A) Protective Shell B) Antlers C) Feathers D) Long Tail
A) Night B) Afternoon C) Evening D) Morning
A) Insects B) Fish C) Berries D) Seeds
A) 12-15 Years B) 20-25 Years C) 5-8 Years D) 2-3 Years
A) South America B) Europe C) Asia D) Antarctica
A) Hearing B) Smell C) Sight D) Taste
A) 20 B) 35 C) 10 D) 5
A) Giant Armadillo B) Pink Fairy Armadillo C) Nine-banded Armadillo D) Six-banded Armadillo
A) 'Tiny mammal' B) 'Little armored one' C) 'Miniature beast' D) 'Small turtle'
A) Carnivora B) Xenarthra C) Rodentia D) Primates
A) Ten B) Thirty C) Fifteen D) Twenty-one
A) Feathers B) Metallic C) Leathery D) Scales
A) Tolypeutes species B) Priodontes maximus C) Dasypus novemcinctus D) Euphractus sexcinctus
A) 75 cm (30 in) B) 200 cm (79 in) C) 100 cm (39 in) D) 150 cm (59 in)
A) Chaetophractus B) Chlamyphorus C) Dasypus D) Glyptodonts
A) 100 cm (39 in) B) 50 cm (20 in) C) About 75 cm (30 in) D) 60 cm (24 in)
A) Chlamyphoridae B) Tolypeutinae C) Euphractinae D) Dasypodidae
A) Dasypus B) Priodontes C) Tolypeutes D) Chaetophractus
A) 20 kg (44 lb) B) 30 kg (66 lb) C) 54 kg (119 lb) D) 100 kg (220 lb)
A) 200-300 g B) Up to 54 kg (119 lb) C) 50-100 g D) Around 85 g (3.0 oz)
A) Argentina B) Paraguay C) Brazil D) Chile
A) Calcium carbonate B) Chitin C) Keratin D) Collagen
A) Yucatán B) Nuevo León C) Chiapas D) Oaxaca
A) Dasypus B) Chlamyphorus C) Priodontes D) Calyptophractus
A) Only the nine-banded armadillo B) Only the giant armadillo C) Only the pink fairy armadillo D) All living armadillos
A) Fossil size comparison B) Behavioral studies C) Ecological niche analysis D) Morphological and genetic evidence
A) Violin B) Charango C) Piano D) Guitar
A) 30–32 °C (86–89.6 °F) B) 33–36 °C (91–97 °F) C) 40–42 °C (104–107.6 °F) D) 37–39 °C (98.6–102.2 °F)
A) It remains unchanged B) It becomes transparent C) It changes color D) It can glow
A) Robert Frost B) Shel Silverstein C) Walt Whitman D) Emily Dickinson
A) Malaria B) Rabies C) Ebola D) Chagas disease
A) The back B) The limbs C) The head D) The underside
A) By jumping high in the air B) By rolling up into a ball C) By running away at high speed D) By digging quickly into the ground
A) Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event B) End-Pleistocene extinction event C) Triassic–Jurassic extinction event D) Permian–Triassic extinction event
A) Geographical distribution B) Behavioral patterns C) Genetics and analysis of the inner ear D) Dietary habits
A) Up to six minutes B) Only for a few seconds C) Indefinitely D) Up to two minutes
A) Calvin Coolidge B) Harry S. Truman C) President Herbert Hoover D) Franklin D. Roosevelt
A) Dasypus B) Chaetophractus C) Euphractus D) Tolypeutes
A) P 3/3, M 1/1 = 18 B) P 7/7, M 1/1 = 32 C) P 4/4, M 3/3 = 44 D) P 5/5, M 2/2 = 40
A) Fossil records B) Undiscovered species C) Living species D) Extinct groups
A) Venom B) Speed C) Camouflage D) Their armor-like skin
A) Polyembryony B) Parthenogenesis C) Cloning D) Asexual reproduction
A) Termites B) Insects C) Leaves D) Fruits
A) Just So Stories B) Kim C) Puck of Pook's Hill D) The Jungle Book
A) Economic pigs B) Depression dogs C) Hoover hogs D) Roosevelt rats
A) They give birth to a single offspring B) They lay eggs instead of giving live birth C) They have litters with up to ten babies D) They give birth to four monozygotic young (identical quadruplets)
A) They have too many plates B) They are too large to roll up C) Their skin is not flexible enough D) They lack the necessary muscle strength
A) Pliocene B) Miocene C) Oligocene D) Eocene
A) Chlamyphoridae B) Tolypeutinae C) Euphractinae D) Dasypodidae |