The Natural World
Animals
From great white sharks to snow leopards, migratory birds to deep-sea creatures — the extraordinary diversity of animal life on Earth, one Wikipedia species article at a time.
Auto-scroll Animals Wikipedia articles — free, no account needed
Start Drifting — AnimalsEarth is home to an estimated 8.7 million species — and Wikipedia has detailed articles on tens of thousands of them. ScrollDrift's Animals topic streams Wikipedia species articles on auto-scroll, pulling from birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, amphibians, invertebrates, and more.
Each article covers the species's taxonomy, physical description, habitat, behavior, diet, reproduction, conservation status, and distribution range. It's a way to passively absorb the breadth of natural history — to learn that the mantis shrimp can punch with the force of a bullet, or that the immortal jellyfish can revert to its juvenile form after reaching maturity.
Set it on your phone during a commute, or on a second monitor while you work — and let the natural world drift past you, one species at a time.
What You'll Discover
Mammals
From blue whales to pygmy shrews — the full diversity of mammalian life, including primates, carnivores, cetaceans, ungulates, and the extraordinary evolutionary radiations of bats and rodents.
Birds
Over 10,000 species of birds — migration, song, plumage, nest construction, and the evolutionary history from theropod dinosaurs to modern passerines.
Reptiles & Amphibians
Crocodilians, lizards, snakes, turtles, frogs, and salamanders — the ectothermic vertebrates that preceded and outlived the dinosaurs.
Marine Life
Sharks, rays, whales, octopuses, and the teeming diversity of coral reef ecosystems — the oceans that cover 71% of Earth's surface.
Frequently Asked Questions
What animals does ScrollDrift cover?
ScrollDrift streams Wikipedia species articles covering mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, amphibians, insects, arachnids, and more — the full breadth of animal life.
Is ScrollDrift free for the Animals topic?
Yes. All topics are completely free with no account needed. Content is from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.