Association of Zoology and Enviromental Student of Nigeria - mouau Chapter

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Association of Zoology and Enviromental Student of Nigeria - mouau Chapter i

THIS ARE ENDLESS LIST OF ANIMALS THAT THE GREAT ZOOLOGIST ARE STUDYING DESPITE THE BIG OBSTACLE AND CHALLENGES IN THE FIELD

JUST GO THROUGH THE LIST AND SEE FOR YOURSELF....

Some well-known types of animals, listed by their common names:







Aardvark
Aardwolf
Afghan Hound
Albatross
Alligator
Alpaca
American Robin
Anaconda
Angelfish
Anglerfish
Ant

Anteater
Antelope
Antlion
Ape
Aphid
Armadillo
Arrow crab
Asp
Ass
Baboon
Badger
Bald Eagle
Bandicoot
Barnacle
Basilisk
Barracuda
Bass
Basset Hound
Bat
Beaked whale
Bear
Beaver
Bedbug
Bee
Beetle
Bird
Bison
Blackbird (Old World)
Blackbird (New World)
Black panther
Black Widow Spider
Blue Jay
Blue whale
Boa
Bobcat
Bobolink
Bonobo
Booby
Box jellyfish
Boston Terrier
Bovid
Buffalo
Bug
Bulldog
Bull Terrier
Butterfly
Buzzard
Camel
Canid
Cape Buffalo
Capybara
Cardinal
Caribou
Carp
Cat
Caterpillar
Catfish
Cattle
Centipede
Cephalopod
Chameleon
Cheetah
Chickadee
Chicken
Chihuahua
Chimpanzee
Chinchilla
Chipmunk
Clam
Clownfish
Cobra
Cockroach
Cod
Collie
Condor
Constrictor
Coral
Cougar
Cow
Coyote
Crab
Crane
Crane Fly
Crawdad
Crayfish
Cricket
Crocodile
Crow
Cuckoo
Daddy longlegs
Damselfly
Deer
Dingo
Dinosaur
Dog
Dolphin
Donkey
Dormouse
Dove
Dragonfly
Duck
Dung beetle
Eagle
Earthworm
Earwig
Echidna
Eel
Egret
Elephant
Elephant seal
Elk
Emu
English pointer
English Setter
Ermine
Falcon
Ferret
Finch
Firefly
Fish
Flamingo
Flea
Fly
Flyingfish
Fowl
Fox
Frog
Fruit Bat
Galliwasp
Gazelle
Gecko
Gerbil
German Shepherd
Giant Panda
Giant squid
Gibbon
Gila monster
Guanaco
Guineafowl
Giraffe
Goat
Golden Retriever
Goldfinch
Goldfish
Goose
Gopher
Gorilla
Grasshopper
Great Blue Heron
Great Dane
Great white shark
Greyhound
Grizzly bear
Ground sloth
Grouse
Guinea pig
Gull
Guppy
Haddock
Halibut
Hammerhead shark
Hamster
Hare
Harrier
Hawk
Hedgehog
Hermit crab
Heron
Herring
Hippopotamus
Hookworm
Hornet
Horse
Hound
Hoverfly
Human
Hummingbird
Humpback whale
Husky
Hyena
Iguana
Impala
Insect
Irish Setter
Irish Wolfhound
Irukandji jellyfish
Jackal
Jaguar
Jay
Jellyfish
Kangaroo
Kangaroo mouse
Kangaroo rat
Kingfisher
Kite
Kiwi
Koala
Koi
Komodo dragon
Krill
Labrador Retriever
Ladybug
Lamprey
Lark
Leech
Lemming
Lemur
Leopard
Leopon
Liger
Lion
Lizard
Llama
Lobster
Locust
Loon
Louse
Lungfish
Lynx
Macaw
Mackerel
Magpie
Mammal
Mammoth
Mandrill
Manta Ray
Marlin
Marmoset
Marmot
Marsupial
Marten
Mastiff
Mastodon
Meadowlark
Meerkat
Mink
Minnow
Mite
Mockingbird
Mole
Mollusk
Mongoose
Monitor lizard
Monkey
Moose
Mosquito
Moth
Mountain goat
Mouse
Mule
Muskox
Mussel
Narwhal
Newt
Nightingale
Ocelot
Octopus
Old English Sheepdog
Opossum
Orangutan
Orca
Ostrich
Otter
Owl
Ox
Oyster
Panda
Panther
Panthera hybrid
Parakeet
Parrot
Parrotfish
Partridge
Peacock
Peafowl
Pekingese
Pelican
Penguin
Perch
Peregrine Falcon
Persian Cat
Pheasant
Pig
Pigeon
Pike
Pilot whale
Pinniped
Piranha
Planarian
Platypus
Polar bear
Pony
Poodle
Porcupine
Porpoise
Portuguese Man o' War
Possum
Prairie dog
Prawn
Praying Mantis
Primate
Puffin
Puma
Python
Quail
Quelea
Quokka
Rabbit
Raccoon
Rainbow trout
Rat
Rattlesnake
Raven
Ray (Batoidea)
Ray (Rajiformes)
Red Panda
Reindeer
Rhinoceros
Right whale
Roadrunner
Rodent
Rook
Rooster
Roundworm
Saber-toothed cat
Sailfish
Saint Bernard
Salamander
Salmon
Sawfish
Scale insect
Scallop
Scorpion
Sea anemone
Sea cow
Seahorse
Sea lion
Sea slug
Sea urchin
Setter
Shark
Sheep
Shrew
Shrimp
Siamese Cat
Silkworm
Silverfish
Skink
Skunk
Sloth
Slug
Smelt
Snail
Snake
Snipe
Snow leopard
Sockeye salmon
Sole
Spaniel
Sparrow
Sperm whale
Spider
Spider monkey
Spoonbill
Squid
Squirrel
Starfish
Star-nosed mole
Steelhead trout
Stingray
Stoat
Stork
Sturgeon
Sugar glider
Swallow
Swan
Swift
Swordfish
Swordtail
Tabby cat
Tahr
Takin
Tapeworm
Tapir
Tarantula
Tarsier
Tasmanian devil
Termite
Tern
Terrier
Thrush
Tick
Tiger
Tiger shark
Tiglon
Toad
Tortoise
Toucan
Toy Poodle
Trapdoor spider
Tree frog
Trout
Tuna
Turkey
Turtle
Tyrannosaurus
Urial
Vampire bat
Vampire squid
Vicuna
Viper
Vole
Vulture
Wallaby
Walrus
Wasp
Warbler
Water buffalo
Weasel
Whale
Whippet
Whitefish
Whooping Crane
Wildcat
Wildebeest
Wildfowl
Wolf
Wolverine
Wombat
Woodpecker
Worm
Wren
Xerinae
X-ray fish
Yak
Yellow perch
Zebra
Zebra Finch

