<text>Zebus have been domesticated for thousands of years, with dwarf type originating on the island of Sri Lanka. Zebus are the sacred cattle of India and roam freely in the streets and villages.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>Z01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_11730.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Like human fingerprints, each zebra's strips are unique. The individual patterns may help zebras recognize each other. A herd of moving stripes also confused attacking predators.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>Z00</text>
</content>
<name>Z</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_17504.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Even though warthogs can use their large tusks for defense, they would rather flee than fight. They try to run away at the first sign of danger, disappearing quickly with their tails held straight up in the air.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>W06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_73313.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The "Alpha" or dominate wolf stands tall, gazing forward, with his tail straight back or slightly raised. He is the leader of the pack. The others recognize his authority by lowering their tails, twisting their heads and whining. Wolves hunt cooperatively to kill the large animals; like deer and moose that are their usual food. Complex signals including howling and other facial expressions and body postures maintain stable harmonious groups and permit teamwork in hunting.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>W04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_11306.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Families of warthogs are common on the African plains.Since U.S.A. disease control laws prohibit importing these animals, the only warthog in our zoo is the life--sized statue by Eric Berg.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>W03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_88881.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Like other woodpeckers, this bird has a very long, sticky tongue that it darts rapidly back and forth to dig out food from the holes it has made.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_7305.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Name refers to the erect scales on the snout. Vivid pattern blends with leaves on floor of forest habitat. Eats small birds and mammals. Poisonous. Has live bearings of young.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>V00</text>
</content>
<name>V</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_75360.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Andes of Ecuador to N. Chile and Argentina</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The blue and yellow tanager does not migrate as most birds do. It stays in the same area, occasionally wandering to a higher or lower attitude.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T32</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_87820.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>In Spanish, this neon-colored bird is known as siete colores, meaning seven colors. Found in the higher branches, males and females look alike.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_32932.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The Philadelphia Zoo's thick-knees are lively and noisy at any time, but in the wild, they are active at night. Their large eyes are adaptations for this nocturnal lifestyle.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T29</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_83578.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Forests streams, southern South America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>You might see this small duck perched in a tree since it nests in a hole in the trunk. Hatchlings leap unhurt from the nest to follow their parents to water.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T26</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_76904.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The vivid Brazilian tanager, like most tanagers, is an arboreal, or tree-dwelling bird that plucks fruits and insects from the upper branches.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T25</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_61560.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The Rainbow trout remains in fresh waters and are brightly colored, with a bright rosy band. This fish is highly prized as a game fish. It fights hard and long for its freedom, often leaping out of the water.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T23</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_70510.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The fish was originally found from the Appalachian regions westward to the Great Lakes territory and Minnesota, and in Canada from the Saskatchewan River to Labrador. But brook trout now have been placed in hundreds of streams of the Upper Mississippi Valley and the Western States.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>3</id>
<text>North America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T21</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_68779.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A small animal of the the southwest Pacific. It is a relative of the lemur. It grows about as large as a rat, and has a round head and owl-like eyes.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_55351.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Highland forests; Kenya and N. Tanzania</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>There are glossy red feathers under the turaco's wings. They are colored with a pigment containing copper which can actually dye water red.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T17</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_54727.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The males' loud calls give trumpeters their name. They are easily caught and tamed. Amazon natives often keep them with chicken flocks as watchdogs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T16</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_50088.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Tahrs are goat-like animals that live on precipitous mountain slopes where they leap and climb with great agility. Social animals that travel in large herds, they post a guard to watch for danger while the rest of the group grazes.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T15</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_44912.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Siberian Tigers are the most northern race of tigers. Like other animals that live in cold areas, they are larger, lighter in color and have longer hair than their relatives from warmer climates.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T14</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_25806.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The head in this species is relatively small and there is a smale scale ( the nuchal) at the foward edge of the shell.Giant tortoises once lived on many islands near Madagascar, but they are now extinct except on South Aldabra and the Seychelelle, to which latter islands the British transferred colonies of them.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T12</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_33872.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Largest (by weight) fresh water turtle in the world. Lies motionless on river bottoms with mouth open. Fish are lured by wormlike process in mouth.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_33383.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Very abundant in the eastern part of its range. Inland it occurs in sandy areas. Often seen aftern warm, heavy rains May interbreed with other species producing hybrids.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_2553.