This cow is called a Texas longhorn.
Photo by Carol M. Highsmith (via Wikimedia Commons) is in the Public Domain.
This bug is called a longhorn beetle.
By Hectonichus - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
This is a peacock butterfly.
This is a peacock butterfly too.
If it wants to hide, it shuts its wings. Then you just see its dull side. It looks like a dead leaf.
Can you spot the seahorse?
It has wrapped its tail around sea coral.
This sort of a bird is an oxpecker. It is a good helper.
By Charles J. Sharp (own work) from Sharp Photography. Licensed via Wikimedia Commons under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Oxpeckers can help a buffalo. Bugs bite buffalo.
The oxpecker pick bugs off buffalo. The birds eat the bugs.
This is a pelican. It has huge wings.
A pelican can catch a fish with its huge bill.
This fish is called a lipstick tang.
This hairy dog is called a komondor.
By Pets Adviser from Brooklyn, USA - Komondor - GCH Quintessential Chauncey 24, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Photo has been cropped.
This is a jawfish.
The jawfish dad keeps mum's eggs in his mouth for up to 10 days. Then the baby fish hatch.
A jawfish can dig with its mouth. It likes to dig a tunnel in the sand under the sea for its home. It scoops up sand in its mouth and spits it out.
This is a numbat.
Image by Seashalia Gibb from Pixabay
This is a chipmunk.
Image by denkendewolke on Pixabay
A chipmunk can store food in its cheeks.
By Cephas - Own work via Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0
This dog is called an Old English Sheepdog.
This sort of dog helps farmers round up their sheep.
This is a harvest mouse.
Photo from Pixabay is in the public domain.
A male moose has big antlers.
Public domain photo via Pixabay.
This is a viscacha.
By Octavio espinosa campodonico - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons
It has long whiskers.
This viscacha has a long tail.
Northern viscacha photo by Alex Lee from Miami, Fl, USA - Chinchilla Uploaded by Snowmanradio CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
This bright bird is a quetzal.
By Francesco Veronesi from Italy - Resplendent Quetzal male - Cloud Forest in Costa Rica_S4E9553, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Its tail feathers are longer than its body!
This bright bird is a hornbill.
It is an omnivore as it eats fruit and insects.
This bird is one kind of hummingbird.
Photo from Pixabay is in the public domain.
It sucks up nectar from flowers. Nectar is a sweet liquid.
This is an emperor tamarin.
This monkey has long white whiskers.
A bat is a mammal. Most bats are nocturnal.
This image has been cropped from original photo. Original photo credit: iStock.com/Paul Colley.
Nocturnal animals come out at night and sleep in the day.
This is a pangolin. A pangolin is a mammal.
Photo by A. J. T. Johnsingh (WWF-India and NCF) has been cropped. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons.
A pangolin is a special mammal as it has scales.
A pangolin can roll up into a ball.
A pangolin baby is called a pup.
This is an armadillo.
Public domain photo via Pixabay.
The body of an armadillo is covered with bony plates.
This is an oakleaf butterfly.
Photo is by Peellden (own work) and licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5 via Wikimedia Commons.
This caterpillar has marks on its skin that look like eyes.
The caterpillar will turn into an elephant hawk moth.
By Charles J. Sharp - Own work, from Sharp Photography, (sharpphotography.co.uk). CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
This is a saddleback caterpillar.
By Gerald J. Lenhard, Louiana State Univ / © Bugwood.org. Licensed under CC BY 3.0 US via Wikimedia Commons.
It looks this way to try to scare away predators.
It turns into a dull moth.
By Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren - # 4700 – Acharia stimulea – Saddleback Caterpillar Moth, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
A caterpillar can shed its old skin.
This is a cowfish.
This is a toadfish.
This is a porcupine.
A porcupine can eat sweetcorn.
This is a kookaburra. It sounds like it can laugh.