Animals
in sentence
2401 examples of Animals in a sentence
Now, I do an enormous amount of research on empathy, and I don't have time to go into it, but empathy is nowadays a topic that we study in rodents and dogs and elephants and primates, all sorts of
animals.
It was filled with sculptures of predatory
animals.
Unfortunately, our beasts are inefficient animals, and they turn two-thirds of that into feces and heat, so we've lost those two, and we've only kept this one in meat and dairy products.
If we do that to fruit and vegetables, you bet we can do it to
animals
too.
So again, both
animals
and humans do the same thing.
But we wondered if there's a possible link with other
animals.
And the reason that is, is because in a place like this island, a lot of the sand is made of biological material because the reefs provide a place where all these microscopic
animals
or macroscopic
animals
grow, and when they die, their shells and their teeth and their bones break up and they make grains of sand, things like coral and so forth.
What if biologists could only study
animals
that made people go, "Aww."
What if we made aesthetic judgments about animals, and only the ones we thought were cute were the ones that we could study?
I would like to talk to you about a very special group of
animals.
They help absorb anthrax that would otherwise spread and cause huge livestock losses and diseases in other
animals.
Now, another couple of years, and these
animals
will survive on their own.
This is poo, and what I want to do today is share my passion for poo with you, which might be quite difficult, but I think what you might find more fascinating is the way these small
animals
deal with poo.
And it seems appropriate to start at the end, because this is a waste product that comes out of other animals, but it still contains nutrients and there are sufficient nutrients in there for dung beetles basically to make a living, and so dung beetles eat dung, and their larvae are also dung-feeders.
So what we're looking at here are a group of
animals
that use a compass, and they use the sun as a compass to find their way around, and they have some sort of system for measuring that distance, and we know that these species here actually count the steps.
So what have we learned from these
animals
with a brain that's the size of a grain of rice?
Now, when you talk about dangerous animals, most people might think of lions or tigers or sharks.
And when you find this in other animals, it's always the same story.
Well, I'm an experimental dermatologist, so what we did was we thought we'd have to expose our experimental
animals
to sunlight.
These robots are of course not very useful in themselves, but they might teach us something about how we can build better robots, and perhaps how humans, animals, create self-models and learn.
You know,
animals
have sex.
This stuff was supposed to only be feed for
animals
in the United States, and it got into the human food supply, and somebody should've figured out that it would get in the human food supply very easily.
And what we did basically was to train the
animals
to learn how to control these avatars and explore objects that appear in the virtual world.
So when we look at the brains of these animals, on the top panel you see the alignment of 125 cells showing what happens with the brain activity, the electrical storms, of this sample of neurons in the brain when the animal is using a joystick.
Now no sooner — this was in the 1950s — and no sooner did we remove the hunting, drum-beating people to protect the animals, than the land began to deteriorate, as you see in this park that we formed.
What we had failed to understand was that these seasonal humidity environments of the world, the soil and the vegetation developed with very large numbers of grazing animals, and that these grazing
animals
developed with ferocious pack-hunting predators.
We'd had 10,000 years of extremely knowledgeable pastoralists bunching and moving their animals, but they had created the great manmade deserts of the world.
Clearly more was needed than bunching and moving the animals, and humans, over thousands of years, had never been able to deal with nature's complexity.
And we did that by increasing the cattle and goats 400 percent, planning the grazing to mimic nature and integrate them with all the elephants, buffalo, giraffe and other
animals
that we have.
Ninety-five percent of that land can only feed people from
animals.
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