Myths · Comparisons · Science
Animal Myth Busters
15 common animal myths answered with sourced facts — bats and blindness, whale sleep, shark smell, koalas as bears, and big-cat comparisons. Each answer links to WARN wildlife guides and comparison pages.
All myth-buster answers
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Myth buster
Do whales sleep?
Yes. Whales and dolphins sleep, but differently from humans: many cetaceans rest one brain hemisphere at a time so they can keep surfacing to breathe. Some species also “log” at the surface in short rest bouts.
- Whales and dolphins do sleep — mainly one brain hemisphere at a time.
- Voluntary breathing requires sleep adaptations unlike land mammals.
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Myth buster
Are bats blind?
No. Bats can see. Many species use echolocation to hunt in darkness, but their eyes are functional — especially in fruit bats that rely more on vision and smell.
- Bats are not blind — vision and echolocation work together in many species.
- Megabats rely heavily on eyesight; microbats add echolocation for hunting.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between an alligator and a crocodile?
Alligators have broad, U-shaped snouts and only upper teeth visible when the mouth is closed; crocodiles have narrower V-shaped snouts and a fourth tooth on each side of the lower jaw that shows when closed. Crocodiles tolerate salt water; alligators are mainly freshwater.
- Snout shape and visible lower teeth are the fastest field marks.
- Crocodiles often tolerate salt water; alligators are mainly freshwater.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between a monkey and an ape?
Apes (gorillas, chimpanzees, orangutans, gibbons, bonobos) lack tails and have broader chests and more flexible shoulders for climbing and knuckle-walking. Monkeys usually have tails — except barbary macaques — and are generally smaller-bodied.
- Apes lack tails; most monkeys have them — quickest field rule.
- Barbary macaque is the main tailless monkey exception.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between a leopard, jaguar and cheetah?
Leopards (Africa/Asia) and jaguars (Americas) are spotted, muscular big cats — jaguars have rosettes with central spots and the strongest bite; cheetahs (Africa, small Iran population) are slender speed specialists with solid spots and cannot roar.
- Cheetah — solid spots, tear marks, speed specialist; cannot roar.
- Leopard — rosettes without central dots; widest felid range.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between a lion and a tiger?
Lions are the only social big cats — living in prides — and males grow manes. Tigers are solitary, striped, and generally heavier, with powerful swimming ability. Lions range in Africa (and a tiny Asiatic population in India); tigers in Asia.
- Lions — social prides, manes, African range (plus Gir lions in India).
- Tigers — solitary, striped, generally heavier; Asian range only.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between a wolf and a coyote?
Wolves are much larger (up to 60+ kg), with broader snouts and rounded ears. Coyotes are smaller (typically 9–23 kg), with pointed snouts and larger ears relative to the head. Coyotes adapt readily to urban edges; wolves need large territories.
- Size, ear shape and snout width are reliable wolf vs coyote field marks.
- Wolves — pack hunters needing large territories.
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Myth buster
Do ostriches bury their heads in the sand?
No — ostriches do not bury their heads in sand. They lie flat with necks extended along the ground to camouflage, which from a distance can look like a buried head.
- Ostriches do not bury heads in sand — a persistent ancient myth.
- They flatten necks to camouflage; heads remain above ground.
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Myth buster
What is the largest animal on Earth?
The blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) is the largest animal ever known — reaching about 30 metres and 180 tonnes. It is a marine mammal, not a fish.
- Blue whale — largest animal ever, up to 30 m and 180 tonnes.
- Baleen filter-feeder on krill — not a toothed predator.
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Myth buster
Can sharks smell blood from miles away?
Sharks have an excellent sense of smell and can detect blood at very low concentrations in water — but “miles away” oversimplifies it. Current, distance and dilution matter enormously.
- Shark smell is acute but not unlimited “miles away” detection.
- Water current and dilution limit real-world scent plumes.
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Myth buster
Are koalas bears?
No. Koalas are marsupial mammals native to Australia — not bears. They carry young in a pouch and are more closely related to wombats than to any bear species.
- Koalas are marsupials — not bears despite the nickname.
- Closest relatives are wombats — pouch-bearing eucalyptus specialists.
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Myth buster
Why do cats purr?
Cats purr by vibrating muscles in the larynx and diaphragm at roughly 25–150 Hz. Domestic cats purr when content, but also when stressed or in pain — likely for self-soothing and communication.
- Purring is laryngeal vibration — not only a happiness signal.
- Cats purr when stressed, injured and in labour — context matters.
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Myth buster
What is the fastest land animal?
The cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) is the fastest land animal — reaching roughly 110 km/h (68 mph) in short bursts over flat ground. It accelerates faster than most sports cars but tires quickly.
- Cheetah ~110 km/h — fastest land animal.
- Sprint only seconds — overheating limits chase.
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Myth buster
How fast can a cheetah run?
Cheetahs reach roughly 100–110 km/h (62–68 mph) in short bursts — among the highest verified land speeds. Acceleration exceeds most cars but sprints last only seconds before overheating.
- Peak ~110 km/h — verified sprint record.
- Chase limited ~30 seconds — overheating.
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Myth buster
What is the difference between a grasshopper and a cricket?
Grasshoppers are mostly day-active with short antennae and often bright warning colours. Crickets have long antennae, are usually nocturnal and sing by rubbing wings together. Both are orthopteran insects — but antenna length, activity time and song method differ.
- Antenna length — short grasshopper, long cricket.
- Suborders Caelifera vs Ensifera.