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This family of tortoises is one of 41 species of 10 genera. Tortoises live chiefly in tropical and subtropical masses except Australia and Antarctica.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_14367.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Tamarins rum and jump between large branches in their forest habitat. When resting in the sun, they stretch along a branch, dangling their legs over the sides. This sunbathing helps to maintain their richly colored fur coats.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_5929.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Before the days of canned and frozen foods, sailing vessels carried thousands of tortoises away from the islands. Colonists killed them for oil and food, and, as a result of all this persecution, these huge reptiles are now extinct on many of the islands and rare on others.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_5698.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Known as the "Blanket" tapirOne only needs to look at the coloring of the Malayan tapir to understand how it gets its nickname. The large patches probably help the animal hide in forests and swamps by breaking up its outline.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_27853.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Found from arid bush lowlands to mountain canyons, wherever permanent water occurs. Secrets poison which can paralyzwe predator the size of a dog.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_26804.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>South Central USA and Northern Mexico</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Aquatic, occuring in various bodies of water, usually those with muddy bottoms. Varied diet of plant and animal material. Able to enclose body almost completely within shell.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>T00</text>
</content>
<name>T</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_80530.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>In pursuit of food, the golden-breasted starling will break open the earthen tunnels made by termites in order to feed on the insects inside.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S49</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_79820.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The flocking behavior of these bright, active birds helps them find ripe fruit trees in the forests. In the Philadelphia Zoo, they flock to feeders to eat fruit and zoocake.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S48</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_77567.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This starling breeds in areas where locusts, their main food, lay eggs. The baby birds hatch just in time to catch young locusts as they are hatched.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S47</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_88508.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The white sucker has thick lips on the underside of the snout. Its mouth has no teeth, but its throat is lined with thin, comblike spines. Suckers live in likes and streams.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_69345.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Horse-tailed squirrels search for nuts and fruit during the day. At night they climb higher in the trees to find a safe sleeping spot. Keen eyesight to judge branch locations and a tail for balance help in their daily commute.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S40</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_55889.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Central Alberta to Ohio and Southern Texas</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Tunnel homes protect these ground squirrels while they sleep and raise young. They spend their day nibbling on seeds and grass. When danger threatens, they race for a safe burrow.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S39</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_54345.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Evergreen forest; Europe, east to China and Japan</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The European red squirrel, a common sight throughout Europe and Great Britian, develops ear tufts as the weather gets colder. With the coming of warm weather the tufts disappear.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S38</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_52042.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Long grasses and reeds of the African savannah provide cover for the secretive Serval Cat. This small agile predator is skilled at stalking birds then leaping high to catch them in flight.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S35</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_41416.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A salamander of shallow water habitats. Forages at night for small aquatic animals. Lacks hind limbs. Breathes by means of external gills.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S34</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_40474.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A very agile salamander. A broad red or chestnut stripe down back, extending from neck well onto base of tail. Recieved name from the old Yonahlossee Road on Grandfather Mountain, North Carolina.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_39143.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Coloration variable from medium dark brown to almost black. These creatures are seldom encountered except during or following medium to heavy rains.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_37954.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Found under surface debris or rocks in moist or wet habitats. One of the lungless salamanders. Breathes through skin and mouth lining. Eats invertabrates.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S28</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_35994.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A large terrestrial rear-fanged snake that is mildly poisonous. The upturned snout is probalby used for rooting in soil in search for prey.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S26</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_34545.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>One of our most impressive native snakes. Inhabits sandy pine flats and dry mountains ridges. Produces vibrant hiss when excited. Eats mammals and birds.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S22</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_24139.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Abundant around the Philadelphia area. Inhabits almost any moist area, including city parks. Eats frogs, tadpoles, salamanders, fish, and earthworms. Has live bearings of young.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S18</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_22376.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Northeastern and central United States</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Occurs in wide variety of habitats from coastal plain to mountain and farm land. Excellent climber. Constricts mice, small rats, and birds. Lays eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S17</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_22009.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The belief that this snake milks cows is not true. Often mistaken for poisonous copperheads. Eats rodents and other small animals. Lays eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S16</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_21658.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>These are great bug catchers. Nimble tree shrews catch and eat flying insects. Using their tongues, they also scoop up insects hidden under rocks</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S13</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_14881.