How do animals protect themselves from the cold?
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- For mammals without hair, insulation is accomplished by blubber, a thick layer of fat tissue which helps to insulate an animal's body because fat does not transfer heat as well as muscle and skin. This blubber may be two feet thick in some whales!
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Explanation:
The fat that is absorbed is stored as energy, but also works as insulation protecting the body and cells underneath it from the cold. This is why animals that live in really cold parts of the world, like seals or whales, may have a layer of warm blubber to keep the heat inside their body.
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