Quizzes

Can You Name All These Striped Animals From One Image?




Image: Buena Vista Images / DigitalVision / Getty Images

About This Quiz

It’s a dog eat dog world out there, and dogs generally have it easy compared to most animals. It’s hard making a go of it in the wild! You have to worry about the weather, finding shelter, finding food, loss of habitat, hunters, predators, all kinds of things. It’s not easy being a wild animal at all. That’s why nature goes out of its way to try to ensure animals have a variety of skills and defenses at their disposal to give them an edge in the game of life. 

This post: Can You Name All These Striped Animals From One Image?

Some animals are super fast and can outrun a human. Some have jaws powerful enough to crush bone. Some climb trees, some fly and some excel at blending in. Striped animals, for instance, use their coloration as camouflage very often. And that can be used to hide from predators just as often as it can be used to hide from prey. Some strips warn you that an animal is dangerous; some may be useful in finding a mate. Some maybe have no purpose that we understand at all. 

Whatever the case, there are a lot of striped animals in the world. How many do you think you can identify? Time to find out!


Image: Buena Vista Images / DigitalVision / Getty Images

About This Quiz

It’s a dog eat dog world out there, and dogs generally have it easy compared to most animals. It’s hard making a go of it in the wild! You have to worry about the weather, finding shelter, finding food, loss of habitat, hunters, predators, all kinds of things. It’s not easy being a wild animal at all. That’s why nature goes out of its way to try to ensure animals have a variety of skills and defenses at their disposal to give them an edge in the game of life. 

This post: Can You Name All These Striped Animals From One Image?

Some animals are super fast and can outrun a human. Some have jaws powerful enough to crush bone. Some climb trees, some fly and some excel at blending in. Striped animals, for instance, use their coloration as camouflage very often. And that can be used to hide from predators just as often as it can be used to hide from prey. Some strips warn you that an animal is dangerous; some may be useful in finding a mate. Some maybe have no purpose that we understand at all. 

Whatever the case, there are a lot of striped animals in the world. How many do you think you can identify? Time to find out!


NNehring / E+ / Getty Images
Which animal looks like a zebra but is more closely related to a giraffe?

Mountain zebra

Zorse

Okapi

Okapi are sometimes called forest giraffes or zebra giraffes. They’re a cousin of the giraffe everyone knows and loves and are native to Central Africa. They’re currently considered an endangered animal with habitat loss and hunting being major threats to them.

Quagga

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Lauren Metcalfe / Moment / Getty Images
You can find these little guys all over North America and one species is in Siberia. Name it!

Groundhog

White-striped lemming

Striped squirrel

Chipmunk

Chipmunks look a lot like little striped squirrels with a smaller tail. Why are they called chipmunks? It may come from a Native American word that means “red squirrel,” but it’s hard to say for sure. For added fun, some people call these little guys “timber tigers.”

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José Rentería Cobos photography / Moment / Getty Images
It’s not the king of the jungle, but it’s close. What is it?

Tiger

Tigers are one of the most easily recognizable animals in the world. There are probably less than 4,000 wild tigers left in the world, and it’s estimated there may actually be more in private homes in the United States than in the wild.

Leopard

Jaguar

Ocelot

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KenCanning / E+ / Getty Images
Which of these smelly animals do you want to keep your distance from?

Polecat

Skunk

Skunks are the scourge of many homeowners in the world thanks to the fact that they adapt pretty well to living in urban areas, and they love to dig into the trash. Their infamous stink is sprayed from glands, which they can aim and fire at a distance of about 10 feet.

Striped gopher

Lemming

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Katrina Baker Photography / Moment / Getty Images
If you don’t have one of these in your house, odds are someone in your neighborhood does. What is it?

Tabby cat

Tabby cats aren’t actually a breed of cat so much as a kind of cat, if that makes sense. Any cat with the striped pattern is generally considered a tabby cat, and they usually tend to be mutts, which is to say not a purebred but a mix of other breeds.

Maine Coon

Sphinx cat

Abyssinian

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Russell Burden / Photodisc / Getty Images
This animal tends to play dead when it gets attacked. Do you know what it is?

Aardwolf

Striped dingo

Striped hyena

Striped hyenas are the smallest of the various hyena breeds in the world, which means they can still get up to around 120 lbs when they’re fully grown. Striped hyenas are pretty historical as animals go and are even mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.

Wild dog

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Scubagirl85 via WikiCommons
Which of these poisonous creatures lives on the ocean floor?