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This large squirrel has a black fur on the back and a light yellow belly weighing over three pounds. It likes to eat fruit, sap, bark and leaves. Also likes to live in tropical trees 60 feet high.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S11</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_11042.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>When startled or at play, a springbok jumps into the air with its head down and its legs held straight.The unusual springing motion gives this antelope its name.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_9481.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Only venomous snake on this West Indian island. Inhabits damp forest and plantations. Bite causes severe local tissue damage. Eats small mammals and birds.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_19383.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Inhabits rocky, wooded canyons and upland forests. Good climber. Adults mainly eat small mammals and birds; young also eat lizards and frogs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>S02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_89223.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Semi-arid open country; S.W. United States</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Unlike the roadrunner of cartoon fame, the real bird is shy. Often seen on roads, it runs away when startled, reaching speeds of 15 m.p.h or more.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R11</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_80240.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Rhino horns are made of stiff hair-like material that grows continuously. The record rhino horn is over 5 feet long. In captivity horns are usually shorter because rhinos rub them against walls and rocks.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R07</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_29083.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Southen Mexico, Central America and South America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Occurs in dry grasslands and thorny scrub habitats. Its size and neurotoxic venom makes it one of the most dangerous snakes in the western hemishpere. Live-bearer.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_24717.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The only rattlesnake of the northeastern United States. Congregates to hibernate in dens on rocky, wooded ledges, often with copperheads. Live bearings.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_23875.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Pit viper. Inhabits pinelands, palmetto flatwoods. Performs important service of reducing rabbit and rodent populations. Live bearings of young.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_4894.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Armor-plated, tough, hard skin protects the rhino from insects. The stiff plates are connected by soft, sensitive folds that allow the rhino to move.Rhinos are disappearing rapidly in the wild. They are slaughterd for their horns and skin which are used for ornaments and folk medicine.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_18420.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Reddish color phase of the Carolina pigmy rattlesnake. Occurs near lakes and marshes. Eats rodents, lizards, snakes, and frogs. Gives birth to live young.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_26940.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Arkansas to California; South to Mexico</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The white rattlesnake is an example of the inherited trait called albinism. An albino lacks coloring matter in the eyes,skin, and its outgrowths(hair, scales, feathers). Eyes appear pink because blood vessels are not hidden by pigment. Albinism is rare in animals since both parents must be carriers of the trait to produce an albino offspring.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>R00</text>
</content>
<name>R</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_81319.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>These unusual partridges, with their red, brushlike crest, travel in groups on the dark forest floor. Here they search for fruit, insects and snails to eat.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P20</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_79445.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The jaunty pitta spends most of its time on the ground, only making brief flights. Its short wings and long, powerful legs are suited to this way of life.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P19</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_79316.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Rainforests, muddy lowland flats; New Guinea</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The lacy crown of this large, beautiful pigeon is used in courtship displays. The male bows is head and spreads its crest to attract a female.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P18</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_78557.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Even though it is not a peacock, this beautiful pheasant has similar "eyes" on its fan-like tail, which it spreads to one side to attract a female.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P16</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_74238.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This fish usally grows between 6 and 15 inches long. Fishermen seek the yellow perch, and it is valued as food. It is an easy catch, and will bite on a simple pole and hook or a casting anytime of year.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_65585.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The penguins in the Philadelphia Zoo exhibit are Humboldt penguins found on the inslands in the Humboldt Current off the coast of Chile and Peru. The species makes best burrows in guano (large deposits of sea bird droppings). Mining of guano for fertilizer is destroying the breeding habitat. As a result, the species may vanish without the aid of captive breeding programs such as the one at the zoo.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P12</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_63750.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This animal is a species of lemur oftern incorrectly called a sloth. It is about the size of a squirrel. Pottos make amusing and friendly pets.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_48958.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Coastal Southern/Western USA to N. South America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>A pelican's beak does not hold a lot, but is is water, not fish taking up all that space. When it spots its prey the hungry Pelican plunges into the water to scoop up the fish with its beak. The lower beak stretches to form a pouch to hold all the water picked up with its meal. Then the Pelican tips its beak to let the water drain out - and gobbles up its fish dinner.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_47647.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Pigs are smart animals with a big sense of smell. Their specially shaped noe can also be used like a plow to dig up roots. In Southeast Asia Pot-bellied pigs are kept as pets and used as food.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P09</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_47409.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A porcupine's quills are stiff, barbed hairs. The quills are loosely attached to the porcupines skin and sticks easily into an attacking enemy.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P08</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>2</id>
<text>Erethizon dorsatus</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>3</id>
