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Ferret

The ferret is a domestic animal thought to be native to Europe. The ferret is thought to be a subspecies of polecat and the ferret has the same long shaped body as a polecat and a weasel.
The ferret is thought to have been domesticated around 2,500 years ago, which is roughly the same time that a number of animals such as the donkey and goat were put to domestic use. The ferret is used to help farmers hunt out rabbits and the ferret does this by crawling into the rabbit burrows, with the ferret using its incredibly shaped flexible body to its advantage as a ferret is often small than many rabbits. The rabbit is scared out of the burrow by the invading ferret and uses one of the many bu

Dhole

The dhole (also known as the Asiatic Wild Dog, Indian Wild Dog and the Red Dog) is an endangered wild dog native to the jungles of Asia. Although the dhole is very similar in appearance to the African Wild dog and the Bush dog, the dhole is the only member of it's genus.
Historically, the dhole was found though East and Southern Asia, from the Russian far east right down to Sumatra, and although today the range of the dhole has been significantly reduced, the dhole inhabits a wide variety of habitats including thick, deciduous woodlands to jungles and tropical rainforests.
There are three different species of dhole that are very similar in characteristics and only really differ i

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Emperor Penguin

Glass Lizard

Asian Palm Civet

Bull Shark

Kingfisher

Magpie

Manatee

Burrowing Frog

Guanacos

Bandicoot

Mayfly

White-Lipped Peccaries

Warthog

African Bush Elephant

Ladybird

Yorkshire Terrier

Woolly Mammoth

Ferret

Weasel

Eagle

Cuttlefish

African Elephants

Vulture

Wombat

Uguisu

Beetle

Gibbons

Coastal Dolphins

Kakapo

Afghan Hound

Horn Shark

Spectacled bear

Snow Leopards

Black Russian Terrier

Sharks

Abyssinian

The Abyssinian Cat is thought to be one of the oldest breeds of domestic Cat in the world, as the first domestication of the Abyssinian Cat occurred in Ancient Egyptian times. It is thought that Abyssinian Cats were bought and sold on the banks of the River Nile by traders, where the African Wild Cats (the ancestors of all domestic Cats) lived in their native habitats. Abyssinian Cats are most easily identified by their "ticked" fur which gives their coat a mottled appearance.