Ostrich myth busted Myth Ostriches bury their heads in the sand when they're scared or threatened. How it started It's an optical illusion! Ostriches are the largest living birds, but their heads are pretty small. "If you see them picking at the ground from a distance, it may look like their heads are buried in the ground," says Glinda Cunningham of the American Ostrich Association. Why it's not true Ostriches don't bury their heads in the sand - they wouldn't be able to breathe! But they do dig holes in the dirt to use as nests for their eggs. Several times a day, a bird puts her head in the hole and turns the eggs. So it really does look like the birds are burying their heads in the sand! National Geographic Kids.
1. O texto anterior "detona" o mito segundo o qual avestruzes enterrariam a cabeça quando assustados ou ameaçados. Qual das opções a seguir não representa um motivo que explica a existência do mito? a) Avestruzes têm cabeças relativamente pequenas. b) Avestruzes abaixam a cabeça para ciscar na terra. c) Avestruzes cavam buracos no chão para botar ovos. d) Avestruzes cobrem os ovos com areia para escondê--los. e) Avestruzes mexem os ovos periodicamente com a cabeça.
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Resposta:
d) Avestruzes cobrem os ovos com areia para escondê--los.
Explicação:
the only thing that the text does no say its that Ortriches hide their eggs with sand
a unica coisa que o texto nao fala
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