This group is created on December 17, 2008..so it is still new..
The owner of this group is neko-cat. She is a girl who loves animals so much..
So, basically, we're a group of friends who love to talk about animals..
Come lets talk and share everything about animals here!!
So, JOIN US TODAY and become a part of something wonderful.
If you have any questions or compliments. Don't hesitate to ask/tell us :D
** Spoiler Alert!!! click to hide or show**
!!!!!!!!!REPORT CRUELTY TO ANIMALS!!!!!!!!!
please support the endangered animals.. they need our help!
there are alot of animal species out there that need protection..
Pudu
The Pudu is considered to be the world's smallest deer and is found in Argentina and Chile in South America.
Due to overhunting and habitat loss to agriculture and livestock, the Southern Pudu has been classified as endangered.
Amur Leopard
With less than 40 individuals left in the wild, Amur leopards are now critically endangered. Poaching for their skins continues to be a threat as well as diminished food supply due to unregulated hunting.
Orangutan
Habitat destruction due to commercial logging and forest clearance for agriculture is the greatest threat to the orangutan. This great ape is also threatened by hunting from farmers in retaliation for crop destruction.
The greatest threat to the orangutan is the disappearance of their lowland forest habitats due to logging and forest clearance for agriculture.
Tiger
Habitat loss and fragmentation due to forest clear-cutting combined with poaching for skins and body parts have greatly reduced tiger populations in the wild. The tiger is one of the most threatened species on Earth. It is estimated that as few as 5,000 � 7,000 tigers remain in the wild.
Snow Leopard
Due to a dramatic decline over the last decade, snow leopard populations are now almost as diminished as those of the tiger.
Diminished food supply due to unregulated hunting, the illegal trade of coveted snow leopard pelts and human encroachment into their habitat are all factors leading to their decline.
Sea Turtle
About 250,000 loggerhead and leatherback sea turtles are accidentally caught and killed each year in fishing gear.
Bycatch is an ongoing, worldwide issue; hundreds of thousands of marine turtles are caught annually in shrimp trawls, on long-line hooks and in illegal fishing nets. The illegal trade in turtle meat, shells and eggs is an ongoing threat to the survival of sea turtles.
Panda Bear
Giant pandas are one of the worlds most threatened species as few as 1,600 remain in the wild and face continual threats to their survival.
Habitat loss and fragmentation due to clear-cutting of forests for agriculture, timber and fuel wood have destroyed over 50% of the bamboo forests that make up the giant panda's home.
Orca Whale
Despite a global freeze on commercial whaling since 1986, seven of the world�s 13 great whales, as well as orcas, remain endangered today.
Asian Elephant
Fewer than 33,000 Asian elephants still roam wild, and these populations are living in mostly small and isolated, fragmented landscapes.
Fragmented and diminished habitat due to logging and the conversion of forest to farmland for growing crops has isolated Asian elephant populations. The poaching of Asian elephants for their hides, meat and tusks remains a serious problem in many countries.
Arctic Fox
Melting sea ice, due to climate change, means Arctic foxes have a shorter hunting season and limited access to their food supply, leading to malnutrition and starvation.
Polar Bear
Fewer than 25,000 polar bears remain in the wild and some populations, such as Canada's western Hudson Bay polar bears, are facing extinction in this century.
Unfortunately today, polar bears are threatened by climate change, melting sea ice, starvation and toxic pollution.
IF YOU WANT TO BE A MOD PLEASE TELL ME I WILL BE HAPPY TO MAKE YOU ONE
African elephants are the largest of Earth's land mammals. Their enormous ears help them to keep cool in the hot African climate.
Fiercely protective of his pride, or family unit, male lions patrol a vast territory normally covering about 100 square miles (260 square kilometers).
Wings spread, this Adélie penguin waddles through an Antarctic colony. Its black tail gives it a tuxedo-like appearance.
Gentle giants, whale sharks filter-feed, swimming with their wide mouths open, collecting plankton and small fish.
A white rhinoceros grazing with her baby
Found throughout the world, the resourceful red fox is known for its cleverness and adaptability.
One hump or two? The dromedary, or Arabian, camel distinguishes itself from its Bactrian relatives by its single hump.
The endangered two-humped Bactrian camel inhabits the deserts of Central and East Asia.
A spectacled bear, native to South America
Their intelligence, friendly disposition, and "smiling" faces make dolphins popular in large aquariums and with divers.
A raccoon eating turtle eggs
Spider monkeys, like this young one seemingly caught by surprise in Bolivia's Madidi National Park, are dependent on their mothers for about ten weeks after birth.
Aardvark sniffing the ground
A white-tailed deer and fawn
The beluga, or white whale, is one of the smallest species of whale. Their distinctive color and prominent foreheads make them easily identifiable.
A baby wallaby
About twice the size of the average house cat, the dappled fur of the ocelot serves as camouflage in the jungles of South and Central America.
Olive ridleys get their name from the coloring of their heart-shaped shell, which starts out grey but be comes olive green once the turtles are adults. They have one to two visible claws on each of their paddle-like flippers.
A red uakari monkey in the rain forest
Sharp eyesight and raw speed make the cheetah a formidable hunter.
A leopard rests in a treetop perch.
Somewhere between the small
The most common owl in North and South America, the great horned owl has adapted to a wide variety of habitats and climates.
cute

so cute
more than cute
scary
snow leopard

