Many animals protect themselves through camouflage. Their colorings blend into their natural habitat. This helps them to either hide from their predator or prey. Lions hide in the dried grass in order to sneak up on their anticipated meal. The coat of lions matches the color of the dead grass; the grass is also high enough to cover the lions.
Each environment causes camouflage to appear differently. Where most of the land is covered in snow and ice, the animals tend to be white or gray. Deserts have animals with a more sandy color, light brown. Grasslands and trees that are home to species lend their green color to the camouflage of the animals. Some animals make themselves look like other objects instead of blending in with the surrounding color. There are animals that look like leafs, sticks, even rocks.
The changing of seasons usually means that animals are no longer camouflaged. If an animal lives in a green grassland, there is a good chance that the animal will have a green or brown coloring. During the winter it may snow and cover all of the green. The animal would then stick out from the snow if he was still brown. The only way to really blend in with the changing scenery is to grow a new coat of fur since animals fur is composed of dead cells. This new coat would camouflage them in the snow, but when spring comes along, they lose their white, winter fur and grow back the brown fur.
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