<text>USA and Canada</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_43460.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Pumas and leopards both weigh about 200 pounds, but the Puma is considered a "small cat" because it can purr like a housecat. Only the "big cats" like leopards, lions, tigers and jaguars can roar.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P07</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_32517.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This large constrictor attains a lenght of 20 feet. It inhabits marshes, gallery forests and rocky ledges near water. They are most active at night, but may bask in the open on warm, humid days. Food consists of mammals, birds and lizards. Breeding occurs from October to February with 15 to 54 eggs in each clutch. Due to its large size and valuable skin this python is considered endangered and is protected by India and other nations.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_32360.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Indo-Malayan Region - Philippine Islands</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Largest of the pythons and reaching alleged lenght of 33 feet. Despite its large size it is inoffensive in the wild, and there are few authentic cases of attacks on man. It is sometimes found along the river banks of cities where there is an abundance of fowls, cats, dogs, and pigs for food.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_29601.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Common name refers to coloration of snake, not habits. Found near water where it feeds on rats. Like most pythons the females broods the eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_28660.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Found in tropical forests near water courses. Food consists of birds and small mammals, which are killed by constriction. This animal lays eggs</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_20220.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Aboreal, with prehensile tail and enlarged front teeth to retain hold on fleeing bird and mammal prey. Young are yellow or red at hatching.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>P00</text>
</content>
<name>P</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_77241.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Burrowing Owls nest underground in abandoned prairie dog tunnels. One parent incubates the eggs in the burrow while the other searches for food above the ground. After the eggs hatch, both parents look for food for their babies.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>O02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_12582.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>River otters hunt mostly at night, swimming and diving to catch fish, crustaceans and frogs. Rather than eating in the water, the otter brings its food back to the shore.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>O01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_10634.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Long arms and hands with long fingers and small thumbs helph orangs climb in trees and cling to branches. Orangutans usually prefer to stay in trees and make extensive detours to avoid the forest floor.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>O00</text>
</content>
<name>O</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_8181.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The "muskie" is a prize among fishermen, who troll to catch it. This fish sometimes reaches a lenght of nearly 8 feet and weights of more than 75 pounds.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_69069.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A wild cat which lives in Central and South America. The margay is 3 1/2 to feet long. The name may have come from the Indian term "little ocelot".</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_62946.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Desert scrub and grasslands; SW USA to N. Mexico</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The feisty grasshopper mouse uses its high-pitched squeak to "declare' is place in the world. It stands on its hind legs, nose pointed skyward, as it emits its sharp cry which can be heard at least 50 ft. away</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M17</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_62385.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>These tiny primates dine on sap, using their teeth to gouge holes in the bark of trees. A heavy coating of enamel gives their lower teeth the strength needed for this tough job.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M16</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_60282.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Harvest mice are found in the grassland areas of their range, making their homes in overgrown pastures where they feed on seeds and grains. In the summer, they weave round nests onto the tall grasses</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M14</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_58786.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Meerkats appear to share their daily duties. A lone sentry perches atop a mound to guard the group and its underground tunnels. Others babysit or hunt for food. Division of labor helps all survive in the harsh desert.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M13</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_58552.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Harvest mice eat, nest and sleep high above the ground. These miniature mice build nests suspended from tall grass and bushes. Hiding high above the ground protects both adult mice and young from hungry owls and weasels.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M12</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_58282.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Marmosets depend on rainforests plants, insects and small animals for food. Hugh trees layered with vines, branches and hanging plants provide food for this primate and many other animals.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M07</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_46007.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The long tusk of male muntjacs are very effective defensive weapons. The antlers are only used in male-to-male challenges during the breeding season.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_39642.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Coati use their long noses and strong claws to root out insects and other food. They roll the prey under their feet to kill them before eating.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_40145.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Generally large lizards, monitors have a long, forked, snakelike tongue that acts as an organ of taste and smell. The 30 species include the Komodo Dragon, the world's largest lizard, that grows to over 10 feet long including tail. All lay eggs with leathery shells. Depending on their size, monitor eat prey ranging from insects to small deer and pigs. They have a special fondness for eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_30280.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Inhabits deserts and semidesert regions. Eats small animals, eggs. Can survive long periods without food. Hunts by chemical senses. Lays eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>M00</text>
</content>
