var arrayFacts=[

"<b>Don't stick your tongue out at me.</b><br><br>Anteaters flick their tongues in and out for food 160 times per minute. Their unusually long snouts house a worm-like tongue 16 inches long.<br><br>They have no teeth, but their tongue has tiny spines which trap prey and prevent it from escaping.  They can eat up to 30,000 insects a day.",

"<b>Handstands.</b><br><br>Anteaters walk on their knuckles. They have long, non-retractable hook-like claws which curve under their paws when they walk.<br><br>If they walked on their paws, they’d cut themselves with their claws. They use their claws to dig for food and to defend themselves.",

"<b>Tasty!</b><br><br>An anteater's tongue is nearly two feet long. This lets him get into tree trunks and under rocks where his meal - the ants - are hiding.<br><br> An anteater can't see very well, but its sense of smell is 40 times greater than that of a human. The tongue is coated with a sticky substance that deposits the ants in the anteater's stomach. They have no teeth to chew.",

"<b>Piggy back ride.</b><br><br>The female giant anteater gives birth while standing upright. Using her tail for support, the female gives birth to only one offspring a year.<br><br> The newborn rides on its mother’s back for the first year of its life.  Since the mother doesn’t have teeth or fingers, the baby must crawl up the mother's back into position.",

"<b>Where's my blankie?</b><br><br>The giant anteater has a huge bushy tail almost 3 feet long. The giant anteater is approximately 7 feet long, and weighs up to 140 pounds.<br><br> Their tail is made of straw-like hair which grows up to 15 inches long.  When resting, the anteater wraps its tail around itself, like a blanket.",

];

