All About Poop
- Question: Why do guinea pigs eat some of their feces?
- Answer: Guinea pigs excrete cecal pellets, which they re-ingest in order to obtain vitamins B and K. They also excrete dry feces that are not re-ingested.
- Question: The young of some species of which animal produce feces contained inside a sac of mucus, allowing the parents to easily remove the feces from the nest?
- Answer: Some nestling birds produce fecal sacs that are carried away by the parent or ejected from the nest by the baby itself. Sometimes the sacs don’t go very far and the outside of the nest may become encrusted with them.
- Question: Why is guano mined?
- Answer: Guano contains lots of nitrogen and phosphorus, making it an excellent plant fertilizer.
- Question: Which of these animals does not produce guano?
- Answer: Guano is produced by birds, particularly seabirds, and bats.
- Question: What is caterpillar waste called?
- Answer: The feces of caterpillars and sometimes the feces of other insects are called frass.
- Question: Why is whale excrement important to oceanic ecosystems?
- Answer: Many whale species feed in the depths, where nutrients are concentrated. When they return to the surface and defecate, they provide nutrients to other, smaller organisms.
- Question: Which animal uses a cloud of excrement to distract predators, much as a squid uses ink?
- Answer: The pygmy sperm whale and its cousin the dwarf sperm whale both release feces into the water when alarmed.
- Question: What are fossilized feces called?
- Answer: The coprolites of extinct species have shed light on their habits.
- Question: The word turd derives from which language’s word for excrement?
- Answer: Turd was a Middle English word for excrement, derived from Old English.
- Question: Why do baby elephants eat their mothers’ droppings?
- Answer: A baby elephant, it is thought, inoculates its digestive tract with its mother’s gut flora by eating her feces.
- Question: Which group of arthropods does not have members that are camouflaged by their resemblance to bird droppings?
- Answer: Some species of beetles and spiders look like bird droppings. The caterpillars of some moths do too. Some even retain that appearance into adulthood.
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© laurine45/stock.adobe.com