ANIMALS

2-syllable Animals that contain R

Animals pronounced in 2 syllables that contain R — full profile for each.

You're looking for 2-syllable animals containing R — here are 28 matches, each linked to a full profile.

List of 2-syllable Animals that contain R

    1

    Aardvark

    Orycteropus afer

    A secretive nocturnal African mammal with a pig-like snout and long sticky tongue — the only living species in its entire order, an evolutionary singleton that has changed little in tens of millions of years.

    2

    Beaver

    Castor canadensis (North American)

    A massive aquatic rodent — North America's largest rodent — that fundamentally reshapes landscapes through dam-building, creating wetlands that support biodiversity and modern landscape restoration efforts.

    3

    Deer

    Odocoileus virginianus (white-tailed); Cervidae family

    Slender, antlered ruminants found across nearly all continents — from the white-tailed deer of North America to the European red deer to tropical muntjacs — among the most successful large mammals in human-altered landscapes.

    4

    Ferret

    Mustela putorius furo

    A domesticated polecat used for centuries to hunt rabbits — popular as a curious, energetic pet, with strong predatory instincts and a reputation for both companionship and mischief.

    5

    Jaguar

    Panthera onca

    The largest cat in the Americas and the third-largest in the world, a powerfully built ambush predator with the strongest pound-for-pound bite force of any big cat.

    6

    Lemur

    Lemuriformes (infraorder)

    A primate family endemic to Madagascar — over 100 species evolved in isolation for 60+ million years, ranging from the tiny mouse lemur to the dramatic ringtailed lemur, all critically threatened by deforestation.

    7

    Lobster

    Homarus americanus (American); Homarus gammarus (European)

    A large marine crustacean — once a poor person's food in colonial New England, now an iconic luxury seafood and the foundation of major Maritime fisheries on both sides of the North Atlantic.

    8

    Mandrill

    Mandrillus sphinx

    The world's largest monkey and the most colourful mammal — males develop electric blue and red facial colouring and a brilliantly coloured rump; despite their fearsome appearance, mandrills are omnivorous and live in enormous groups called hordes.

    9

    Mara

    Dolichotis patagonum

    The Patagonian mara looks exactly like a small deer but is actually a giant guinea pig — a large South American rodent that runs on the tips of its hoofed toes, mates for life, and lives in colonial warrens where multiple pairs deposit their young in a communal den while taking turns guarding.

    10

    Markhor

    Capra falconeri

    The national animal of Pakistan — a large wild goat of the Himalayas and Hindu Kush with spectacular spiral horns that in old males can reach 160 cm; the horns spiral outward in a tight corkscrew, unique among wild goats; the markhor lives on vertiginous cliff faces inaccessible to most predators and is revered in the region — its Farsi name means "snake eater," though it does not actually eat snakes.

    11

    Meerkat

    Suricata suricatta

    A small social mongoose of southern African deserts — famous for upright sentinel posture, tightly cooperative family groups, and starring roles in nature documentaries and "The Lion King."

    12

    Narwhal

    Monodon monoceros

    An Arctic whale with a single long spiraled tusk — actually a tooth — that gives it the popular name "unicorn of the sea," found only in the high Arctic.

    13

    Otter

    Enhydra lutris

    A marine mustelid that floats on its back and uses stones as tools to crack shellfish, with the densest fur of any mammal and a key role in kelp-forest ecology.

    14

    Rabbit

    Oryctolagus cuniculus (European)

    A small social mammal that lives in burrows in groups of dozens — domesticated for fur, meat, and pets, with European rabbits as the iconic species but dozens of distinct rabbit species worldwide.

    15

    Raccoon

    Procyon lotor

    A masked, dexterous-pawed nocturnal mammal of North American forests and cities — exceptionally intelligent, omnivorous, and notorious for cracking open garbage cans and pet food containers.

    16

    Serval

    Leptailurus serval

    Africa's most successful small wild cat — a tall, long-legged cat with enormous ears and a spotted coat, capable of leaping 3 metres into the air to bat down birds in flight; it has the highest hunting success rate of any wild cat, catching prey on more than half of all attempts.

    17

    Sloth Bear

    Melursus ursinus

    A shaggy, long-snouted bear of the Indian subcontinent — specialised as a termite and ant eater, with long curved claws for tearing open mounds, a mobile lower lip and long tongue for extracting insects, and the ability to close its nostrils to keep out dust; the sloth bear's noisy sucking sounds as it vacuums up termites can be heard from 100 metres away.

    18

    Springbok

    Antidorcas marsupialis

    South Africa's national animal and emblem — a graceful medium-sized antelope of the Karoo and Kalahari known for its spectacular "pronking" display, in which it springs repeatedly into the air with arched back and stiff legs; once migrated in herds of millions across southern Africa.

    19

    Squirrel

    Sciurus carolinensis (Eastern grey); Sciurus vulgaris (Eurasian red); many species

    A small bushy-tailed rodent of trees and parks — among the most successful suburban-adapted mammals, with hoarding behavior that accidentally plants countless trees each year.

    20

    Starfish

    Asteroidea (class)

    A radially symmetric marine invertebrate (more correctly called a sea star) with hundreds of tube feet, the ability to regenerate lost arms, and a unique digestive system that turns inside-out to feed.

    21

    Sun Bear

    Helarctos malayanus

    The world's smallest bear — a tree-climbing, honey-obsessed omnivore from Southeast Asia with an extraordinarily long tongue, a chest patch shaped like a rising sun, and an unexpectedly expressive face.

    22

    Tapir

    Tapirus spp.

    A large, prehistoric-looking mammal from South America and Southeast Asia with a short prehensile trunk — one of the oldest surviving large-mammal body plans on Earth, more closely related to horses and rhinos than to pigs.

    23

    Tiger

    Panthera tigris

    The largest cat species, an apex predator with distinctive orange-and-black stripes, native to Asian forests, grasslands, and mangroves.

    24

    Turtle

    Testudines (order)

    An ancient reptile order with a protective bony shell — over 350 species ranging from tiny musk turtles to massive sea turtles, with some species living over 150 years.

    25

    Walrus

    Odobenus rosmarus

    A massive Arctic marine mammal with iconic tusks — pinniped giant of the polar seas, weighing up to 2 tons, equipped with sensory whiskers that find clams in dark seabed mud.

    26

    Wild Boar

    Sus scrofa

    The ancestor of the domestic pig — a powerfully built, tusked omnivore with coarse grey-black bristles that has recolonised much of Europe and Asia; a major game animal, agricultural pest, and ecological engineer whose rooting transforms forest floors.

    27

    Xerus

    Xerus inauris (Cape ground squirrel)

    An African ground squirrel of arid scrub and semi-deserts, with sandy or grayish fur, a long bushy tail, and a habit of using the tail as a parasol against the sun.

    28

    Zebra

    Equus quagga

    The most common and widespread zebra species, a grazing horse with vivid black-and-white striping that lives in family bands across the African savanna.

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