Animals are awesome!
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.colt.eat/
No matter what the activity, everything an animal does requires energy.
Giraffes need energy to run; monkeys need energy to climb; children need energy
to play. But where does all of this energy come from? All animals acquire
energy from the food they eat. Depending on the type of animal, this food may
consist of plants, animals, or a combination of both.
Animals that eat only plants are called herbivores. Most herbivores,
including the giraffe, macaw, ground squirrel, and elephant in this video
segment, eat a wide variety of plants and plant parts. Some herbivores,
however, are very particular about the plant matter they eat. Wild pandas have
evolved to eat nothing but bamboo plants - a food that is plentiful where they
live but not particularly nutritious for bears. Because of their inefficiency
digesting plant material pandas need to eat a lot. Adult pandas spend 10 to 12
hours each day eating and consume about 40 pounds of food during that time.
Animals that eat only other animals are called carnivores. Polar bears,
sharks, woodpeckers, and anteaters are all carnivores. Like herbivores,
however, carnivores may generalize and eat a wide variety of animals, or
specialize and eat only one type. Anteaters are highly specialized creatures. These animals
eat little else besides ants and termites, and their sticky tongue and powerful
front legs are perfectly adapted for doing
just that.
Omnivores are the least choosy about what they eat. These animals, which
include raccoons, opossums, and black and grizzly bears, eat both plants and
animals, and often eat a wide variety of each. A typical grizzly bear, for
example, will eat just about anything it can catch and get its mouth around.
Grizzlies are known to kill their own food, including deer, but will also
scavenge the carcasses of dead animals. They also eat fish, crustaceans,
amphibians, small mammals, insects, berries, tree buds, and grass. Links 7, p.132
1 pound = 450g
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