/
My Australian Animal Dingo My Australian Animal Dingo

My Australian Animal Dingo - PowerPoint Presentation

tatiana-dople
tatiana-dople . @tatiana-dople
Follow
410 views
Uploaded On 2017-10-03

My Australian Animal Dingo - PPT Presentation

By Noah and Jackson Dingo Appearance Bushy tail Large eyes Big ears Yellowishtan hair Sharp teeth 4 toed feet with white markings A dingo is 50c tall and 120c long mammal Dingos are Life ID: 592646

dingos dingo noah pups dingo dingos pups noah eat jackson den information groups uluru hunt leave catch watching power

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "My Australian Animal Dingo" is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

My Australian Animal Dingo

By Noah and JacksonSlide2

Dingo Appearance

Bushy tail

Large eyes

Big ears Yellowish-tan hairSharp teeth4 toed feet with white markingsA dingo is 50c tall and 120c long.Slide3

mammal

Dingos areSlide4

Life Cycle of a

Dingo

The bitch gives birth to her pups in a den. A litter of pups is usually about 5. Both the male and the female care of their pups. They catch food and bring it to the pups until they are about 3 weeks old. Then the pups leave the den and are taught to hunt by their parents. The parents will still catch the prey for their young but they leave it somewhere near the den for the pups to hunt down. A dingo pair stays together for life.Slide5

Dingo - Diet

Dingos eat almost everything. Dingos even eat insects. Dingo also eat dead animals and plants. Dingos eat sheep and also rabbits.Slide6

Dingo - Habitat

Dingos normally live in family groups or packs. Each of the groups of dingos have their of territory.Slide7

Interesting Information - Dingos

Dingos don’t bark. They howl as a way of announcing where their territory is. They make many different sounds to communicate within the group or to call pups that stray. Dingos mate between May and July and the pups are born 63 days later. Dingos been in Australia for about 3,500 years. Dingos can

nearly

turn their heads all the way round.Slide8
Slide9
Slide10

Dingos Running around in circlesSlide11

THANK YOU!!

Thank you for watching Noah and

Jackson’s

power point. 7 more slides to go.Slide12

This is dingo speaking

Hello said dingoSlide13

Dingo At Uluru

Noah and Jackson used

Paint to draw a dingo at Uluru.Slide14

Dingo picture pageSlide15

More Pictures (Dingo).Slide16

More Information On Dingo

DINGOS ARE AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Slide17

Dingo said “ by “.

Thankyou for watching our Noah Dover and Jackson Monks

POWER POINT

Thanks for watching…Bye Now.Slide18

BYE DINGO

(Please

clap)