbed by the seeds, and the kangaroo rat regains the water it has previously lost when it then consumes them.
Camel, is the best animal that I know to hold the thirsty, if there are any more, I guess they are kind of bacterium