I’ve discovered a surprisingly effective (and slightly odd) method to get animals to yawn—and it actually works! By simply sitting near them and yawning repeatedly for about five minutes, I’ve noticed that many animals eventually start yawning, too. It may sound strange, but this “contagious yawning” phenomenon seems to cross species.
I’ve tried this technique with different animals multiple times, and the results speak for themselves—you can see it clearly in the photos I’ve captured. It’s a fascinating and fun way to explore subtle forms of communication and empathy in the animal world.
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Why is it humans are the only species who have to brush and floss our teeth, but animals in the wild don't?
Because, for a carnivore like this, chewing through whole prey effectively "brushes" their teeth. By biting, tearing, and shearing through their prey's fur, bones, and bits, the teeth get "scrubbed" in the process. Carnivores like big cats also do not have flat grinding molars like we do, so they don't "chew" - they shear off chunks and swallow. That leaves very little food "sitting" on their teeth, so to speak - at least not in the way we'd have bits of potato chips in our teeth after eating a bag of them.
Load More Replies...Not a yawn. That's called flehmen. Equines do that when they smell something interesting.
Ironically I believe this is a leopard... cheetahs rarely have spots on their lower jaw/throat area XD
Load More Replies...Flehmen again. If a horse or donkey yawns, you'll know it. Big teeth!
This made me yawn! 😅🙃 (good pics, and literally made me yawn from seeing animals yawn 👍🙂 )
This made me yawn! 😅🙃 (good pics, and literally made me yawn from seeing animals yawn 👍🙂 )