<name>M</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_85432.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Grasslands and marshes; South America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>While at the Philadelphia Zoo, listen for the loud scolding calls of this bold, black and white bird. It searches for food in damp, marshy areas.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L16</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_59204.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This primitive primate is related to the lemurs and monkeys. It is nocturnal and moves slowly through the trees as it stalks its prey of insects, lizards, and even small birds. A single baby is born and it clings tightly to its mother's chest.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L14</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_57948.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The weight of these tiny creatures varies greatly during the year, depending on available food. Lemurs store fat in their tails during the wet months when food is plentiful, and use it up in the dry months when food is less abundant.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L13</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_48793.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Sea Lions are mammals. Hair covers their body and helps them stay warm when it's cold outside. They also breathe air and produce mild to feed their babies.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L12</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>3</id>
<text>North Atlantic and Pacific oceans</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>2</id>
<text>Otariidae (family)</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_46276.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Ruffed Lemurs bask with their legs stretched out and their faces turned toward the early morning sun. Active at night, they sleep away the day. Their black and white patterns hides them in the shadowy tree tops.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L11</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_44024.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Snow Leopards live on high rocky ledges of the Himalayan mountains. They have adaptations which help them survive the cold and harsh habitat.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_13343.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>When Lions hunt together they have a better chance of catching a meal. A few lions will scare their prey towards others waiting in ambush. Females do most of the hunting.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L09</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_35771.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A legless lizard, not a snake. The long, fragile tail has given rise to the "joint snake" story of folklore. Largely insectivorous, but also eats mice.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L08</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_30880.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The 3,000 species inhabit every continent but Antarctica. They exhibit a wide variety of adaptations to cope with their different lifestyles of walking, climbing, swimming, gliding and burrowing. Some lizards can shed their tails if attacked and grow new ones. Like snakes, these reptiles molt periodically. Some lizards have movable eylinds and external ear openings.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L07</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_30649.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Africa, Asia, Australia, East Indies, Polynesia</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Many species are quite uniform in appearance with long heads and necks, heavy bodies, and long tails. They range in size from 8 inches to 10 feet. The family is unspecialized in habits, and most kinds are at home on the ground, in trees, in water, or burrows. Almost any animal matter is eaten and is swallowed whole or in large chunks.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_2086.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A ringtailed lemur defends his territory by marking it with scent. Glands located on his wrists and below his tail produce a powerful odor. Watch the males use his tail to spread the scent on your next visit to the zoo.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_15738.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Langurs seem to have cast-iron stomachs. These creatures often eat leaves that would taste bad to other animals. Bacteria in their stomachs neutralize the leaves' toxic chemicals and ensure a food supply that does not appeal to other species.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_6669.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Llamas are new world members of the camel family. like their cousins, the dromedaries, they are domestic beast of burden. Their strong flexible feet and long legs carry them safely over steep mountains.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_19525.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Bite seldom fatat to man. Lives in tropical deciduous or thorn forests. Eats small animals and eggs. Hunts by chemical senses (tastes and smell). Lays eggs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>L00</text>
</content>
<name>L</name>
<script></script>
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card_84013.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Kerodons or Rock Cavies inhabit rocky areas near mountainsides. When threatened, these rodents will leap about or seek shelter under rocks.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>K06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_51000.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The open fields cleared by colonial farmers were welcome hunting areas for American Kestrels. Today these "Sparrow Hawks" can still be seen, hovering over fields and roadsides looking for mice and insects.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>K05</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>3</id>
<text>Europe, Asia and Africa</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_42998.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A kinkajou loves to eat honey. It also enjoys flower nectar and the ripest parts of fruits like mangoes and wild-figs. Its long, extendible tongue enables it to satisfy its sweet tooth.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>K04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_15412.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Red kangaroos are the largest of the marsupials(pouched mammals). They can stand 5 to 6 feet tall. Those long hind feet help the kangaroo hop at speeds of 30 mph and cover 25 feet at a bound. The males are dusty red while the females are blue--grey.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>K01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_19856.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Coastal wetlands, northern South America</text>
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<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Wild scarlet Ibis' probe the mud for tiny shrimp. This diet keeps their feathers vibrant. In the zoo, healthfuf food additives keep them "in the pink"</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>I01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_16164.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This large green lizard is so named because of three blunt horns on its snout. The species has a habit of squatting flat upon the hindquarters with the foward portion of the body reared high on its front legs. This iquana is very rare.</text>
</content>
