What are the methods of animal self-treatment (by Baidu) Wild cats with mouths eat toxic things and vomit and diarrhea. It will be anxious to find a poisonous veratrum, which tastes bitter and will vomit after eating, and gradually it will be fine. It turns out that Veratrum contains an alkaloid, which has the effect of inducing vomiting.
After the vomit chicken gets wet by the heavy rain, it will swallow the bitter grass-benzoin leaves to prevent colds.
The abdominal muscles of wolves and coyotes can contract automatically. When they suspect that they have eaten poisonous food, they will immediately contract their stomach muscles and spit out the contents of their stomach to prevent poisoning.
Cats and dogs often lick sores or wounds with their tongues because enzymes in saliva have bactericidal effects.
Hot spring bath is a kind of physical therapy, and bears and badgers will also use this method to preserve their health and treat diseases. American grizzly bears have a habit. When they are old, they like to go to a wet spring containing sulfur and bathe in it, just like treating senile arthritis. The female badger often takes the sore badger to the hot spring to take a bath and treat the sore disease until she recovers.
Bison suffers from tinea pedis. It walked a long way to the lake. It "bathed" in the mud for a while, then climbed ashore and dried the mud. Soon after, it went to the lake to "take a bath" until it cured tinea.
Rhino, hippo, etc. I also like this kind of mud, which not only cures diseases, but also prevents diseases. In this way, the worms parasitic in the gap of the panel can't stay.
Many animals can do "reset therapy" for themselves. The stomach was cut open and the internal organs leaked out. They can stuff their internal organs in, and then hide in a quiet corner to "recuperate" and wait for the wound to heal. A frog was injured by a stone and its internal organs were exposed from its mouth. Frogs will stay where they are and slowly swallow their internal organs back. After three days, I basically recovered and was alive and kicking again.
There are many ways to treat wild animals. Do you know what other ways animals treat themselves? Add wounds with your mouth, find herbs by yourself (injured carnivores will eat plants), drink plenty of water, and find other animals born in * * * (fish has this function).
What are the ways for animals in the water to protect themselves and what are the ways for animals to save themselves? 1. When the opossum meets the enemy, it plays dead on its stomach, its feet facing the sky, its eyes staring straight, its mouth half exposed, its teeth twisted, and it looks like a zombie. When the beast sees the body, it will turn and leave.
2. There is a pair of smelly glands near the weasel's * *, which is its unique chemical weapon. When it is hurt by the enemy, it will even fart a few times. When the enemy hesitates a little, it will take the opportunity to escape.
Scorpion is a reptile. Its tail is long and thin. Once caught, it will break its tail to confuse the enemy and then run away.
Squid usually likes to float on the sea. When it is hurt by the enemy, it will use its own unique skill to spray thick ink from the ink sac. Ink turns into smoke in water, as if it were a "smoke bomb", confusing the enemy's harm. Squid can take the opportunity to escape.
When an ostrich meets an enemy, it is foolish to bury its head in sand or grass, thinking that it will be all right if it can't see its pursuers.
6. When the grasshopper is caught, in order to escape, it will break its thigh, leaving only one leg to jump and escape;
7. This crab has a broken line on its leg. If the leg is caught, it will tighten the broken muscles on the leg, abandon the leg and escape, and then grow new legs;
8. The escape technique of sea cucumber is even more peculiar: when the enemy invades, the alert sea cucumber will quickly spray out its internal organs and brains to let the other party have a full meal, while it will escape with the help of recoil. After 50 days of self-repair, the sea cucumber will grow a new pair of internal organs.
How do animals "treat themselves well"? Animals get sick just like people, but they can't go to the hospital. If it is poultry and livestock, they can rely on the help of their owners. But if the owner doesn't find their illness, are they just sitting still? No, they can often "cure" themselves. For example, sick dogs or sick pigs go to the fields to find some grass or other plants to eat, so as to "cure" the disease. We also see injured cats and dogs licking wounds for a long time, which is their way of "treating" injuries, because animal saliva has antibacterial effect. Wild animals are more capable of being kind to themselves. Although the method is simple, it is also varied and unexpected. Wild boars often roll in the mire, covered in mud and dirty. This "mud bath" is actually like applying medicine and dressing, isolating the wound and infected part from the outside world, and then treating the wound by the body's internal resistance. It was observed that some bison with tinea trudged to a lake for a few days, "bathed" in the mud for a while, then came out, dried the mud, and "bathed" again a few weeks later until the tinea was completely eliminated. There are also rhinos who like "mud bath". This kind of "mud bath" can not only "cure" injuries and "cure" diseases, but also prevent diseases, because it makes it impossible for insects and the like that disturb peace to parasitize. Wild elephants can also "treat" themselves. An explorer tracked an injured elephant in the forest. He saw it rubbing the injured part back and forth on the rock from a distance until the injured part was covered with a thick layer of dust and fine sand, as if it were coated with medicine. Some sick elephants will swallow a few kilograms of marl when they can't find grass and wild fruits to treat the disease. People have tested it and found that this kind of mud ash contains minerals such as magnesium oxide, sodium and silicate, which has the effect of treating diseases. Some animals will receive rest therapy after getting sick or injured. It is difficult for them to find a very remote and undisturbed place to "live in seclusion", dormant, trying to conserve energy in their bodies and concentrate their remaining energy on coping with diseases and injuries. Surprisingly, some birds, such as woodcocks and pheasants, can "treat" fractures! An English naturalist once saw such a scene: after a woodcock fell, he picked up some mushy clay from the water and painted it on the knee of one leg. Then, it jumps to the edge of the grass with its other foot, pecks out thin grass stems from the grass and dips them into the pasty soil; Then, it went to the lake and painted mud on the broken foot; Go back and forth between the lake and the grass several times until you "put on the plaster." How can animals have the ability of "self-treatment"? This interesting phenomenon needs further study and explanation by zoologists.
How do animals know each other? Animals have the ability to know each other, to distinguish between relatives and friends, and to distinguish between men and women. They know each other through sight, smell, hearing, touch and even gestures. Light and color are the objects they observe. If two groups of tadpoles dyed with different colors are mixed in water, they will soon get together with tadpoles of the same color. There are more than 1500 species of fireflies, all of which are nocturnal. Because different kinds of fireflies can emit different colors, such as orange, light blue, light yellow and white, even if they emit the same color, their brightness and wavelength are different, but all fireflies of the same kind can know their kinship. In addition, fish in shallow waters have their own unique spots, which make similar fish clear at a glance. On land, it seems that a zebra with a single color has different patterns, even if the details of each stripe of the same zebra are different, so that the zebra can know its mother and spouse accordingly. Wild bears living in the northeast forest will know their relatives and become close as long as they look at each other's hair. These are all through visual recognition. Identifying relatives by voice is also a skill of animals. Cicada, cricket, Jin Lingzi, etc. Flapping wings to attract relatives and spouses. Its sound can travel as far as 1 km, while the howling of frogs, cranes and wolves can travel further. Old seagulls can tell which sounds are children's calls from many similar calls and send food to the children's mouths. Smell is an important means for animals to identify their relatives.
What are the ways animals store food? What are the ways for animals to store food in caves? Store food in caves. For example, hamsters store food in caves. Store food in trees or holes in trees. For example, squirrels collect mushrooms on branches. There is also a woodpecker, which makes a small hole in the trunk, and then embeds acorns into the small hole one by one for storage. Bury food underground for storage. Like a fox; Wolf, wait. There are also animals that store food in their nests. Like bees. Use the body to store. Camels, for example, convert food into fat and store it in their humps.