Blue-ringed octopus

Zebra nautilus

Striped man-o-war

Striped pajama squid

The striped pajama squid is remarkably small, only about 3 inches long at full size. The white stripes on the squid reflect lights while the colored stripes are actually chromatophores or pigment-filled cells that the squid can actively flash.

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© Debi Dalio / Moment / Getty Images
To find this animal in the wild, you’d have to visit Madagascar. What is it?

Tarsier

Ring-tailed lemur

Ring-tailed lemurs are social animals that live in big family groups with upwards of 30 members. Female lemurs are the leaders of the family groups, while males will fight for dominance among one another by using scent-glands to have stink fights with their smelly tails.

Mandrill

Galago

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Kativ / E+ / Getty Images
Do you know which snake is one of the most common in all of North America?

Ribbon snake

Northern water snake

Milk snake

Garter snake

Garter snakes range from Central America all the way to Northern Canada. For years it was assumed that they were entirely harmless, but more recent evidence shows that they actually are venomous. That said, they produce so little venom and it’s so mild that they may as well be non-venomous.

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Paul Starosta / Stone / Getty Images
You can find this skunk-like creature in Africa. Name it!

Striped polecat

Striped polecats are more closely related to weasels and badgers than skunks. However, like skunks, they employ a potent and offensive spray from their posterior to defend themselves.

Stoat

Eurasian mink

African civet

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Richard Bartz via WikiCommons
Do you know which of these striped animals is sometimes called a zebra mouse?

Forest gerbil

Coypu

Striped grass mouse

Striped grass mice typically live in grasslands in sub-Saharan Africa. There are 11 different species of these small animals, and just one of them can be found in the North of Africa.

Murinae

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Robin Smith / The Image Bank / Getty Images
Tell us the name of this nocturnal herbivore.

Bongo

The bongo is a species of antelope that’s generally divided up as Western and Eastern bongos. The colored portion of their coat is usually a chestnut brown and darkens as the animal ages. Weirdly enough, the pigment can actually be rubbed off.

Waterbuck

Nyala

Common eland

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Lingbeek / E+ / Getty Images
These guys lose their stripes as they age. What are they?

Grey’s peccary

Wild boar piglets

Wild boar, like many species related to pigs, tend to have stripes when they’re very young and lose them as they age. Technically speaking, the wild pigs you might find in North America aren’t actually wild boar but probably hybrids with feral pigs.

Skunk pig

Javan warty pig

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Mark Newman / The Image Bank / Getty Images
Which of these creatures is known as a sachavaca or “bush cow” in Spanish?

Zephyr hog

Juvenile capybara

Aye-aye

Baby lowland tapir

Lowland tapirs tend to be a solid grey or brown as adults, but the young calves are a light chestnut brown with white spots and stripes that fade out as the animal gets older. Despite the somewhat awkward appearance of tapirs, they’re actually pretty swift on their feet, and they’re even good swimmers.

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namibelephant / E+ / Getty Images
During the dry season, these animals are known to feed on watermelon. What are they?

Kudu

Kudu, which can be lesser kudu or greater kudu, is an antelope species native to eastern Africa. Kudu horns have been used to make musical instruments that are appropriately called kudu horns.

Giant eland

Wildebeest

Bongo

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TED MEAD / Stone / Getty Images
Which of these animals feeds almost exclusively on termites?

Striped possum

Numbat

The numbat is a small Australian marsupial and is an endangered species these days though it used to range all across the South of the continent. Even though they have teeth, they rarely use them. Instead, they use their very sticky tongue to lick up termites and swallow them whole.

Plains mongoose

Verigated Asian badger

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Joao Paulo Burini / Moment / Getty Images
These creatures can be found all over the world today but they came from Asia originally. What is it?

Yellow jacket

Hornet

Wasp

Honeybee

Honey bees are arguably one of the most recognizable insects in the world. There has been some fear in recent years that if bees were to die out, human civilization might follow since bees couldn’t pollinate plants, but science doesn’t back that theory up and, in fact, most crops don’t require insect pollination at all.

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Gabrielle Therin-Weise / Photographer’s Choice RF / Getty Images
Another name for this creature is the balbok. What is it?

Dik-dik

Impala

Mountain nyala

The mountain nyala is a species of antelope native to the Ethiopian Highlands. Only males have horns. They’re very much a part of Ethiopian culture, and they’re even featured on Ethiopia’s 10 cent coin.

