The document discusses several nocturnal animals, including owls, hedgehogs, bats, badgers, and foxes. Owls have disc-shaped faces that collect sound waves like satellite dishes and male owls hoot loudly to defend their territories. Hedgehogs have poor eyesight, adults have 5,000 spines, and baby hedgehogs are called hoglets or piglets. Bats live under bridges near Spar and there are 18 species in Britain that all eat insects. Badgers live in tunnel networks called sets and are 700mm long, shy mammals. Foxes can be easily trained, hunt alone eating small mammals and birds, and enjoy chickens as a meal.
2. Owls
The barn owl’s disc-
shaped face collects
sound waves in the
same way that a
satellite dish collects
radio waves.
Male owls hoot loudly
to make other male
owls stay away from
their territory.
The female owl sits on
her eggs for a month.
3. Hedgehogs
Hedgehogs have poor
eye sight.
Adult hedgehogs have
5,000 spines.
My uncle aunt and my
granny have hedgehogs
in there garden.
Baby hedgehogs can be
called hoglets or
piglets.
4. Bats
Some bats live under
the bridge by the Spar.
My daddy has a
machine to listen to bat
sounds.
We have 18 different
species of bats in
Britain.
All of the bats in Britain
eat insects.
5. Badgers
Badgers live in
networks of tunnels
called a set or a den.
Badgers are 700mm
long and have a heavy
body weight.
Badgers are very shy
creatures.
Badgers are mammals.
6. Foxes
Foxes can be easily
trained.
Foxes eat other
mammals and birds.
Foxes hunt on their
own.
Chickens are one of the
foxes favourite meal.