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About The Cheetah

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Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Cheetahs, Cheetah Pictures, Cheetah Facts - National Geographic
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
The cheetah is the world\'s fastest land mammal. With acceleration that would leave most automobiles in the dust, a cheetah can go from 0 to 60 miles (96 kilometers) an hour in only three seconds. These big cats are quite nimble at high speed and can make quick and sudden turns in pursuit of prey.
Before unleashing their speed, cheetahs use exceptionally keen eyesight to scan their grassland environment for signs of prey—especially antelope and hares. This big cat is a daylight hunter that benefits from stealthy movement and a distinctive spotted coat that allows it to blend easily into high, dry grasses.
When the moment is right a cheetah will sprint after its quarry and attempt to knock it down. Such chases cost the hunter a tremendous amount of energy and are usually over in less than a minute. If successful, the cheetah will often drag its kill to a shady hiding place to protect it from opportunistic animals that sometimes steal a kill before the cheetah can eat. Cheetahs need only drink once every three to four days.
Female cheetahs typically have a litter of three cubs and live with them for one and a half to two years. Young cubs spend their first year learning from their mother and practicing hunting techniques with playful games. Male cheetahs live alone or in small groups, often with their littermates.
Most wild cheetahs are found in eastern and southwestern Africa. Perhaps only 7,000 to 10,000 of these big cats remain, and those are under pressure as the wide-open grasslands they favor are disappearing at the hands of human settlers.
The king of the African savannah is in serious trouble because of massive conversion of the continent’s remaining wilderness to human land-use, according to a detailed study.
Intensely shy and hovering on the edge of extinction, Iranian cheetahs are essentially impossible to see.
Thinking of snow leopards as domesticated—and thus dependent on people for food—may help save the dwindling species, one conservationist claims.
Beating Usain Bolt\'s best, Sarah the "polka-dotted missile" clocked the world\'s fastest recorded time for a 100-meter run.
Gus Mills has a passion for our large feline friends, and he\'s using that to help save them.
Meet some of science\'s most important movers and shakers—from past and present.
Champion divers but clumsy landers, doting parents but hostile neighbors—northern gannets abound in contradictions.
Photographer Sven Začek provides an intimate view of this large raptor.
© 1996-2014 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved.
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meh
I bet that was a beautiful speech...I just forgot how to speak cheetah
posted più di un anno fa.
 
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smile
X3
posted più di un anno fa.