The thylacine reading answers
the thylacine reading answer |
The extinct thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger, was a marsupial that bore a superficial resemblance to a dog. Its most distinguishing feature was the 13-19 dark brown stripes over its back, beginning at the rear of the body and extending onto the tail. The thylacine’s average nose- to-tail length for adult males was 162.6 cm, compared to 153.7 cm for females.
The thylacine appeared to occupy most types of terrain except dense rainforest, with open eucalyptus forest thought to be its prime habitat. In terms of feeding, it was exclusively carnivorous, and its stomach was muscular with an ability to distend so that it could eat large amounts of food at one time, probably an adaptation to compensate for long periods when hunting was unsuccessful and food scarce. The thylacine was not a fast runner and probably caught its prey by exhausting it during a long pursuit. During long-distance chases, thylacines were likely to have relied more on scent than any other sense. They emerged to hunt during the evening, night and early morning and tended to retreat to the hills and forest for shelter during the day. Despite the common name ‘tiger’, the thylacine had a shy, nervous temperament. Although mainly nocturnal, it was sighted moving during the day and some individuals were even recorded basking in the sun.
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1. Carnivorous
2. Scent
3. Pouch
4. Fossil
5. Habitat
6. True
7. False
8. Not given
9. False
10. Not given
11. False
12. True
13. Not given
14. F
15. G
16. A
17. H
18. B
19. E
20. C
21. B or C
22. B or C
23. Solid
24. (Sumatran) orangutan
25. Carbon stocks
26. Biodiversity
27. D
28. B
29. C
30. D
31. C
32. No
33. Yes
34. Not given
35. No
36. H
37. D
38. I
39. B
40. F
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