Savannah antelope

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Buena Vista Images / Photodisc / Getty Images
Which animal is known to run at speeds of over 40 miles per hour?

Bongo

Giant eland

The giant eland is a large antelope that can weigh over 2,000 pounds, which is pretty intense for an animal that can also hit 40 miles per hour at a run. In fact, the giant eland is the largest species of antelope in the world.

Elk

Mangrove antelope

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Federica Grassi / Moment Open / Getty Images
Another name for this animal is the pajama tang. Name it!

Striped surgeonfish

The striped surgeonfish lives in reefs throughout the world. For the most part, they only eat algae to stay alive, but, in a pinch, they’ll also try to eat small crustaceans. Everyone loves seafood.

Lionfish

Clownfish

Striped grill fish

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Gerard Soury / The Image Bank / Getty Images
Which of these looks just like a poisonous animal even though it’s not poisonous itself?

Banded sea snake

Ribbon snake

Harlequin snake eel

The harlequin snake eel, also known as the ringed snake eel or banded snake eel, is not a snake at all even though it looks like one. It also looks like the venomous banded sea krait, likely as a self-defense mechanism.

Blake’s eel

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Humberto Ramirez / Moment / Getty Images
This popular aquarium fish is also venomous. What is it?

Striped monkfish

Kingfish

Lionfish

Lionfish are also called firefish, tastyfish, and butterfly-cod, among other names. Their fin rays contain a toxic that causes nausea, vomiting, fever, convulsions, and other symptoms in humans and rarely can be fatal.

Pacific reel fish

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Ansel Fong via WikiCommons
Which tiny creature only grows to 12 millimeters in length?

Banana frog

Yellow fire frog

Tiger frog

Yellow-striped pygmy eleuth

The yellow-striped pygmy eleuth is a tiny frog from Cuba. When it comes time to mate, these little critters can produce a high-pitched mating call 278 times per minute.

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Ger Bosma / Moment Open / Getty Images
This creature is found all over Europe. Name it!

Stink bug

Italian striped bug

The Italian striped bug is what’s known as a shield bug thanks to the large, shield-like carapace it sports. The bright colors are a warning to predators since; as a relative of the stink bug, these insects apparently taste pretty awful.

Tiger beetle

Ladder bug

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Robert Pickett / Corbis Documentary / Getty Images
Do you know which of these is very popular as a house pet?

California kingsnake

California kingsnakes are pretty chill as far as snakes go and don’t pose a threat to humans, which makes them excellent pets for people who are into snakes. Even though they’re non-venomous, they can still bite if they get angry.

Corn snake

Garter snake

Western milk snake

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Megan McCarty via WikiCommons
If you live near pawpaw trees, you’ve likely seen this creature. What is it?

Harlequin butterfly

Black and white dovetail

Zebra swallowtail

Zebra swallowtail butterflies live in Canada and the United States. The caterpillars of this species feed exclusively on leaves from pawpaw trees, so the butterflies are never far away. Conversely, if you see some of the butterflies, that means you’re probably near pawpaw if you’ve never tried the fruit and want to.

Regent butterfly

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Paul Souders / Stone / Getty Images
Which of these animals might eat a quarter of million termites in a night?

River hyena

Aardwolf

Even though aardwolves look like hyenas, they tend to act a bit more like aardvarks. They only eat insects as opposed to large prey, and their sticky tongue helps them raid termite mounds and other bug nests so they can slurp up tiny prey rather than chomp down on big animals as you might expect.

Desert fox

African wild dog

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Kristian Bell / Moment / Getty Images
These snakes can be found throughout North and South America as well as Asia. What are they?

Garden snake

Zebra snake

Coral snake

Coral snakes are some of the most common venomous snakes in the world and also pretty easy to recognize thanks to their color patterns. That said, they’re only “generally” easy to identify since there are so many species of coral snake and so many species of snakes that mimic this color pattern that, unless you’re an expert, knowing for sure if you found a venomous snake could be risky.

Banded krait

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Bering Land Bridge National Preserve via WikiCommons
Which of these animals would you be most likely to find in the Arctic?

Ribbon seal

Ribbon seals have some of the most striking markings of any animal and, from a distance, actually can look like giant penguins as a result. In general, they are pretty unimpressed by humans and don’t often flee when people approach since they have such little contact with them.

