Musculo

Musculo
Músculos (vista lateral): Organos fibrosos que crean el movimiento cuando contraerse.
Braquial anterior: Musculo del lado exterior del brazo.
Bíceps braquial: Musculo a los dos grupos de porciones, relativo al brazo.
Supinador largo : Musculo que permite la rotacion de la mano.
Cubital posterior: Musculo relativo al codo.
Tríceps braquial: Musculo a los tres grupos de porciones, relativo al brazo.
Pectoral mayor : Musculo voluminoso del pecho.
Oblicuo externo: Musculo cuyo las fibras son oblicuos.
Recto largo del abdomen: Musculo del abdomen cuyo las fibras son verticales.
Tensor de la fascia lata: Membrana muscular que permite alargar.
Sartorio : Musculo que cubre la pierna sobre el muslo y el muslo sobre el pelvis.
Recto anterior : Musculo vertical del lado interno del muslo.
Vasto externo: Musculo major situado del lado externo del muslo.
Tibial anterior: Musculo de la pierna, por debajo la rodilla.
Extensor común de los dedos : Musculo que permite la flexion de los dedos.
Peroneo largo : Musculo situado entre el péroné y los metatarsianos.
Sóleo: Musculo extensor del pie.
Gemelos (internos y externos): Dos musculos que forman la pantorrilla.
Fascia lata: Membrana que envuelve y sostiene un musculo o un grupo de musculos.
Bíceps del muslo: Musculo del muslo a los dos grupos de porciones.
Glúteo mayor : Musculo largo de las nalgas.
Glúteo medio : Musculo situado al nivel de las nalgas.
Dorsal ancho: Musculo largo relativo a la espalda.
Redondo mayor: Musculo largo relativo al movimiento de la hembra.
Redondo menor : Pequeno musculo de la hembra.
Infraspinoso: Musculo situado por debajo espina dorsal.
Trapecio : Musculo de la espalda que une el omoplato a la columna vértebral.
Esternocleidomastoideo : Musculo del cuello que unen el esternon a la clavicula y relativo al apofisis mastoides.

Foto :

EN : Goat
FR : Chèvre
ES : Cabra

Cabra

Domestic goats are one of the oldest domesticated species. For thousands of years, goats have been used for their milk, meat, hair, and skins all over the world. Most goats naturally have two horns, of various shapes and sizes depending on the breed. While horns are a predominantly male feature, some breeds of goats have horned females. Polled (hornless goats) are not uncommon and there have been incidents of polycerate goats (having as many as eight horns), although this is a genetic rarity thought to be inherited. Their horns are made of living bone surrounded by keratin and other proteins and are used for defense, dominance, and territoriality.

Goats are ruminants. They have a four-chambered stomach consisting of the rumen, the reticulum, the omasum, and the abomasum. Goats have horizontal slit-shaped pupils, an adaptation which increases peripheral depth perception. Because goats' irises are usually pale, the pupils are much more visible than in animals with horizontal pupils but very dark irises, such as sheep, cattle and most horses.

Both male and female goats have beards, and many types of goats may have wattles, one dangling from each side of the neck. Some breeds of sheep and goats appear superficially similar, but goat tails are short and point up, whereas sheep tails hang down and are usually longer, though some are short, and some long ones are docked.