Sea Eagle
The sea eagle tends to mate for life with a single partner
The sea eagle tends to mate for life with a single partner
Adult fleas can jump up to 7 inches in the air
Rock paintings of bees date back 15,000 years
The fly has no teeth
Male crickets can produce sounds by rubbing their wings together
Fruit flies are among the most common research animals in the world
Will mate with the entire flock!
Can live for up to 100 years!
Wild Budgerigars are easily tamed.
The mantis can turn its head 180 degrees.
Doesn’t have eyes.
Males form large mating swarms at dusk
They inject hosts with a chemical that stops them from feeling the pain of the bite
The adult deathwatch beetle taps on the wood to find a mate.
The biscuit beetle form a symbiotic relationship with yeast
Bed bugs feed for 4-12 minutes.
The common furniture beetle feeds exclusively on wood