Saturday, 11 August 2012

Beautiful Animals of Arctic

The Arctic is a very cold, windy, and often snowy biome located around the North Pole. When referring to the Arctic, people usually mean the part of the earth within the Arctic Circle (an imaginary circle around the Earth, parallel to the Equator and 23 degrees 28 minutes from the North Pole, that is, above about 75 degrees North Latitude). Although there is no land at the North Pole, the icy Arctic Ocean is teeming with life ranging from the microscopic (like zooplankton) to the huge (like whales). There is also a lot of land within the Arctic Circle (northern parts of Asia, Europe, and North America). Land within the Arctic Circle is tundra, and it supports less life most other biomes because of the cold temperatures, strong, dry winds, and permafrost (permanently-frozen soil). Long periods of darkness (in the winter) and light (in the summer) also affect Arctic life. Animals that live in the Arctic (either full time or seasonally) are adapted to extreme conditions. Many animals who overwinter in the Arctic (like the Arctic fox and the ermine) have a coat that thickens and changes color to white during the winter as camouflage in the snow (blending into the background is called cryptic coloration). Some animals hibernate during the cold season; they go into a very deep, sleep-like state in which their heartbeat slows down. These animals often hibernate in an underground burrow or pit. Some hibernators include skunks, chipmunks, and some bears (but these bears are not true hibernators, they go into a state that is closer to a normal deep sleep). Many animals (like the Arctic tern) spend the summer months in the Arctic, but leave as the weather turns frigid and food becomes scarce (these animals return again the next summer, repeating this pattern year after year). This behavior is called migrating.
The Alaskan malamute is a powerful sled dog from Alaska.


                                 This small, white fox lives farther north than any other land animal.
                                        This white hare lives in the Arctic and has huge hindfeet.
                A small bird that flies from the Arctic to the Antarctic and back again each year.
 

Arctic wolves are carnivores that live in Northern Canada.

                              A small, white, toothed whale that lives mostly in cold, Arctic waters

A wild, white sheep from the Arctic and sub-Arctic of North America.
Ermine also known as stoat or short-tailed weasel, this tiny, ferocious mammal lives in cold areas.


A large, slow-swimming shark with glow-in-the-dark eyes.



Harp Seals live are marine mammals that live in the North Atlantic and the Arctic Ocean.






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