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Endangered Animals

Endangered Animals

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Endangered Animals. Cheetah. What are they like: Fastest mammal on land Run at 60 mph After a chase need 30 min rest Doesn’t have spots on white belly Difficult to breed in captivity. Where: Namibia has the largest population of wild cheetah -about 2500. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Endangered Animals

Endangered Animals

Page 2: Endangered Animals

Cheetah

Where: •Namibia has the largest population of wild cheetah -about 2500.

•Smaller populations exist in Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Kenya and Tanzania while 19 other countries have even fewer.

What are they like:•Fastest mammal on land• Run at 60 mph

•After a chase need 30 min rest•Doesn’t have spots on white belly•Difficult to breed in captivity

Page 3: Endangered Animals

Population: In 1900 there were only about 100,000 cheetah worldwide.

Now: 10 to 15 thousand with about 1/10 of those living in captivity.

Why: •Skin•captured for hunting •human expansion leads to lack of habitat and food.

Page 4: Endangered Animals

Mountain Gorilla

What are they like:•Gorillas are the largest strongest primates • A mature male gorilla can be over 6

feet tall and weigh 300 to 500 pounds.

•Full range of emotions: love, hate, fear, grief, joy, greed, generosity, pride, shame, empathy, and jealousy.

•Gorillas sleep about 13 hours each night and rest for several hours at midday.

Page 5: Endangered Animals

Population: about 600 individuals, living in 2 populations of about 300 each, separated by about 20 miles.

Why: •Habitat loss•Poaching- illegal hunting for trade•War•Hunted for sport

Page 6: Endangered Animals

ZebraWhat are they like:•Largest Zebra•No 2 zebras have the same pattern•Herbivores•Excellent eye sight, smell and hearing

Where: -Plains Zebra live on the grasslands of Africa-Mountain Zebra live in dry areas of southern Africa, -Grevy's Zebra live in the dry areas of northeast Africa.

Page 7: Endangered Animals

Population: •A few decades ago, more than 15,000 Grevy’s zebra inhabited Africa. •Today, fewer than 2,500 remain.

Why: •Habitat loss•Over grazing•Livestock •Depleting water supply

Page 8: Endangered Animals

ElephantWhat are they like:•Elephants are sensitive fellow animals where if a baby complains, the entire family will rumble and go over to touch and caress it.•Elephants cry, play, have incredible memories, and laugh!•Predicted to be extinct by 2020

Where: Africa & India

Page 9: Endangered Animals

Population: •7.4 percent a year led to the international ban on the ivory trade. •The death rate of African elephants is now 8 percent a year with the fact that the ban is absent today.

•Now elephant population is less than 470,000

Why: •Poaching•Ivory tusks

Page 10: Endangered Animals

DolphinWhat are they like:•Very little is known about the Baiji. •The Baiji is easily frightened and usually next to impossible to approach by a boat. •This species is probably the most endangered of all the cetaceans•Very seldom seen above the surface of the water

Where: China

Page 11: Endangered Animals

Population: •150-200

Why: •Trapped and tangled in fish nets •Hunting,•Destruction of their habitat•Human disturbance•Pollution of the waters they live in.

Page 12: Endangered Animals

OrangutanWhat are they like:•Orangutans have an enormous arm span.

•Orangutans are more solitary than other apes. Males are loners.

Where: Southeast Asian islands of Sumatra and Borneo.

Page 13: Endangered Animals

Population: •7,300 individuals in the wild

Why: •Deforestation •Hunting

Page 14: Endangered Animals

Red PandaWhat are they like:•The red panda has an extra thumb for feeding and climbing.

•The red panda is an excellent climber.

•Red pandas have semi-retractable claws.

Where: •live in the mountains of Nepal and northern Myanmar (Burma), as well as in central China.

Page 15: Endangered Animals

Population: •There are fewer than 2,500 adult red pandas.

Why: •Habitat loss•Hunting•Soil pollution

Page 16: Endangered Animals

TortoiseWhat are they like:•Female tortoises dig burrows to lay their eggs in.

•Their growth depends on the availability of food and water.

•Most of them are herbivorous i.e they eat grasses, weeds, leafy greens, flowers, and certain fruits but some eat insects also.

Where: •Galapagos Islands

Page 17: Endangered Animals

Population: •15,000 Galapagos giant tortoises left in the Galapagos. Around the world, many species of giant island tortoises have been either wiped out altogether or reduced to near- extinction.

Why: •Taken for supplies•Introduced mammals•Goats eating vegetation