Product Description
Baby Cheetah ~ Plastic Replica ~ F251-B206
Perfect Baby Cheetah for the Creative play for young children and for school projects. Model animals like this Cheetah help you bring nature to life! Highly detailed, these toy figures come in a huge variety including Wildlife, Dinosaurs, and Pets! Perfect for learning, play and collection the only limit is your imagination. All our toy figurines are educational grade, highly detailed, true to life, and of the highest quality!
Cheetah Toy Model
Toy Cheetah Replica! Super High Quality Plastic Model Cheetah Gift. Hold the Greyhound of the Desert in the palm of your hand! Great Cheetah Miniature for anyone who likes Cheetahs! Perfect Gift for the shelf of a young Cheetah fan or the Office Desk of a Cheetah Admirer. Fastest Cat around, Show the fierceness of the Big Cat as Home or Office Décor. Awesome Gift!
Cheetah Great Office Desk Toy
The cheetah is a remarkable piece of natural engineering with a series of evolutionary adaptations perfectly suited to its fast-paced life. Cheetahs have the longest legs of any cat, enabling a stride of up to 10m in length – perfect for long chases over open ground. Their lower hind-leg bones are secured tightly together by fibrous tissue which enables explosive acceleration, high-speed stability and protects against stress injuries. Their unretractable claws may mean that they’re not very good at climbing trees, but they serve a purpose not unlike sprinters' spikes.
The cheetah is a large cat of the subfamily Felinae that occurs in Southern, North and East Africa, and a few localities in Iran. It is the fastest land animal. The cheetah is characterised by a slender body, deep chest, spotted coat, small rounded head, black tear-like streaks on the face, long thin legs and long spotted tail. Its lightly built, slender form is in sharp contrast with the robust build of the big cats, making it more similar to the cougar. Cheetahs are active mainly during the day, with hunting their major activity. Adult males are sociable despite their territoriality, forming groups called coalitions.