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- Home | San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
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- Animals | San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
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- Plants | San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
The San Diego Zoo’s 100 acres are home to a wide variety of extraordinary plants from habitats around the world, many of them rare in botanical collections The Zoo maintains eight accredited plant collections, along with the thousands of plants that create the wildlife habitats and surround visitors in lush, exotic, and peaceful landscapes From plants known for their colorful blossoms to
- All Plants | San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
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- Regions - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
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- Axolotl - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
Predation from introduced fish and large birds, as well as over-collecting them for food and medicine also contributes to their persistent decline Axolotls at the San Diego Zoo eat a variety of worms and insects Visit the San Diego Zoo’s Denny Sanford Wildlife Explorers Basecamp today and discover more about axolotls inside Marsh Meadows
- Toucan - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
The toucans at the San Diego Zoo eat pellets made for softbills and parrots, a variety of fruit and vegetables, and crickets Grapes and bananas are used for positive reinforcement when teaching the birds new behaviors for healthcare or enrichment
- Australia New Zealand - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
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- Camel - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
The camels were imported in the 19th century as pack animals and were used to cross the vast desert regions there Swirling desert sand can be a problem for most of us, but camels have special adaptations for the pesky stuff
- Trees - San Diego Zoo Animals Plants
As with most other flowering plants, angiosperm trees produce flowers to make pollen for fertilization and ovules that develop into seeds The colors, patterns, and structures of the flowers attract pollinators like insects and birds, which transfer the pollen from one flower to the next; wind and water can also carry pollen
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