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Classical Chinese essays on protecting rare animals

1. Public welfare phrases for protecting rare animals

1. Giant panda’s inner words: I leave the beauty to you who care about me, and you leave the environment to the earth where we live.

2. I love my family and I love giant pandas.

3. Pay attention to the environment, you and I just need to do a little bit!

4. Green shade, smile, responsibility.

5. To giant pandas: We own them, we care about them, and we will cherish them even more.

6. It is everyone’s responsibility to protect nature!

7. "Water, life!", "Humanity has only one earth!"

8. Cherish food to improve health

9. This lush greenery has Thank you for your love. Please be gentle

10. In order to improve your literacy, please speak Mandarin 2. Slogans to protect rare animals

·Care for wild animals and protect our beautiful home!

·Protect wild animals and achieve harmony between man and nature!

·Protect birds, protect wild animals, and maintain ecological balance.

·Loving and protecting birds is a human virtue.

·Protect wild animals and maintain ecological security!

·Wild animals are humans’ friends!

·We are on the same earth, enjoying nature!

·Protecting wild animals means protecting humans themselves!

·Under the blue sky, humans and birds are at home together.

·Birds are the natural enemies of pests. Birds are friends of humans.

·Pay attention to migratory birds and protect the environment.

·Protecting birds and wildlife is everyone’s responsibility.

·Love animals and cherish life

·Maintain ecological balance and protect animals

·Protecting wild animals means caring for humans themselves

·One sky, one home

·Protect animals and be in harmony with nature

·Countless facts have proven that humans and animals live and die together

·Protect wildlife Animals, do not hunt birds, catch snakes, catch frogs

·Protect wild animals, human and nature coexist

·Raise environmental awareness, care for flowers, trees, and protect wild animals, Maintain public facilities and promote the coordinated development of people, people and society, and people and nature

·It is glorious to care for animals, and it is shameful to abuse animals

·While looking at the lambs The innocent look in his eyes while chewing on his mother's body. What's the difference between you and the devil? 3. The rare and rare animal - the echidna Original text

At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, a hedgehog-like animal was chosen as the mascot and has been swaggering around the world. Many people don't know its name, only its image is engraved on the Australian five-cent coin. This little thing is called an echidna, and its footprints are found only in Australia.

The shape of the echidna is similar to that of a hedgehog, 300-450 mm long and less than 70 mm wide, with the male being slightly larger. Both males and females are covered with thick, sharp thorns. The tips of the tawny spines are dark brown. This color makes it inconspicuous when running in the sandy shrubs. The camouflage color is very successful. Not only its back but also the edges of its body are covered with thorns. This is of course a tool or "shield" for its self-protection. Once it encounters an enemy, such as an eagle, a snake, or a lizard, it can curl up into a ball, like a hedgehog, with the spines all over its body pointing outwards, making it impossible for enemies to attack it.

The biggest difference between echidnas and hedgehogs is that echidnas have sharp claws and are good at digging. The long claws on its hind legs can also be used to clean and tidy up its own skin, a skill far beyond that of Asian hedgehogs.

Like a hedgehog, it curls up its body into a ball, and then waits for the enemy to walk away impatiently. Although the echidna also has this "passive" ability and uses it, the echidna's The "unique skill" is to dig holes to escape. The echidna's claws are very powerful, like human hands and a bit like chicken claws. They can dig soil quickly and deeply. They can dig about 1.5 meters in one breath. Not to mention that its speed is not as fast as that of a hedgehog or a hare, and even modern tools and even machines may not be able to catch up with it. China’s pangolins are no match for it either.

When you find a yellow echidna crawling slowly in the bushes, you call to your companions and walk towards it. But in just a few seconds, before your eyes, the echidna disappeared! Even a piece of grass or even a piece of sand can disappear before your eyes in an instant, leaving only a hole filled with floating soil on the surface.

Of course, digging burrows is not the echidna's main job. Its food sources are ants, earthworms, etc. found in Australian grasslands, hills, deserts, and mountains, including termites, which Australians hate to the core. Many houses in Australia are destroyed by termites every year, and it is natural that farmers like cute little echidnas.