<name>I</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_88182.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Lowland forests; India to S.W. China, Sumatra</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>The female hornbill uses mud to seal herself into a hole in a tree where she lays her eggs. The male feeds her through a narrow slit left in the mud.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>H04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_61017.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Active at night, hedgehogs probe the leaflitter for insects, worms and snails. Their wet snouts help them nose out prey by intensifying scents.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>H03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_41133.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A large bizarre salamander with folds of skin at the sides. Inhabits rivers and streams with rapidly flowing water. Eats any aquatic animal it can swallow.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>H02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_87468.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>One glance at this drab brown bird's long crest shows why 'it was named "hammer head." Pairs build huge domed nests that they add to year after year.</text>
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<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_2911.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A submersible creature. The hippo closes its nostrils as it sinks below the surface of water. A hippo can stay under water up to 6 minutes but usually comes up in 1 or 2 .</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>H00</text>
</content>
<name>H</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_83165.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Guanacos are wild relatives of the domesticatd llamas. Herds of 20 or more live in the highlands at elevations of 4,000 meters (13,000 ft). The guanaco's thick fur protects the animal from the cold temperatures of this habitat.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>G10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_48336.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Gibbons speed through the treetops by swinging hand-over-hand. This style is called brachiation(bray-key-a-shum) swinging and dangling below the branches helps them reach ripe hanging fruit.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>G08</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_45136.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The largest of the anthropoid, or manlike, apes. It is the ape that looks like a man. It is also the rarest. The gorilla lives in forests of central and west Africa. A gorilla usually walks on all fours, but sometimes it rises upright like a man or woman.</text>
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<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_35011.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Has movable eyelids, unlike many geckos. Although harmless it is greatly feared by the people in areas it inhabits. Eats insects. Nocturnal. Most Geckos lay 2 eggs at a time.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>G05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_8495.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Unlike other waterfowl, Cape Barren geese have a sharp claw on the back of each foot. This adaptation aids in climbing the rocky shores of islands they use for breeding and rearing young.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>G01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_18945.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The star finch can often be seen flying around with nesting material in its beak. It constructs many nests, even though it will never use them all.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_52496.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Grey Foxes readily adapted to the presence of European settlers. They raidaed barns to add chickens to their wild diet of rabbits, mice, seeds and fruits.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F09</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>3</id>
<text>Southwestern USA and western Mexico</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_44525.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Fennec foxes survive in the desert's extreme cold and heat. A thick fur coat protects them from the nighttime chill. Their big ears help dissipate body heat. Light colored fur reflects the desert sun's burning rays.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F08</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_39769.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Often seen in gardens. Enters houses in search of insect food. Belongs to the narrow-mouthed toad family. A widespread group found in Asia, New Guinea and America.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F07</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_38499.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Spends the day in plants growing on the limbs of tall trees. Oftern found around human habitation. Descends to ground to lay its eggs in standing bodies of water.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_37828.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Southern New Jersey to Northern Florida</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Often associated with sphagnum bogs on the coastal plain. Voice resembles the sound of carpenters hitting nails,thus the origin of the common name.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_22530.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Caribbean Islands, Yucatan and S. America, Galapagos I.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>With their long legs and necks, famingos are well adapted for life in shallow tropical salt lakes and lagoons. Wading along with upside-down bills, they sieve microscopic plants and tiny animal life from the water. The pink color of flamingos' feathers is a result of the reddish pigments contained is their natural diets. The Philadelphia Zoo adds synthetic carotene to our flamingos' food to maintain their bright color.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>F02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_89485.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Undergrowth of evergreen forests; Southeast Asia</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>Rock ledges along rainforests streams are the home for these tiny birds that appear as fleeting glimpses of blue as they dart about catching insects.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
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card_18575.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Slim and agile ermines hunt and feast on rabbits and rodents. Ermines kill these animals with a powerful bite to the back of the neck. Keen sight, smell and hearing help the ermines find a meal.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>E04</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_45814.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The Bald Eagle is found only in North America and has been the national emblem since1782. It is in danger of extinction. Although not endangered in Alaska and Canada, its numbers in the 48 states dropped down to about 1000 by 1970. Now federal law protects the Eagle from being hunted. The pesticides that cause abnormal egg shells have been banned. Bald Eagles are not bald. The name comes from the feathered white head of the adult bird that looks bald from a distance.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>E03</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_4243.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The only bird larger that the Emu is the Ostrich. Although Emus can not fly, they are rapid runners. The wings are short and the feathers are coarse and hairl...</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>E02</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_4616.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Of the two type elephants this one is larger--up to 13 feet at the shoulders, weighs 7 tons. Has larger ears. Two "fingers" at the tip of the trunk. Both sexes have tusks. A sway back.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>E01</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_4374.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Of the two type elephants this one is smaller--up to 10 feet at the shoulders, weighs 6 tons. Has smaller ears. One "finger" at the tip of the trunk. Usually one the males have tusks. A doomed back.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>E00</text>
