<u>Amur Leopard - critically endangered</u>
Explanation:
The Amur leopard is one of the most critically endangered animals with the world population of just about 84 individuals in the protected wild areas.
Reasons for endangerment:
- Illegal wildlife trading especially for their rich fur.
- Shrinking of prey tracts due to poaching of their prey animals like roe deer, sika deer etc., which makes it difficult for the Amur leopards to find food.
Habitat: Currently only found in the temperate forests of Far Eastern Russia, in the Primorye region and along parts of northern China.
Diet: Amur leopards are nocturnal carnivores and hunt their prey. They mostly hunt and survive on Siberian roe deer, wild boar, Sika deer, badger, and pheasant.
Weight: A male Amur leopard weighs around 32-48 kg while the females can weigh up to 75 kg.
Lifestyle: Amur leopards are mostly solitary carnivores and mammals. They are not symbiotic and stay at the top of the food chain. They have a lifespan of about 10 to 15 years.
Answer: They focused on other stimuli in the room and not the marshmallow.
Explanation: They were able to distract themselves from the marshmallow, which can also be understood in the form that they were positively able to delay gratification by not eating the marshmallow, by limiting the exposure that they had to the marshmallow.
<u>Some covered their eyes, turned around, and in general avoided any type of perception of the marshmallow to prevent eating it. </u>
<u>They focused on other stimuli of the room and chose to ignore the marshmallow. </u>
Early and late puberty is associated with emotional and social difficulties. In fact, early puberty seems to be more challenging for <u>girls than boys</u>.
The pituitary gland produces hormones that leads to increase the synthesis of the sex hormones oestrogen and progesterone (in girls) or testosterone (in males), which causes the development of secondary sexual traits. This process is known as puberty.
In girls, menarche, or the first menstruation, usually occurs between the ages of 8 and 13 and marks the end of puberty. Puberty in boys typically starts between the ages of 9 and 14, commencing with the development of the sexual organs and ending with the development of facial hair and a deeper voice.
Early puberty may be particularly difficult for girls than boys, according to study. Early maturity in males has been associated with internalising symptoms like anxiety and externalising symptoms like tobacco use rather than full-blown problems. In girls, early puberty is linked to higher rates of eating disorders, disruptive behaviour disorders, drug use disorders, and depressive disorders in teenage girls.
To learn more about puberty, refer
brainly.com/question/9410140
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