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A Disabled Raccoon Walks Again With Help From A Dog Friend And A Student-Made Wheelchair, His Determination And Friendship Inspire Hope

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Boone the raccoon was born with cerebral hypoplasia, which made it hard for him to walk until a group of engineering students at Kentucky’s Central Hardin High made a wheelchair for the animal

Odd couple Benton the Great Pyrenees and Boone the disabled raccoon are best friends helping each other make it through life with a positive attitude, writes people.

The duo lives at Nolin River Wildlife Sanctuary in Glendale, Kentucky — a sanctuary dedicated to nursing wild animals back to full health.

“Boone was diagnosed with a rare disorder, cerebral hypoplasia, that makes it very difficult for him to get around,” Mary Key, Nolin River’s founder, tells PEOPLE. “He came to us as a baby, and when it was time for him to start walking, I noticed there was a problem.”

Hoping to help Boone with his walking skills, Key looked up wheelchairs for animals on the internet but found that the nonprofit couldn’t afford the options available. So she reached out to a friend at nearby Central Hardin High to see if the school’s engineering students could help. The engineering teacher, Russ Pike, replied it was the perfect real-world project for his students.

“From the first time they brought Boone to class for the kids to meet him, they were fully on board. It’s pretty neat. Most of the time, you’re trying to get kids involved and engaged. Well, we had to reign them in because they were so excited,” Key says of the enthusiasm for the project.

Over the past few months, Boone regularly visited the high school so the engineering students could measure the raccoon for fittings and make adjustments to their prototypes. After a bit of tinkering, the students came up with a wheelchair — their third prototype — that worked for Boone.

“It’s amazing! The look on Boone’s face when we first put him in it … I was crying. He gets really engaged and gets a very purposeful look, and when he first moved in the chair, you could see him looking like this is different, and this is good,” Key says of Boone’s reaction to the custom creation. “He is absolutely adorable and unbelievably sweet, and now he can get around on his own.”

Now that Boone is free to move on his own, Key says he loves steering his wheelchair into the mud and playing in puddles under the watchful and caring eye of Benton the dog.

“He has this relationship with Benton. They love each other. Benton sits beside Boone most of the day, and if he’s not sitting right by him, he’s keeping an eye on him,” Key says of the unlikely friendship between the two animals. “It’s super cute. I’ll put Boone out in the yard, and Benton puts his paw over him. Boone doesn’t have any other animal companions on the ranch, so it’s really nice to see him with Benton. It’s true love.”

Key adds that while the goal at the sanctuary is always to release injured animals back into the wild once they’ve fully recovered, that’s not possible with Boone because he depends on his new wheelchair to get around.

“He couldn’t survive like that, but he’s pretty happy here. He’s neutered, and so he’s just so sweet, and he gets more attention than any other animal here from all the volunteers,” Key says of life at the sanctuary. “Watching him get around now with the chair … it’s just adorable.”

This story originally appeared on people.com

What five characteristics do all animals have in common?

What five characteristics do all animals have in common?

In the following slides, we’ll explore the basic characteristics shared by all (or at least most) animals, from snails and zebras to mongooses and sea anemones: multicellularity, eukaryotic cell structure, specialized tissues, sexual reproduction, a blastula stage of development, motility, heterotrophy and possession …

 

 

What characteristics do all animals have in common quizlet?

The six characteristics that all organisms in the animal kingdom share are: they are multicellular, almost all can move, their cells have no cell wall, they have to hunt for their own food (consumers), they are eukaryotic, reproduce sexually-when two cells join to form off spring and their cells lack chloroplasts.

What 4 characteristics do all animals share?

 

Most animals share these characteristics: sensory organs, movement, and internal digestion. All of them are illustrated in Figure below. Animals can detect environmental stimuli, such as light, sound, and touch. Stimuli are detected by sensory nerve cells.

What are the 7 characteristics of all animals?

These are the seven characteristics of living organisms.
  • 1 Nutrition. Living things take in materials from their surroundings that they use for growth or to provide energy.
  • 2 Respiration.
  • 3 Movement.
  • 4 Excretion.
  • 5 Growth.
  • 6 Reproduction.
  • 7 Sensitivity.

What are the 6 characteristics common to all animals?

They are as follows:

 
  • All animals are made up of cells that do not have cell walls.
  • All animals are multicellular organisms.
  • Most animals reproduce sexually.
  • All animals are capable of self-propelled motion at some point in their lives.
  • All animals are heterotrophic and must consume other organisms for energy.

What protein do all animals have in common?

The exctracellular protein collagen (making the most abundant extracellular protein in animals) which is required in multicellular organisms to keep the cells together, which is exclusive to animals. Most enzymes responsible for metabolic pathways.

What are the 3 characteristics of animals?

Characteristics of Animals

  • Animals are multicellular organisms.
  • Animals are eukaryotic.
  • Animals are heterotrophic.
  • Animals are generally motile.
  • Animals possess specialized sensory organs such as eyes, ears, nose, skin, and tongue.
  • Animals reproduce sexually.

What are the basic characteristics of all animals?

In the following slides, we’ll explore the basic characteristics shared by all (or at least most) animals, from snails and zebras to mongooses and sea anemones: multicellularity, eukaryotic cell structure, specialized tissues, sexual reproduction, a blastula stage of development, motility, heterotrophy and possession of an advanced nervous system.

What do all animals have in common with each other?

Sexual reproduction is another characteristic shared by most, but not all, animals. Regardless of species, all animals share multicellularity, which means their bodies consist of multiple cells. This sets animals apart from organisms, such as single-celled algae, fungi, bacteria and other basic life forms.

What do plants and animals have in common?

Most plants are also multicellular, so although this is a characteristic shared by all animals, it is not one unique to animals.Every animal on the planet is a eukaryote. A eukaryote is an organism that consists of cells that have membrane-bound nuclei and organelles.

What are the characteristics of the animal kingdom?

All animals are eukaryotic, multicellular organisms, and most animals have complex tissue structure with differentiated and specialized tissue. Animals are heterotrophs; they must consume living or dead organisms since they cannot synthesize their own food and can be carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, or parasites.

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