</content>
<name>E</name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_83736.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The emerald dove is a terrestrial, or groung-dwelling bird. Although it nests and roosts in trees, it spends most of its time on the floor.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>D17</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_69492.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This animal is tiny and timid. Full grown at 14 inches, dik-diks hide in the thick undergrowth of the African bush. Only males have tiny, spiked horns.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>D10</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_57590.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Barasingha are often called "swamp deer" because they live in a wet environment. Their hooves are splayed (spreadable) to prevent the deer from slipping in the mud.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>D06</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_49252.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Hunting dogs lick each other's faces in greeting or as they prepare for a hunt. The dogs hunt at dawn or dusk, leaving some adults, not always females, to guard the pups. The hunts are usually sucessful because the pack chases a Gazelle or young Wildergeaste that is slower than the rest of is herd. The leading dog pursues the prey at speeds up to 35 mph. If he tires, another dog will take his place. Finally the exhausted pry is attacked by all the hunters. When they return to the den, the dogs share their kill. They regurgitate the meat to the young and the "baby-sitters".</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>D05</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_46686.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Open forest; Tropical Nicaragua to N.E. Argentina</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>These busy little birds travel in small groups through the tropical forest hunting for their favorite meals - mango tre flowers and wild figs.</text>
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<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_9159.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Open marshy area; Southern lowlands of South America</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>4</id>
<text>These small wading birds seek food by probing under stones and into mud with their beaks. They lift their feet high out of the water as they go.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C34</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_84332.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Like other cranes, sandhill cranes engage in frequent elaborate dances. They are exuberant performers, sometimes leaping as high as 15 to 20 feet.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C31</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_77743.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Cocks of the rock perch on low trees often near streams. Both the bright orange male and the dull brown female have unusual feathered forehead discs.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C30</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_72555.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A relative of the goldfish and has golden-colored scales. the largest carp can weighs from 30 to 80 pounds. Carp came from Asia, but are now found in most of the northern hemisphere.</text>
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<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_72356.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>A fresh-water fish which is closely related to sunfish and black bass. It is about a foot long when full grown. The crappi has a large mouth. Crappies are good to eat, and they are good game fish.</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_69878.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Chamois are among the most acrobatic climbers of the hoofed animals. Young chamois can stand up at birth and are scrambling on rocks searching for grass to eat when they are just 10 days old.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C23</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_47279.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>African Civets produce an oily fluid in glands under their tails. This mush has been used to make perfumes from biblical times to the present.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C21</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_44131.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>Pouncing on a flock of feeding birds, a caracal can catch several as they fly away. The cat leaps up to 6 feet in the air, batting the birds down with its forepaws.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C20</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_37559.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>This cobra is highly variable in coloration. Inhabits the open grasslands and relicts forests of South Africa. Eats amphibians, lizards, birds and rodents.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>background</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>C18</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_36826.xml
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<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text>The king cobra is probably the only snake that constructs a true nest. The female scrapes up leaves and debris withthe rear part of her body to build a two-chambered nest of leaves and other vegetation. The snake coils in the chamber above the eggs and guards them until they hatch.</text>
</content>
<content>
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<text>The Nile crocodile inhabits streams, lakes and saltwater estruaries. The female lays 25 to 95 eggs in holes excavated in sand or gravel, which they guard during incubation. This species was once common thoughout its range, but has become seriously endangered because of hide-hunting.</text>
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<text>Western Mexico to Ecuador - West Indies to South Florida</text>
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<text>The American crocodile inhabits salt or brackish water and is the only true crocodile in the USA, where it occurs only in and near the Everglades National Park. Eggs are buried in sand scooped into low mounds. Young crocodiles mainly eat fish, whereas larger ones devour fish, turtles, birds, mammals, and sometimes smaller crocodiles.</text>
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<text>C14</text>
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<text>Crocodylus americanus</text>
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<text>This relative of the alligator, also known as the Yacare, inhabits marshes, swamps and vegetated sections of tropical river systems. Its food consists primarily of fishes and crustaceans, but it will also eat other animals. Reproduction occurs in the wet season with 30 to 45 eggs being deposited in amount nest, which is constructed with plant material and guarded by the female.</text>
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<text>C13</text>
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<text>Massachusetts to Kansas, South to Alabama</text>
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<text>The toxicity of this snake's venom has been exaggerated. Quiet dispostion. Ususally inhabits rocky areas but also low country. Eats mainly mice.</text>
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<text>C11</text>
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<text>The crowned crane probes grasses and reeds with its beak for locusts and other insects that are its main food. Philadelphia was the first zoo to breed this bird in captivity.</text>
