
The
Patas Iguaneetah is a rather unique creature with
interesting characteristics. This animal consists of a Patas
Monkey, a Cheetah and a Desert Iguana. They are very fast
and can run up too 104 mph. The Patas Iguaneetah is often
found in the savannahs of Africa but can also be found in
the tall mountains of Colorado or in the vast tundra of the
North Pole. This animal loves the savannah and spends most
of the day sunbathing and eating. When this animal wakes up
in the morning, its tail is usually a dark color but after
many hours of sunbathing it is a pale white color. When this
animal gets angry its tail turns a bright cherry red. This
animal can live to be up to 45 years old. This animal is an
omnivore and loves to eat rabbits, yellow flowers, and
insects. Papa Murphy's Pizza is also one of its favorite
foods. This animal is very human friendly but is
endangered because it is very curios and often injures
itself in its curiosity. Its mating season is during the
summer usually in-between June or July. Before having its
babies, it acts crazy and runs in small circles. The baby Patas Iguaneetah is up and active exactly two hours after it
is born but for the first two hours it rides on its fathers
back because its mother is too tired to walk. After the first
two hours, the baby Patas Iguaneetah follows its father. The
baby will watch and help the father catch bugs and rabbits. By sundown
the baby Iguaneetah can catch a full grown rabbit all by
itself. The Patas Iguaneetah usually travels in packs of six
Iguaneetahs, one alpha male and female, one beta female and
male, and an omega male and female. But when not traveling, they camp in groups of up to 300 Patas Iguaneetahs. Though
this animal is friendly to humans, it hates the polar monkig
and the sidehill wompas who often gang up on it. But
whenever the Patas Iguaneetah spots a polar monkig or
sidehill wompas alone it calls its family and plans an
ambush on one of the two. And on strange occasions, they bury
their enemies’ dead instead of eating it. Sometimes, when in small groups, it teams up with the Yellow-Throated Amaga Iguana. This animal is rarely seen. |
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