var arrayFacts=[

"<b>Wolverines are careful eaters.</b><br><br>Even though its name means glutton, a wolverine never eats more than it needs. After a wolverine finishes its meal, it will spray the remains with musk and bury it, coming back later to finish it off.",
"<b>Wolverines are intelligent hunters.</b><br><br>Often wolverines need to be clever when going after larger prey. They will climb onto a rock or stump and wait until something comes along. Once their prey passes below them, they will pounce onto the animal's back, breaking or severing vital organs to bring it down.", 
"<b>In the snow wolverines have an advantage.</b><br><br>Their big furry feet act as snowshoes, enabling them to run down their prey.",
"<b>Although great hunters, wolverines are difficult to trap. </b><br><br>Wolverines are a difficult animal to trap--they will spring traps by dropping a stick on them or it may turn them upside down to set off the release. They have been known to drag the traps away and hide them elsewhere.",
"<b>Wolverines aren't frightened by size.</b><br><br>Extremely strong and aggressive, wolverines will drive bears, cougars and wolves from their kill. Their large claws and foot pads allow them to chase prey easily across the snow. They are also capable of bringing down prey five times their size.",



"<b>They can weasel their way into anything.</b><br><br>Its long, low, sloping body and small head allows the European common weasel to fit into small openings. If a weasel sees a mouse that ducks into its hole, it just goes right down after it.<br><br>When it catches its prey, it savagely bites the back of its head until it kills or stuns it. It will always eat the head and brain first before feasting on the rest of its victim. Smaller weasels tend to be more lively and vicious than larger ones.",
"<b>Name changes</b><br><br>The weasel and the ermine are the same animal. The mammal's coat  changes with the season.  In its white winter coat, it is known as an ermine; in its summer coat, it is the brown weasel.",


"<b>She's having a baby.</b><br><br>Female ferrets sometimes need to get pregnant.  If a female ferret does not breed while in heat, she can develop a serious illness and may die as a result.  From March to August, female ferrets can go into heat more than once. If the ferret does not mate during this time, she will remain in heat for up to 160 days.<br><br> This can cause the ferret to develop aplastic anemia due to regression of the bone marrow. Anemia can lead to severe illness and even death. This is why it is important to sterilize female ferrets, which are not being used for breeding purposes.",
"<b>Haven't seen the last of them.</b><br><br>The black-footed ferret was actually extinct in the wild.  They were actually thought to be completely extinct until 1981 when a colony was found in Wyoming.  The black-footed ferrets were captured and sent to a captive breeding center.<br><br>  As a result of the captive breeding program, black-footed ferrets now live at seven different sites in the USA, including sites in Montana, Wyoming, Arizona, South Dakota, and along the Colorado/Utah border, as well as in Chihuahua, Mexico.",
"<b>My first pet was...</b><br><br>The ferret is a small, furry animal that resembles a weasel.  Ferrets were domesticated, and then used as pets, by the Ancient Egyptians nearly 5000 years ago!",
"<b>Ready...set...go.</b><br><br>The fastest ferret ran 32 feet in 12.59 seconds.  Ferrets are popular pets because they are playful, entertaining, and enjoy interacting with everyone in the family.  They enjoy exploring new territory and can travel around their homes and yards quickly.<br><br> The fastest ferret won the Ferret Racing Championships in 1999. The ferret, Warhol, attended the event in the UK with its owners and two other family ferrets.",
"<b>Home on the range.</b><br><br>Prairie dogs help ferrets survive.  With the destruction of prairie dogs the numbers of ferrets had dropped below 100 in 1985.  Black-footed ferrets make their homes in abandoned prairie dog burrows.<br><br> The ferret's diet consists of prairie dogs, which they hunt and kill within their burrows.  Of the original 100 million acres of black-footed ferret habitat, only 2 million acres remain.",


"<b>Do you have health insurance?</b><br><br>A badger was saved by a CAT scan. A badger cub was found asleep in the woods after being abandoned by her parents. When taken to the wildlife center they noticed she had an unusual head shape and was unsteady on her feet. The hospital agreed to do a CAT scan and the tests revealed severe fluid on the brain. The operation was a total success and the badger, now named CT, was able to return to the wild.",
"<b>A few extra rooms.</b><br><br>Badgers live in a sett.  A sett is a system of underground tunnels with chambers for nesting and waste materials. In England, an excavation revealed hundreds of underground tunnels that contained 50 chambers and 178 entrances. It was estimated that the construction of the sett required the badgers to remove 70 tons of soil.",
"<b>Ditch digger.</b><br><br>The badger is an excellent digging machine.  The badger is able to dig faster than any animal, even a man with a shovel. There are accounts of badgers who have popped up through pavement while excavating. Digging is how the badger catches its prey. It will tunnel after ground-dwelling rodents with such amazing speed that they have no chance of escape.",

];