Animals A-Z.

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Xoloitzcuintli


No, I did not make that up. That's an actual animal name.
It's also known as the Mexican Hairless Dog.
 
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Frigit Bird

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Quoll

Quolls are small to medium sized marsupials that are found in Australia and New Guinea. Four species of quoll are found in Australia, the other two being found in New Guinea.
Quolls are solitary, nocturnal animals. They are carnivorous (meat-eating), and feed on small animals such as insects, birds and reptiles.
All six species of quoll are either Near Threatened or Endangered. 🙁
 
Zorilla

The striped polecat - also called the African polecat, zoril, zorille, zorilla, Cape polecat, and African skunk - is a member of the family Mustelidae that resembles a skunk. The name "zorilla" comes from the word "zorro", which in Spanish means "fox". It lives predominantly in dry and arid climates, such as the savannahs and open country of Central, Southern, and sub-Saharan Africa, excluding the Congo basin and the more coastal areas of West Africa.
 
Zebu


[FONT=Lucida Grande, Lucida Sans Unicode, Lucida Sans, sans-serif, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial]Apologies for the poorly written article I linked it to.[/FONT]
 
Nedd!cky

"A nedd!cky is a bird found in most African countries such as Rwanda, Tanzania, Gabon, and South Africa. The bird lives in open plantations, woodlands, and in savannahs. It has a dull brown color with brown eyes and a short bill. The bird makes its nest out of dry grass from the woodlands. The nedd!cky feeds on tiny insects found in the bushes and beneath trees."
 
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