About: Giantala   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

This animal has evolved from the plains-dwelling kangaroos and wallabies that were common when much of the continent was semiarid grassland, and betrays its ancestry by its upright stance and peculiar loping motion. The giantala is so large that it seems at first sight ill-adapted to life in the confined conditions of the tropical forest floor. However, its great height does give it the advantage that it can feed on leaves and shoots that are well out of reach of the other forest inhabitants and its bulk means that shrubs and small trees do not impede it. As the giantala crashes through the thickets, it leaves behind well-marked trails, which, until they are reclaimed by the natural growth of forest, are used as track ways by smaller animals such as the posset.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Giantala
rdfs:comment
  • This animal has evolved from the plains-dwelling kangaroos and wallabies that were common when much of the continent was semiarid grassland, and betrays its ancestry by its upright stance and peculiar loping motion. The giantala is so large that it seems at first sight ill-adapted to life in the confined conditions of the tropical forest floor. However, its great height does give it the advantage that it can feed on leaves and shoots that are well out of reach of the other forest inhabitants and its bulk means that shrubs and small trees do not impede it. As the giantala crashes through the thickets, it leaves behind well-marked trails, which, until they are reclaimed by the natural growth of forest, are used as track ways by smaller animals such as the posset.
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • This animal has evolved from the plains-dwelling kangaroos and wallabies that were common when much of the continent was semiarid grassland, and betrays its ancestry by its upright stance and peculiar loping motion. The giantala is so large that it seems at first sight ill-adapted to life in the confined conditions of the tropical forest floor. However, its great height does give it the advantage that it can feed on leaves and shoots that are well out of reach of the other forest inhabitants and its bulk means that shrubs and small trees do not impede it. As the giantala crashes through the thickets, it leaves behind well-marked trails, which, until they are reclaimed by the natural growth of forest, are used as track ways by smaller animals such as the posset.
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