The echidna has a long, tubular mouth. The nostrils are opened at the tip of the long mouth. The tongue is also an important weapon of the echidna. It can extend more than a foot outside the mouth. The tip of the tongue secretes a A very dense mucus used to feed anteaters. It is estimated that it can eat tens of thousands of ants and termites in a day.

Echidnas are generally active during the day and spend 18 hours a day looking for food, using their noses to detect ants, earthworms and other invertebrates. Its mouth and nose can detect and feel very subtle bioelectronic signals and quickly capture food. At night it sleeps on the ground in the bush, in hollow logs, in the cracks of stones, and even in the burrows of hares and wombats, because these animals cannot touch it. Of course, it doesn't compete for other people's food. It lies dormant in winter, and can even stay dormant for up to 28 weeks in high mountain areas. During this period, its movements and reactions were very slow. In fact, winter in Australia is not cold, and there is no ice or snow. The temperature in some areas in the northern and central areas is still 15 degrees Celsius above zero. Echidnas that come out of their burrows to look for food in the first few days of spring move more slowly and come out more often. The echidna moves slowly, like a rolling ball, but strangely, it can swim and float on the water like a ball of thorns, which looks very cute.

August to October is the season when echidnas attack large ant nests. There are many fat, winged queens in the ant nest. These queens have prepared sufficient fat nutrients and are ready to fly out of the nest and build a new home. At this time, the echidna violently attacks the ant nest with its proboscis, stretches out its mucus-filled tongue, sticks to the food, and rolls it into its mouth. While the queen ants are stuck, a lot of dirty dirt will also be brought in, but that doesn't matter. Echidnas eat a lot of dirt every day. The dirt not only helps digestion, but also contains rare elements. The echidna has a rough stomach skin that is very different from other mammals. After eating such a sumptuous dinner, the little echidna grew very quickly and became much larger in spring and summer.

Echidnas have a lifespan of almost 50 years, and their mating season is from June to September every year. The female echidna develops a temporary abdominal pouch during the breeding season and lays an egg two weeks after mating. The egg is about 15 mm long and has a leathery surface, not as smooth and hard as an egg. The eggs are laid and hatch in a pocket on the mother's abdomen. Almost ten days later, the little echidna hatched out of its shell. At this time, protruding pores will appear in the female echidna's pocket, and milk will leak out of the pores for the young to suck. An echidna's breast milk is thicker and fatter than cow's milk, and becomes thicker as the young grow older. The baby echidna stays in the pocket for 6-9 weeks, and spines begin to grow on its back. When the thorns grow, they will sting the mother, so the time comes for the pouch to be released. But at this time, the little echidna still couldn't open its eyes and was blind. After it leaves the pocket, it goes to the nursing nest dug by its mother when she was pregnant, and waits for her mother to feed it every day. At this time, it still returns to the pocket to suck milk every 7 days or so. It was officially weaned after 5 months. It used its claws to dig in the soil to find food, and used its tongue and mucus to subdue prey. 4. Look at the pictures and write an essay on protecting rare animals

There are many rare animals in our country, and the cutest one is the giant panda.

The giant panda is chubby, with a tuft of white hair on its head, a pair of small round ears, and big eyes on its face with black eye circles, as if it is wearing a pair of sunglasses. Except for the elbows, belly and upper back, which are white, the rest of the giant panda is black.

The plant that pandas like to eat the most is arrow bamboo. When the arrow bamboo grows to its most luxuriant, the panda will use all his strength to destroy the arrow bamboo, tear the bamboo skin, put the branches and leaves in his mouth and eat hard. Even if your belly becomes bulging, you won’t hesitate.

Giant pandas are not only vegetarian, they sometimes eat meat! It likes to eat a small animal called Zhuliuzi (bamboo rat). Pandas are nibbling bamboo on the ground, while bamboo rats are nibbling bamboo roots underground. As soon as the giant panda hears the "click! click!" sound of the bamboo rat, it will put down the bamboo in its hand and pull at its nest while listening to the sound. Once it finds the bamboo rat, the panda will beat it to death with the bamboo. Then tear the skin and eat with relish.

Giant pandas were very lively when they were young. They liked to jump around, climb up and down. When it grows up, it sleeps all day long. Even if someone comes to tease it, it will only open its eyes and take a look, and then it will be asleep again.

The panda is so cute, I like it!