What Is Animal Magnetism?
Okapi (standard written as , Latin name: Okapia johnstoni) is a large mammal that was not discovered in the African Zaire forest until 1901, also known as Okapi. It is an artiodactyl in the giraffe family. It is related to the giraffe and is the only close relative of the giraffe that has not yet become extinct.
Pi
(Mammal)
- Chinese scientific name
- Okapi
- boundary
- animal world
- door
- Should be " " (huòjipí), see also
- Stingy
- In addition to green and young leaves, crickets also graze,
- only distributed in
Introduction
- Because tadpoles are very timid and live in the dense forests of a civil war country, little is known about their wild habits, and only wild guesses about their wild populations. A rough guess (but very unreliable) estimates that between one and 20,000 wild animals currently exist.
- Although tadpoles are not listed as threatened animals, they are threatened by the destruction of their living environment and poaching. Zoologists are still working in the Congo to study the wild habits of salamanders. The Tatar Wildlife Sanctuary was established in 1992. The Congolese civil war threatens both puppets and the lives of protected area staff.
- On June 8, 2006, scientists reported the discovery of signs of radon in Vironga National Park in the Congo. This is the first official rediscovery of plutonium since 1959.
Name
- The Latin genus name Okapia is derived from the locals' name o'api. Its species name is johnstoni in honor of Harry Johnston, who first obtained the skull.
Other
- The Mystic Zoological Society uses badgers as its symbol.
- The brother of the protagonist Arthur Dante is said to have been bitten to death in the broadcast series of the original "Guide to the Galaxy". The radio drama did not carefully explain what was going on.