KIDS2018.12-2019.01

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1
ERNI / SHUTTERSTOCK (WINTER FOX); ONDREJ PROSICKY / SHUTTERSTOCK (SUMMER FOX); JIM CUMMING /
SHUTTERSTOCK (WINTER HARE); FOTOREQUEST / SHUTTERSTOCK (SUMMER HARE); TOM MCHUGH / GETTY IMAGES (WINTER LEMMING); © ALL CANADA PHOTOS / ALAMY (SUMMER LEMMING); ANDREANITA / SHUT-
16 NAT GEO KIDS • DECEMBER 2018 | JANUARY 2019 TERSTOCK (WINTER PTARMIGAN); NICK PECKER / SHUTTERSTOCK (SUMMER PTARMIGAN); JUKKA JANTUNEN / SHUTTERSTOCK (WINTER ERMINE); MICHAEL MESHCHERYAKOV / SHUTTERSTOCK (SUMMER ERMINE)

THAT HARE?
An all-white look might work in the middle of
winter. But what about when the snow
starts to melt in spring, leaving large splotches
of mud everywhere? That’s when a patchy color
pattern helps. Snowshoe hares’ winter fur
grows in patches instead of showing up evenly.
This adaptation makes it difficult for predators
to tell them apart from a landscape that looks
both brown and white.

Harp seals permanently ditch their white fur about
a month after they’re born. But other Arctic animals
mix things up, changing their fur color to blend in with
winter snow or summer plants. Check out how these
critters survive in style.

HOW CHANGING COLOR HELPS
SOME ARCTIC ANIMALS SURVIVE

BY JOE LEVIT

ANIMAL: SNOWSHOE HARE
HABITAT: Northern forests

DRESSED


WEATHER


FOR THE


»SUMMER


SUMMER

»


»WINTER


»WINTER


WHERE’S

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