Your little rider can drive this toy car independently by the foot pedal and the forward & backward switch and we also make sure that we add equal fun for parents to take full control of the steering via a 2.4G remote control.
A durable PP car body combined with 4 wear-resistant wheels, this battery powered toy car with an adjustable safety belt and 4-wheel suspension provide a smooth and secure cruise on rougher surfaces for about 40 minutes.
Boasting some realistic features like double working high doors, bright LED headlights, horns and music, this kids ride on truck is a head-turning present for your kid (3-6 years old) on birthdays, Christmas or New Year.
Featuring a rear trunk with 2 cup holders, this motorized car provides your little one with endless fun through carrying fallen leaves, toys, sand and dumping them to the destination.
CHARACTERISTICS
The Chipmunk is a member of the family Mammalia, Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is also known as the Striped Squirrel, the Timber Tiger and the Mini-bear. The body length among most Chipmunks ranges from 5.5 to 6.3 inches and the tail length is 5 Inches. Chipmunks typically weigh about 0.02 pounds and live about 5 to 10 years. They have small but prominent ears which face forwards, and small eyes on the sides of their heads. Most wild Chipmunks are lively.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
CHARACTERISTICS
Spiny-Tailed Monitors are a small-to-medium sized monitor species with a body shape that resembles a miniature Komodo dragon. They have short legs, a low, rounded body and a long, spiny, tapering tail that can be twice the length of the abdomen. Their heads are pointed and covered in small, smooth scales. Their nostrils are situated at the sides of the nose, between the eyes and the tip of the snout. Adults can be 24-30 inches (60-75 centimeters) long. Females are slightly smaller than males.
The Spiny-Tailed Monitor’s back is dark brown with a pattern of yellow circles that contain red and brownish spots. Its head is brown, with yellow or cream colored spots and a deep brown stripe that extends through the eye and continues to the neck. Its underbelly is typically cream colored. The Spiny-Tailed Monitor also has pale stripes that run lengthwise down its neck, which distinguish it from two similar-looking subspecies of lizards that live in the same area. Its spiny tail can be wielded like a club to fend off threats and guard the entrance to its burrow.
RANGE AND HABITAT
Spiny-Tailed Monitors are well adapted to hot, arid conditions and are found across a wide area of Northern Australia. Their range overlaps with two closely related subspecies, Varanus acanthurus brachyurus and Varanus acanthurus insulanicus. They live in a variety of tropical and subtropical habitats, but they are most commonly associated with rocky ranges and outcrops. They will also live in trees, burrows and lowland areas of shrubs and spinifex grass. In stony areas, they like to shelter in rock crevices or in burrows under slabs of rock where they are protected from predators and extreme temperatures.
DIET
They eat a variety of insects, spiders, grubs, snails, small lizards and mammals. They have also been observed overpowering and eating other monitor lizards and small snakes. They get most of the water they require from their food. At the Smithsonian’s National Zoo, they eat crickets, mealworms, roaches and occasionally mice.
BEHAVIOR
Habits and Lifestyle
These monitors are diurnal, meaning they are most active during the day. They typically live for about 10-15 years in human care. When they are in danger, these monitor lizards squeeze themselves into crevices in the rocks that they then seal off with their spiny tails, protecting themselves from any predators.
Mating Habits
Spiny-Tailed Monitors become sexually mature when they are about 1 year old. In the wild, mating behavior usually coincides with the onset of spring in the late dry season (August to November). After breeding, females dig or tunnel into the soil and lay a clutch of five to 15 eggs in the earthen nest chamber they have excavated. The eggs are about 1 inch (25 millimeters) long and are incubated at around 80-90 degrees Fahrenheit by the hot, humid ambient conditions. They hatch after about 120 days. The 4-5 inch (10-12 centimeter) long hatchlings dig themselves out of the nest, and then seek cover from predators and look for invertebrates to eat.
The Chipmunk is a member of the family Mammalia, Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is also known as the Striped Squirrel, the Timber Tiger and the Mini-bear. The body length among most Chipmunks ranges from 5.5 to 6.3 inches and the tail length is 5 inches. Chipmunks typically weigh about 0.02 pounds and live about 5 to 10 years. They have small but prominent ears which face forwards, small eyes on the sides of their heads. Most wild Chipmunks are lively.
The Red Squirrel, a member of the Sciuridae, is an arboreal, omnivorous rodent often referred to as a Forest Seeder and folklore as the Devil King Squirrel.
The Arizona Gray Squirrel, also known as the American Gray Squirrel, is a member of the family Rodentia and Sciuridae. It is small in size, with gray fur and a belly between white and cream. It has long ears, no tufts of fur and a fluffy tail edged in white. The body is about 16-20 inches long and weighs up to 1.4 pounds.
The Rock Squirrel, also known as Sao Maozi or Stone Mouse, belongs to the rodent and is a species in the family Sciuridae. The most common natural predators of the Rock Squirrel include bobcats, owls, eagles and snakes. Though the Rock Squirrel is cute, alert, and courageous, it is still considered a pest due to its habit of destroying crops.
The Abert’s Squirrel is a member of the genus Sciurus with a body length of 18-22.8 inches, a tail length of 7.5-9.8 inches and a weight of 2.2 pounds, and can live up to 10 years in the wild. Its most distinctive feature is tassels of fur about 0.8-1.2 inches long at the tip of its ears, which looks very interesting. In addition, it is alert and agile.
Reptile Catcher Chases Monitor Lizard Through Australian Cafe
Oct. 25 (UPI) — An Australian reptile wrangler shared video of an unusual capture that featured a 3-foot monitor lizard fleeing through a cafe.
Drew Godfrey, owner of Hervey Bay Snake Catchers, said he was summoned to a block in Urraween, Queensland, on a report of a yellow monitor lizard roaming the area.
Godfrey’s video, posted to Facebook, shows the reptile wrangler attempting to capture the lizard in a flower bed, but the monitor flees into a nearby cafe.
The lizard darts under tables and counters before Godfrey is finally able to catch it by the tail in the cafe’s kitchen.
“It’s bloody hilarious. I think I physically completed more athletic events than an Olympian to get it,” Godfrey wrote in the Facebook post. “There was running, diving and of course wrestling!”
Godfrey said the lizard was released into a more suitable habitat.
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