05/09/2017

itz not the strongest of the species that survive nor the most bravest or intelligent but the one that is most RESPONSIVE to CHANGE that make it in life....so life is a misery..sometime it last in love sometime it hurts instead but whatever br the case or situation...stay on the part of positivism because ''he who live without discipline dies without honour or respect.....

30/10/2013

WONDERS SHALL NEVER CEASE TO END IN NIGERIA..IMAGINE A PASS GOVERNMENT WHO COULD NOT SORT OUT THE PROBLEM WITHOUT STRIKE IN THEIR TENURE TO INTERVENE IN THE SAME CRISES THEY HELPED IN FUELING ............I FEAR OOOO

ASUU Strike: FG Rejects Past Leaders Intervention

The Federal Government has rejected the suggestion to involve past Presidents/Heads of States, governors and traditional rulers in its current face off with the Academic Staff Union of Universities.

National President of Nigerian Union of Teachers, Michael Olukoya, had after a palliative meeting with the Minister of Education, Nyeson Wike; and the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Emeka Wogu, in Abuja offered the suggestion.

The suggestion came to the heels of recent treats by the NUT to embark on sympathy strike with ASUU, if government failed to resolve the crisis.

Although Wike told journalists that the advice will be looked into but investigations by our correspondent revealed that the government’s team had not considered heeding the advice almost four weeks after it was given.

Our correspondent also learnt on Monday that the NUT had been taking submission from its state executives on the modalities and strategies to adopt in their sympathy strike with ASUU.

A government source who spoke to our correspondent in confidence said, “The Federal Government team is strong enough to broker peace with ASUU. There is no need in involving other persons not in government in the discussion when we are already achieving progress”.

Asked why the government made commitment to the NUT when it was suggested, the source reply, “There was no commitment anywhere. It was a meeting where stakeholders express their desire to move the sector forward. So it was out of mutual respect that both parties spoke.”

When contacted on whether the government has taken steps to involve the past leaders as promised, Special Assistant (Media) to Wike, Simeon Nwakaudu said, “ I don’t understand what you mean by promise. All I can say is that government is desirous to find a lasting solution. And it is working towards that.”

Olukoya had suggested that given the inability of some committees earlier set up to settle the crisis, the Federal Government should seek the intervention of past presidents, governors, traditional rulers and serving Senators.

He said, “With the way this strike has lingered on for three months, we believe government should explore all modalities to end it. Government should invites past heads of states, speakers, senators , ministers of labour and education and every other stakeholder in the sector to resolve this ugly situation.

“Call powerful voices like traditional leaders to intervene in this strike because our concern as teachers is that as these undergraduates stay at home, they are prone to negative vices and in turn these are the same people that will lead the society in future.

30/10/2013

HOPE WE CAN SEE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL

ASUU strike: Wike shuns journalists after secret meeting with Union, stakeholders

In a continued effort to resolve the ongoing face-off between the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, and the federal government, an emergency meeting was on Tuesday held between the Supervising Minister of Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike, and the Union.

It was reported that nothing tangible was gathered regarding the outcome of the meeting that lasted for only one hour.

Attempts to speak with the ASUU President, Dr. Nasir Fagge and the Minister failed, as both of them refused to disclose the outcome of the meeting to journalists.

The ASUU Head only responded after series of questions that, “I am not in a position to talk.”

Apart from the Minister and the ASUU chairman, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, Prof. Julius Okojie; the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Prof. Isaac Adewole and a few other national officers of the union were equally at the meeting.

Relatively, Vice-President Namadi Sambo had a brief meeting with stakeholders in the nation’s education sector on Tuesday.

No details of the meeting’s outcome were made available to journalist as none of the members agreed to speak to the press.

The stakeholders were led to the Presidential Villa by Wike and other members of the delegation, including Okojie and Adewole.

Some members had earlier told journalists who were waiting outside the venue that the Minister would address them, but Wike did not respond to questions when he came out of the Vice President’s office.

ASUU has remained on strike for nearly four months, in protest of the Federal government’s failure to implement the 2009 agreement it signed with the Nigerian government. It has said that until hundred per cent of the said agreement is implemented, the nation’s universities would remain shut.

HOPE STILL DEY OOOOOOOOO

hiits HIGH TENSION on the blog...let join hand down and do own things without mincing words on what we stand as zoologis...
30/10/2013

hi
its HIGH TENSION on the blog...let join hand down and do own things without mincing words on what we stand as zoologist and great environmental biologist throughout Nigeria and to the entire word at large.......

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