D is for Deer
21.09.2006 - The mule deer in Yellowstone have big ears like mules.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5206
21.09.2006 - The mule deer in Yellowstone have big ears like mules.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5206
21.09.2006 - Male elk are called bulls and they can have huge antlers like the one in the picture. Female elk are called cows and have no antlers.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5207
21.09.2006 - All cats are felines and the biggest feline in Yellowstone is the Mountain Lion. The Mountain Lion has been called many things over the years. Some people called them cougars while others called them catamounts or panthers.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5208
21.09.2006 - When you hike in Yellowstone it is smart to wear a bell or to sing while you walk. That way if there is a grizzly bear around the bend he will know you are coming and won't be startled.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5209
21.09.2006 - One of the most disliked insects in the park is the mosquito. I let this mosquito bite my hand so you could see what they look like when they sit down to dinner.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5211
21.09.2006 - Jackrabbits are hard to photograph because they run so fast.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5212
21.09.2006 - Killdeer like to eat bugs at the edges of the hot springs in Yellowstone.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5213
21.09.2006 - Longtail Weasels have long slender bodies. They are related to minks and otters.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5214
21.09.2006 - Moose like to spend their summers near rivers and streams where the plants are lush and green and tasty.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5215
21.09.2006 - Flying squirrels use the skin flaps between their legs to glide from tree to tree.
http://www.medienwerkstatt-online.de/lws_wissen/vorlagen/showcard.php?id=5216
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