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  2. Rodent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodent

    They use their sharp incisors to gnaw food, excavate burrows, and defend themselves. Most eat seeds or other plant material, but some have more varied diets. They tend to be social animals and many species live in societies with complex ways of communicating with each other. Mating among rodents can vary from monogamy, to polygyny, to promiscuity.

  3. List of rodents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rodents

    Rodents are animals that gnaw with two continuously growing incisors. Forty percent of mammal species are rodents, and they inhabit every continent except Antarctica. This list contains circa 2,700 species in 518 genera in the order Rodentia. [1]

  4. List of feeding behaviours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_feeding_behaviours

    Oligophagy is a term for intermediate degrees of selectivity, referring to animals that eat a relatively small range of foods, either because of preference or necessity. [2] Another classification refers to the specific food animals specialize in eating, such as: Carnivore: the eating of animals Araneophagy: eating spiders; Avivore: eating birds

  5. Dietary biology of the brown bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dietary_biology_of_the...

    Brown bears will also commonly consume animal matter, which in summer and autumn may regularly be in the form of insects, larvae such as grubs and including beehives.Most insects eaten are of the highly social variety found in colonial nests, which provide a likely greater quantity of food, although they will also tear apart rotten logs on the forest floor, turn over rocks or simply dig in ...

  6. List of carnivorans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_carnivorans

    Various carnivorans, with feliforms to the left, and caniforms to the right. Carnivora is an order of placental mammals that have specialized in primarily eating flesh. Members of this order are called carnivorans, or colloquially carnivores, though the term more properly refers to any meat-eating organisms, and some carnivoran species are omnivores or herbivores.

  7. Chewing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewing

    Carnivores generally chew very little or swallow their food whole or in chunks. [11] This act of gulping food (or medicine pills) without chewing has inspired the English idiom "wolfing it down". [12] Other animals such as cows chew their food for long periods to allow for proper digestion in a process known as rumination.

  8. Carnivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnivore

    Lions are obligate carnivores consuming only animal flesh for their nutritional requirements.. A carnivore / ˈ k ɑːr n ɪ v ɔːr /, or meat-eater (Latin, caro, genitive carnis, meaning meat or "flesh" and vorare meaning "to devour"), is an animal or plant whose nutrition and energy requirements are met by consumption of animal tissues (mainly muscle, fat and other soft tissues) as food ...

  9. Regurgitation (digestion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regurgitation_(digestion)

    Ruminants regurgitate their food as a normal part of digestion. During their idle time, they chew the regurgitated food and swallow it again, which increases digestibility by reducing particle size. [citation needed] Honey is produced by a process of regurgitation by honey bees, which is stored in the beehive as a primary food source.