When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Marabou stork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marabou_stork

    Marabous eating human garbage have been seen to devour virtually anything that they can swallow, including shoes and pieces of metal. Marabous conditioned to eating from human sources have been known to lash out when refused food. [10]

  3. Scavenger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scavenger

    Obligate scavenging (subsisting entirely or mainly on dead animals) is rare among vertebrates, due to the difficulty of finding enough carrion without expending too much energy. Well-known invertebrate scavengers of animal material include burying beetles and blowflies, which are obligate scavengers, and yellowjackets. Fly larvae are also ...

  4. Garbage Goat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_Goat

    The Garbage Goat is a metal sculpture in Spokane, Washington's Riverfront Park. It was created by Paula Mary Turnbull, a local artist known as the "welding nun", for Expo '74, the city's 1974 world's fair. The sculpture was designed with an internal vacuum mechanism allowing the goat to "eat" trash held close to its mouth.

  5. Boaters get glimpse of ‘rare’ creature — known for eating ...

    www.aol.com/boaters-glimpse-rare-creature-known...

    The deep-diving species can grow up to 52 feet, experts say.

  6. Black vulture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_vulture

    The black vulture is a scavenger and feeds on carrion, but will also eat eggs, small reptiles, or small newborn animals (livestock such as cattle, or deer, rodents, rabbits, etc.), albeit very rarely. They will also opportunistically prey on extremely weakened, sick, elderly, or otherwise vulnerable animals.

  7. Tarrare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarrare

    Despite his unusual diet, Tarrare was slim and of average height. [9] At the age of 17, he weighed only about 100 pounds (45 kg; 7 st 2 lb). [1] [5] He was described as having unusually soft fair hair and an abnormally wide mouth (roughly four inches between his jaws when his mouth was fully extended), [10] in which his teeth were heavily stained [9] and on which the lips were almost invisible.

  8. Groundhog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundhog

    Groundhogs also occasionally eat small animals, such as grubs, grasshoppers, snails, and even bird eggs and baby birds, but are not as omnivorous as many other Sciuridae. [ 35 ] [ 36 ] An adult groundhog can eat more than 1 lb (0.45 kg) of vegetation daily. [ 37 ]

  9. Bark-eating creature had a feast on trees in Idaho. Can you ...

    www.aol.com/bark-eating-creature-had-feast...

    A hungry, bark-eating critter had a feast on trees in Idaho forests. The U.S. Forest Service - Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forests shared photos of the bare trees to Facebook on Feb. 20, asking ...