Long-eared Jerboa
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This endangered animal uses its long legs to hop around on the sand. The soles of their feet have small, stiff hairs that act as friction pads so they don't slip. Their ears are a third longer than its head and the tail grows as long as 16.2 centimeters, which is 7.2 centimeters than its russet-coloured body. The tail is covered in short hairs with a tuft of white fur at the end. This animal favours sandy river basins and shrub cover.
Bactrian Camel
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The bactrian camel is one of two surviving wild camel species in the world. Unlike its cousin, it has two humps, which helps it survive much better in the forbidding wilderness of the Takla Makan desert. When the stored fat in their humps diminishes, they become floppy. Without these camels, the people that travel through the desert,
Onager
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Tho onager is the most horse-like of all of its species. It has a broad, black stripe running down the middle of its spine, though the colour of its coat varies by the season. Herds can number up to 1200 individuals, and they are very aggressive. It is 1.5 meters tall at the shoulder and weighs about 550 lbs. You do not one of these things to kick you in the stomach. You would be immobile for weeks!
Marbled Polecat
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One of the most widely distributed small carnivores in Europe and Asia, the European marbled polecat is a small mammal with a short muzzle and short, strong limbs with long claws. It is strikingly patterned, with the reddish-brown fur on its back being mottled with irregular lines and patches of yellowish fur. The limbs and underparts of the marbled polecat are dark brown or blackish, and its head is dark brown with a white band across the forehead. It has a long, hairy tail, which is dark brown with a yellowish band in the middle, and ends in a black tip. The ears of this species are large, rounded and white.
Ili Pika Rabbit
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Discovered in 1983 and formally described three years later, the species had to wait another 10 years to be properly studied in its cliff-face homeland atop China's Tian Shan Mountains in the northwest province of Xinjiang. In its 32 years on the record, just 29 individuals have been spotted, and it’s thought that the 2,000 or so adults estimated to exist back in the early 1990s has dwindled to less than half this, due to habitat loss and severely fragmented populations.