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<text>"What's wrong with the chimps with the pink bottoms" is a question often asked. Swollen pink skin on a female chimp's bottom shows that she is sexually receptive. The swelling goes down when her breeding period is over.</text>
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<text>These animals are known as the "Ships of the desert". Dromedaries are the domestic animals that provide desert transportation. Their padded feet support them in sand and they can go without water for several days. Fat, an energy reservoir, is stored in the hump.</text>
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<text>South Central USA and Northeastern Mexico</text>
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<text>Occurs in a variety of habitats, usually avoiding dense vegetation. Tolerates more heat than most snakes. Occasionally seen during day, even in hot weather.</text>
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<text>Pairs of brimstone canaries live in small groups. They feed their young exclusively on insects, even though the main food for adults is seed.</text>
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<text>C02</text>
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<text>Hidden in the leafy, forest canopy, the chloropsis, or leaf bird, can be heard cheerfully whistling. It makes its home exclusively in the treetops.</text>
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<text>When fanned, the wings and tail of this shy brown bird reveal a sunburst of red and gold. Look for it strutting on the ground or sunning on a branch when you visit the Philadelphia Zoo.</text>
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<text>The brightly-colored male and duller female prefer the high branches of trees near running water where they search for nectar and fruit to eat.</text>
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<text>Grassy plains, Himalayas to Indochina and Java</text>
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<text>The red-capped babbler checks the stems of grasses and reeds for insects, first climbing upward and then hopping down to start the search all over again.</text>
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<text>B23</text>
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<text>A common game fish with lenghts to 10 inches. Found in lakes and streams throughout the Mississippi Valey, Great Lakes, and eastern and southern USA.</text>
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<text>Africa South of the Sahara and Turkey to Pakistan</text>
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<text>These are very laage bats. Measured from wing tip to wing tip, these bats can be as big as 3 1/2 feet! But big doesn't mean dangerous. These gentle bats eat only fruit and nectar.</text>
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<text>Large ears help the bat to understand the echoes and navigate around the obstacles. The bat's "nose-leaf" helps direct the sounds the bat makes when navigating by echo-locations.</text>
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<text>B13</text>
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<text>English settlers named this North American wildcat for its short, jaunty tail. Now scarce in Pennsylvania, it favors rocky forests for its home.</text>
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<text>The binturong's tail is prehensile. It can hold on to branches like an extra arm. A tail like this is useful to binturongs who climb in trees during the night.</text>
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<text>Largest frog in the USA. Prefers shores of ponds and lakes, but also occurs in small streams. Will eat almost any animal life it can swallow.</text>
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<text>Coloration serves as concealment in treetops as snakes lies waiting for prey of birds, or lizards. Has prehensile tail which aids in climbing. Live-bearer.</text>
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<text>Secretary birds are usually seen on the ground hunting snakes and insects.They kill snakes by stamping on them or dropping them from high in the air.</text>
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<text>Most of the year, Kori bustards are hard to see. Their dull colors blend into the plains. But, in the mating season, when the males inflate their white neck feathers, they are among the most visible birds on the savanna.</text>
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<text>B04</text>
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<text>The sloth bear, with its long, curved claws, can hang upside down from trees like a sloth. As with many other animals, the sloth bear is in danger of extinction because land development is reducing its range.</text>
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<text>B03</text>
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<text>Reedbeds & marshes; S. Brazil to N. Argentina</text>
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<text>The brilliant scarlet-headed blackbird wades along the water's edge, poking its sharp beak into the water-logged rushes looking for insects to eat.</text>
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<text>South America's only bear, the spectacled bear lives mostly in humid forest. Many of these areas are being taken over by humans for farmland. Deprived of its habitat, this bear is threatened with extinction.</text>
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<text>B01</text>
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<text>Solomon and adjacent South Pacific Islands</text>
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<text>Primarily terrestial snake, but will climb in search of food. When disturbed or threatened it assumes a defensive posture similar to vipers. Bears live young.</text>
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<text>B00</text>
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<text>"Aardvark" is an Africaans word which means "earth pig". The animal has powerful claws which are used to rip open hard sun-baked ant and termite mounds in quest of insect meals. The aardvark's long slender tongue is well adapted for this diet. The aardvark is a nocturnal mammal and spends most daylight hours sleeping in underground burrows.</text>
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<text>A07</text>
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<text>The largest member of the Boa family reaching an alleged lenght of 37 1/2 feet. It leads a semiaquatic life in swampy river valleys preying on birds and mammals that frequent the river banks. The Anaconda bears living young like other Boas.</text>
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<text>A05</text>
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<text>North Carolina to Florida and west to Texas</text>
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<text>The alligator was once very common in the above area. Habitat destruction and the leather industry brought this impressive animal to the verge of extinction. Alligators are benenficial animals that occupy an important position in the ecology of their wet-land habitats. In periods of drought the "gator holes" are often the only source of water for all other animals in the area. </text>
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<text>Sable antelopes, among the most striking of all antelopes, have heavily ringed horns. The males, who ar black in color use them to defend their territory, while the brown females use them to protect their young.</text>
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<text>Forest and savannah; S. Mexico to Brazil</text>
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<text>As they wander through the forest agoutis often follow groups of monkeys that jump through the trees. The monkeys knock down fruit as they pass, which the agoutis eat or bury for later use.</text>
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