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  2. List of animals by number of legs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animals_by_number...

    [2] [3] [4] Animals have been selected so that each number from 0 to 55 leg pairs has one example listed. Each of these examples is listed by a number closely associated with the relevant taxon, either because that number is the one most commonly observed in that taxon or because it is one of only a few numbers recorded for the taxon.

  3. Tripedalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripedalism

    It has been said that parrots (birds of the order Psittaciformes) display tripedalism during climbing gaits, [3] which was tested and proven in a 2022 paper on the subject, making parrots the only creatures to truly use tripedal forms of locomotion. [1] Tripedal gaits were also observed by K. Hunt [4] in primates. This is usually observed when ...

  4. List of artiodactyls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_artiodactyls

    The order Artiodactyla consists of 349 extant species belonging to 132 genera. This does not include hybrid species or extinct prehistoric species. Modern molecular studies indicate that the 132 genera can be grouped into 23 families; these families are grouped into named suborders and many are further grouped into named clades, and some of these families are subdivided into named subfamilies.

  5. Laurasiatheria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurasiatheria

    Laurasiatheria (/ l ɔː r ˌ eɪ ʒ ə ˈ θ ɪər i ə,-θ ɛr i ə /; "Laurasian beasts") is a superorder of placental mammals that groups together true insectivores (eulipotyphlans), bats (chiropterans), carnivorans, pangolins (), even-toed ungulates (artiodactyls), odd-toed ungulates (perissodactyls), and all their extinct relatives.

  6. Limbless vertebrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limbless_vertebrate

    Many vertebrates are limbless, limb-reduced, or apodous, with a body plan consisting of a head and vertebral column, but no adjoining limbs such as legs or fins. Jawless fish are limbless but may have preceded the evolution of vertebrate limbs, whereas numerous reptile and amphibian lineages – and some eels and eel-like fish – independently lost their limbs.

  7. Sheltopusik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheltopusik

    The full body of a sheltopusik. The sheltopusik can reach a length of 135 cm (4.43 ft). It is tan colored, paler on the ventral surface and the head, with a ring-like/segmented appearance that makes it look like a large earthworm with a distinctive fold of skin down each side called a lateral groove.

  8. Confronted animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confronted_animals

    Confronted animals, or confronted-animal as an adjective, where two animals face each other in a symmetrical pose, is an ancient bilateral motif in art and artifacts studied in archaeology and art history. The "anti-confronted animals" is the opposing motif, with the animals back to back.

  9. Evolution of cetaceans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_cetaceans

    [4] [5] Research conducted in the late 1970s in Pakistan revealed several stages in the transition of cetaceans from land to sea. The two modern parvorders of cetaceans – Mysticeti (baleen whales) and Odontoceti (toothed whales) – are thought to have separated from each other around 28–33 mya in a second cetacean radiation , the first ...