“They can actually remember up to five months and can be taught to remember human faces.”
“It doesn’t work, it can actually cause the sting to release more venom.”
“They just have very bad eyesight and frantic movements scare them.”
“They aren’t. They use their tongues as toilet paper.”
“Lions often yawn to show irritation, so this isn’t a father building confidence, it’s just Mufasa about to backhand the lights out of Simba.”
“Koalas don’t get high on eucalyptus, it’s just that this genius animal insists on eating something that gives them zero energy which is why koalas look tired.”
“They don’t. Even if they did, we wouldn’t know because there isn’t a machine big enough to scan their brains. We’ve killed thousands of them and after years of generational trauma they really don’t see us as cute.”
“This myth started because a Disney documentary crew chased lemmings off a cliff to their death and then edited the footage to seem like the animals did it themselves.”
“Penguins are just reluctant to jump into the water. Eventually one or two might dive so the rest decide to follow them, but they don’t push each other.”
“They don’t, it depends on height they fall from. The higher they fall the less injuries they get.”
“The T-Rex had better vision than raptors today, including eagles and hawks.”
...seen Covid coming? Seriously? Who wrote this cr#p?
The chameleon fact is right in the Pic and wrong in your list. chameleons change their color to communicate and depending on temperature. It has nothing to do with the background
it's like he was waiting for someone to toss him a peanut the whole time, with lips like those.
-24.html] Since chameleons can't generate their own body heat, changing the color of their skin is a way to maintain a favorable body temperature. A cold chameleon may become dark to absorb more heat, whereas a hotter chameleon may turn pale to reflect the sun's heat. Chameleons will also use bold color changes to communicate.