

– There is a big collection of elateridae in the Museum of Natural History. It spreads the wings into the air.Įlateridae: click beetles and certain fireflies. The young eaglet tried to fly for the first time. – Okay, eudyptes penguins rock their modern looks with those crazy feathers. It is funny that children think herons bring them. – The Egretta moves through the water with gracious steps. – A gorgeous bird, that erne perched on the log looking to the sky. Can you believe that? Poor birds.Įrne: bulky greyish-brown eagle with a short wedge-shaped white tail of Europe and Greenland. – Eider feathers are used to fill pillows. Of course, there’s no way for them to be related.Įider: duck of the northern hemisphere much valued for the fine soft down of the females. It is true that the eretmochelys mouth looks like a hawk beak. – Family of elapidae includes 300 species of venomous snakes. Why does he have a snake as a pet?Įlapidae: cobras kraits mambas coral snakes Australian taipan and tiger snakes. – He laid on the grass next to the eunectes it was larger than him. – The elaphe or ratsnake likes to hide under rocks, logs, even under rugs and mats. I bet they have a big amount of food for the winter. They keep running to their hole in the trunk. The eutamias looked so funny with all those nuts stuck in their mouths.

– We could see from the helicopter some eumetopias sunbathing on some rocks.Įutamias: chipmunks of western America and Asia. – The scientific name of the American black bear is euarctos. It’s amazing how it swims backward.Įuarctos: American black bears in some classifications not a separate genus from Ursus. – The Enhydra looked lovely trying to open a clam. – I have always thought that the edentata is a prehistoric animal living in modern times. Here are some names of animals that start with the letter E.Įdentata: order of mammals having few or no teeth including New World anteaters sloths armadillos. Some of them are very difficult to pronounce. Species all over the world have strange scientific names.
