What is Subarder Suin?
Suins are members of biological subordinate suin , which includes two living and four extinct families - pigs (19 species), peccarys (4 species), Raoellides (sister group to levels, extinct), entelodons (truly with bone jaws, extinct), extinct), and other old groups)) and other boundaries), and other boundaries), and others themselves), and other omnivors). Suborder Suina is one of the three in the order of artoDactyl, even modern ungulates. Other subordinations are Tylopoda (hipples and camels) and re -evaluation (deer, giraffes, cattle, goats, sheep, antelope, eaves, deer mice, deer Musk and Chevrotains). The closest living relatives of uniform ungulates are cetaceans (dolphins, whales and porpoises). These orders were distributed approximately 60 million years ago, in an early Paleogen. Suins are colloquially known as a pig. There are approximately 2 billion domestic pigs worldwide, which isLarger than the number of cats and dogs together. The home pig is actually a subspecies of wild Kare, from which it was domesticated 5,000 - 7,000 years ago. The natural range of wild Kares covers most of the middle and low latitudes of Eurasia and North Africa. Unlike the pink coloring of the home pig, the boars are brown and can display stripes.
Suborder members Suina are considered the most archaic and primitive cannabis. They can be the oldest subordinate cannabis. This is indicated by anatomical features, such as the absence of maxillary teeth, which prevents chewing. Instead, Suins strengthens food in large pieces. They are known to be truly all -powerful, like rodents and Wina consumes garbage or food remnants, which gave them a reputation as gluttony and dirt. Despite their negative properties, it should be noted that pigs are among the most intelligentMore animals that people lead on factory farms. In recent years, proposals have appeared on ballots around the world to improve pig living conditions.
The least known member of Suina is Peccars, small pigs that live in southwestern North America and throughout Central and South America. Peccarsys differ from pigs in that they come in South America when it was an island continent rather than Africa. Peccarys and pigs can be separated by their short and straight (rather than curved) tusks. Unlike pigs, Peccarsys are never known to have been domesticated, even if they are hunted for meat.