enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Get a daily dose of cute photos of animals like cats, dogs, and more along with animal related news stories for your daily life from AOL.

  3. Robison of San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robison_of_San_Francisco

    Robison of San Francisco was a family-owned bird and animal importer, pet-supply producer, and retail pet shop that began operating during the California Gold Rush and endured until at least 1989. As the Saturday Evening Post put it in 1953, "from the turn of the century to the [19]20s the Robison store was the world center for the big-animal ...

  4. Transportation of animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_of_animals

    A horse being led into a horse trailer. The transportation of animals is the intentional movement of non-human animals by transport.Common categories of animals which are transported include livestock destined for sale or slaughter; zoological specimens; laboratory animals; race horses; pets; and wild animals being rescued or relocated.

  5. Laboratory animal sources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_animal_sources

    Animals from "random sources" come from auctions, pounds, newspaper ads (including "free-to-home" ads), and some may be stolen pets or illegally trapped strays. [3] As of February 2013, there were only seven active Class B dealers remaining in the United States. However, these sources round up "thousands" of cats and dogs each year for sale. [5]

  6. The rare giraffe born without spots now has a name - AOL

    www.aol.com/rare-giraffe-born-without-spots...

    A rare baby giraffe has no spots, but now she has a name.

  7. Tennessee zoo names the world’s first spotless giraffe - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/zoo-claims-world-only-spotless...

    The giraffe was born on 31 July. The zoo that welcomed a rare spotless giraffe has now been named after weeks of collecting suggestions and votes.. On 31 July, at Brights Zoo in Limestone ...

  8. Giraffe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giraffe

    The giraffe's head and neck are held up by large muscles and a nuchal ligament, which are anchored by long thoracic vertebrae spines, giving them a hump. [17] [63] [36] Adult male reticulated giraffe feeding high on an acacia, in Kenya. The giraffe's neck vertebrae have ball and socket joints.

  9. Animal breeding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_breeding

    Breeding stock is a group of animals used for the purpose of planned breeding. When individuals are looking to breed animals, they look for certain valuable traits in purebred animals, or may intend to use some type of crossbreeding to produce a new type of stock with different, and presumably superior abilities in a given area of endeavor.