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ABOUT US

Hello Friends,
My name is ISWAR CHANDRA NAIK.A truely devotes of Flora and Fauna.I am doing my pg  in Andhra university,from the School of Animal Science.Being from the zoology background i am facinating about  both living and non living things of this universe. I reflects all my love affections towars  Animal to a soft copy of Article, blog or pages.Here is my first blog named as ᴡᴡᴡ.ɪsᴡᴀʀᴄʜᴀɴᴅʀᴀɴᴀɪᴋ.ʙʟᴏɢsᴘᴏᴛ.ᴄᴏᴍ. It is under the controle of School of Animal Sciene. Department of zoology.

                                 The key role about this blog is aware the people about their health,environment and livelyhood by scientific approaches.



🇦​🇧​🇴​🇺​🇹​ 🇺​🇸​
Name- ISWAR CHANDRA NAIK
City- BHAWANIPATNA
pin-766017
Contact:-
iswarchandranaik4@gmail.com

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"CLOACAL KISS"

This month,  Smithsonian  published a fascinating article about the history of chickens and how they basically took over the world.  Obviously, chickens couldn't have established their empire without reproduction, so I thought I'd take a behind-the-scenes look at how chickens became so prominent. As it turns out, chicken procreation is a lot weirder than I thought. Here are just a few of the finer points. 1) Asymmetrical gonads Here's how gonads are usually arranged: males have two testes, and females have two ovaries. Both genders usually have one gonad on the right side of their body and one on the left. It's pretty simple. In contrast, hens only have one functional ovary. In fact, most birds have this lopsided  anatomy  probably because it's more practical for flight. Birds need to be light and compact in order to fly, so they only develop one of their gonads. For most male birds, the right testes is also smaller than the left. This tren...

The 10 greatest discoveries of zoology

A panel of judges at BBC Wildlife Magazine has named the greatest zoological discoveries of all time. Do you agree with their choices? Ian Sample , science correspondent   @iansample Fri 19 Nov 2010  09.23 GMT First published on Fri 19 Nov 2010 Mid-way through the 4th century BC   the Greek philosopher Aristotle   turned his great mind to the wildlife around him and documented the behaviour and characteristics of hundreds of species in nine books that together became   The History of Animals . The work is impressive for its sheer scope and ambition. In 130,000 words, the author divides and categorises animal life every which way: by basic physiology and anatomy; by habitat and mode of movement; by how and what these creatures ate. Humans are not excluded from examination, but are woven throughout the text, giving Aristotle the opportunity to compare and contrast the essence of other species with that of our own. There are some...

Top 50 Intresting Facts about Animals.

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