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Leopard Tortoise

The leopard tortoise is a large species of tortoise found throughout the African savannas. The leopard tortoise is the forth largest species of tortoise in the world, and is also the most widely distributed tortoise species in Southern Africa. The leopard tortoise has a wide distribution in sub-Saharan Africa from Sudan to the Cape. As a grazing species of tortoise, the leopard tortoise is most commonly found in semi-arid areas including shrubland and grasslands. The leopard tortoise is one of the world's largest tortoise species as they can grow to 70 cm in length and weigh about as much as a small person. As with other tortoise species, the leopard tortoise has a large shell which protects it's softer body. The limbs of the leopard tortoise are able to retract back into the leopard tortoise's shell so that no body part is left vulnerable. The leopard tortoise is a generally solitary animal that spends the majority of it's time grazing on plants, which it can do ef...

The Giant Rats Helping To Clear Landmines


(c) A-Z-Animals
In the aftermath of many wars including the Vietnam war in the late 1970s, much of the rural land in Cambodia still today is unusable due to the sheer number of unexploded land mines that are thought to be left hidden in the ground. In fact, around half of people there believe that land mines have restricted their livelihood in some way.Detecting unexploded land mines is a dangerous and time-consuming task as every blip received by hand-held metal detectors has to be carefully examined. Dogs are often trained to help with the searches and although this is known to be an effective method, it is a costly process to both train and transport them.
Things however, are looking brighter on the horizon as there has been a big breakthrough by a nonprofit organisation in Belgium (known as APOPO)who have been successfully training the cat-sized African giant pouched rats to sniff out TNT and therefore locate landmines.
The small size and lightweight bodies of the rats mean that they themselves do not set the landmines off if they walk over them, ensuring that these little critters are simply not being sent off to their death. They are so efficient that one African giant pouched rat is thought to be able to search an area over 2,000 square feet in just 20 minutes (which would take a person up to four days).
Since 1997 when APOPO was founded, these incredible creatures have helped to detect 13,200 landmines which can then be cleared from Cambodia but also from minefields in Tanzania, Mozambique and Angola.