Kamis, 21 November 2013

SHORT REPORT

MATERIAL
SHORT REPORT
   
Short report is report text in spoken form or written form. it aims at giving information about something. In a short report, you should give information based on the scientific research.

EXAMPLE:
GREEN IGUANA
General Clasification
The Iguana is a large, arboreal herbivorous species of lizard of the genus Iguana. Some types of iguanas live in tropical rain forests, others live in deserts, and there are some that live on rocks along the ocean. One special adaptation they have is that they can be different colors from bright green, to dark brown to help them hide in grass, trees, in water, and along rocks.
Habitat
The habitat of iguana native to Central, South America, and the Caribbean. The green iguana ranges over a large geographic area, from southern Brazil and Paraguay as far north as Mexico and the Caribbean Island especially in Puerto Rico where they are also known as "Gallina de palo" and they are very common throughout the island where is seen as an intruder animal from South America; and in the United States as feral populations in South Florida (including the Florida Keys), Hawaii, and theRio Grande Valley of Texas
Breeding
Male Green Iguanas have highly developed femoral pores on the underside of their thighs which secrete a scent (females have femoral pores, but they are smaller in comparison to those of the males). In addition, the dorsal spines that run along a Green iguana's back are noticeably longer and thicker in males than they are in females, making the animals somewhat sexually dimorphic.
Green Iguanas are oviparous with females laying clutches of 20 to 71 eggs once per year during a synchronized nesting period. The female Green iguana gives no parental protection after egg laying, apart from defending the nesting burrow during excavation. In Panama, the Green iguana has been observed sharing nest sites with American crocodiles and in Honduras with Spectacled Caimans.
The hatchlings emerge from the nest after 10–15 weeks of incubation. Once hatched, the young iguanas look similar to the adults in color and shape, resembling adult females more so than males and lacking dorsal spines.
Juveniles stay in familial groups for the first year of their lives. Male Green iguanas in these groups often use their own bodies to shield and protect females from predators and it appears to be the only species of reptile which does this.




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