National Geographic Kids | National Geographic Kids Things get loud in the Borneo forest when the animals start talking! Check out this video by DJ Ecotone that features orangutans, gibbons, cicadas, and the golden-cheeked barbet
Wacky Wild Animals - National Geographic Kids Watch wild animals goofing off Farley, a young red panda, has been through a lot in his short life Watch him grow and thrive under the care of his keepers
Mammals - National Geographic Kids Mammals include humans and all other animals that are warm-blooded vertebrates (vertebrates have backbones) with hair They feed their young with milk and have a more well-developed brain than other types of animals
Great White Shark - National Geographic Kids Great White Shark When a great white shark is born, along with up to a dozen siblings, it immediately swims away from its mother Born on the east and west coasts of North America, the south of Africa and southwest Australia, baby sharks are on their own right from the start Their mother may see them only as prey
Reptiles - National Geographic Kids Reptiles are cold-blooded vertebrates (Vertebrates have backbones ) They have dry skin covered with scales or bony plates and usually lay soft-shelled eggs
Polar Bear photos, facts, and map | National Geographic Kids Polar bears live along shores and on sea ice in the icy cold Arctic When sea ice forms over the ocean in cold weather, many polar bears, except pregnant females, head out onto the ice to hunt seals Polar bears primarily eat seals Polar bears often rest silently at a seal's breathing hole in the ice, waiting for a seal in the water to surface A polar bear may also hunt by swimming beneath