Harbor seal

Atlantic sea lion

Golden seal

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Yiming Chen / Moment / Getty Images
This colorful creature can also be called a beaked coralfish. Do you recognize it?

Surgeonfish

Clownfish

Copperband butterflyfish

The copperband butterflyfish gets its other name, beaked coralfish, thanks to two very obvious facts about them. The coralfish part is because they live in coral reefs, and the beaked part is obvious from the picture; these guys have pointy little beak mouths.

Lionfish

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Martin Barraud / Stone / Getty Images
There are three different species of this easily recognizable animal. What is it?

Mule

Donkey

Morgan horse

Zebra

Along with tigers, zebras are likely the most familiar striped animal in the world. In Africa, there are three species of zebra — plains zebra, mountain zebra, and Grevy’s zebra. Among those, there are several more subspecies.

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Do you know which of these animals is sterile?

Okapi

Wild donkey

Zorse

A zorse is what you get when you cross a zebra stallion and a horse mare. For some reason, there is just an endless supply of names for horse/zebra hybrids, including zebrula, zebrule, hebra, horbra, zebrinny, zebret, and a few others.

Appaloosa

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Francesca Grossi via WikiCommons
Which of these is found in oceans all over the world?

Vaquita

Striped dolphin

Striped dolphins are fairly commonplace as dolphins go and exhibit most of the same behaviors people familiar with dolphins would recognize. They can be acrobatic, jumping and flipping out of the water, and they can travel in massive pods sometimes with thousands of dolphins together.

Harbor porpoise

River dolphin

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By Eve Livesey / Moment / Getty Images
This animal is sometimes called a marshbuck. What is it?

Sitatunga

The sitatunga is an antelope you might find in swampland throughout central Africa. Because they’re swamp dwellers, they’ve uniquely adapted to their habitat and have rubbery, shaggy fur which repels water and tends to resist mud and sludge buildup as well.

Wildebeest

Impala

White-tailed deer

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Colors and shapes of underwater world / Moment Open / Getty Images
People used to think this fish could swim at nearly 70 miles per hour but not anymore. What is it?

Grey swordfish

Blue marlin

Atlantic sailfish

There’s no doubt that Atlantic sailfish are big and fast, reaching lengths of over 10 feet. One hundred years ago, data suggested these fish could sustain speeds of 70 miles per hour, but more modern research has knocked that speed estimate way down to about 22 miles per hour.

Sawfish

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Kispál Attila via WikiCommons
Do you know which small antelope is sometimes called a marking deer in Liberia?

Zebra duiker

Zebra duikers are a small species of antelope that grow to be at most about 40 to 45 lbs. Thanks to extra-strong bones around their nose and jaw, zebra duikers can chew through hard-shelled fruits and nuts in the wild. It also helps during confrontations when they get hit in the face by rivals.

Dik-dik

Eastern bongo

Lowland capybara

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Grigory Morozov via WikiCommons
This is one of the rarest carnivores in the entire world. Name it!

Palm civet

Reticulated weasel

Grandidier’s mongoose

Grandidier’s mongoose lives in Madagascar, but just barely. This animal has an incredibly small range and can only be found in the tiniest area of land in Madagascar’s Parc National de Tsimanampetsotsa.

Eurasian badger

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Esther Böck via WikiCommons
Do you know this small animal that has quills?

Highland streaked tenrec

Highland streaked tenrecs are native to Madagascar. They look like little shrews, but they’re not the same family of animal. Even though they’re mammals, tenrecs also have a cloaca like birds or reptiles, which is a single opening through which they eliminate all their waste.

Tiger shrew

Hallow rat

Ground possum

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Charles J Sharp via WikiCommons
Which of these creatures from Madagascar is also called a fanaloka?

Meyer’s striped cat

Striped tenrec

Polecat

Striped civet

The striped civet is a small, cat-like animal only found in Madagascar. They weigh just under 5 pounds, but despite their small size, they’re actually the second largest carnivore in Madagascar.

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j03yYunG Aquariums via YouTube
This turtle from the Southern U.S. is sometimes kept as a pet. Name it!

Tiger turtle

Striped mud turtle

Striped mud turtles call places like Florida and Georgia home. Because they’re omnivorous and pretty easy to care for, fans of turtles like to keep them as pets. They’ll eat algae, plants, insects, fish, and people have apparently even seen them looking for food in cow dung.

Red-eared slider

Alligator snapping turtle

FINISH QUIZ

You Got:


/40

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