Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
Animals in the polar region
1.
2. is a small fox native to Arctic
regions of the Northern
Hemisphere and is common
throughout the Arctic tundra
biome. It is well adapted to
living in cold environments. It
has a deep thick fur which is
brown in summer and white in
winter. It averages in size at
about 85.3 cm (33.6 in) in body
length, with a generally
rounded body shape to
minimize the escape of body
heat.
3. The arctic hare or polar rabbit, is a
species of hare which is adapted
largely to polar and mountainous
habitats. The arctic hare survives
with a thick coat of fur and usually
digs holes under the ground or snow
to keep warm and sleep. Arctic
hares look like rabbits but have
shorter ears and can stand up
taller, and can live/maintain
themselves in cold places unlike
rabbits. They can travel together
with many other hares, sometimes
huddling with dozens or more, but
are usually found alone, taking in
some cases more than one partner.
The arctic hare can run up to 40
miles (64 km) per hour. Its predators
include Arctic wolf, Arctic Fox, and
Ermine.
4. The Arctic Tern is a seabird of
the tern family Sternidae. This bird has
a circumpolar breeding distribution
covering the Arctic and sub-Arctic
regions of Europe, Asia, and North
America (as far south
as Brittany and Massachusetts).
The species is
strongly migratory, seeing two
summers each year as it migrates from
its northern breeding grounds along a
winding route to the oceans
around Antarctica and back, a round
trip of about 70,900 km (c. 44,300
miles) each year. This is by far the
longest regular migration by any
known animal.
5. The Emperor Penguin is
the tallest and heaviest
of all
living penguin species
and
is endemic to Antarctica.
The male and female are
similar in plumage and
size, reaching 122 cm
(48 in) in height and
weighing anywhere from
22 to 45 kg (49 to 99 lb).
6. The Snowy Owl is a
large owl of
the typical owl family
Strigidae. The Snowy
Owl was first
classified in 1758
by Carolus
Linnaeus, the
Swedish naturalist
who
developed binomial
nomenclature to
classify and organize
plants and animals
7. The polar bear is
a bear native largely within
the Arctic
Circle encompassing the
Arctic Ocean, its surrounding
seas and surrounding land
masses. It is the world's
largest land carnivore and
also the largest bear,
together with
the omnivorous Kodiak Bear,
which is approximately the
same size. A boar (adult
male) weighs around 350–
680 kg (770–1,500 lb), while a
sow (adult female) is about
half that size.