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Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Golden Poison Dart Frog

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Red-legged tortoise

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Small anteaters

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

jaguar

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The loudest terrestrial creature, the howler monkey

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Cotton-crowned marmoset

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Night Monkeys

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Hung's ring penguins compete with South American cormorants for land to fish in the sea

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America
Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

fur seal

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Spectacled bears look for bird nests to eat eggs and nest in trees to rest

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Marine iguanas eat only seaweed

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Redstone crabs clean up parasites for marine iguanas

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Sheila's poison lizard only eats ten times a year

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Glow-breasted hummingbird

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The slowest animal in the world, the three-toed sloth, excretes only on the ground

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Dung golden turtle

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

tern

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Brown pelican

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Silverfish flock to the beach to fertilize and spawn, the survivors return to the sea, and two weeks later the eggs hatch into the sea with the tide.

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Asia

Lorises prey on crickets at night

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The Lai fox bat, navigating by sight and smell, hangs upside down branches during the day to rest, constantly waving its wings to cool down

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

White-handed gibbons, jumping between trees

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Red pandas also eat bamboo leaves

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Long-tailed macaques feed on seeds and crustaceans in the water, always watching to avoid the nagasawa dragons.

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Asian elephants eat for 13 hours a day, eating 150 kilograms of food, constantly fanning their ears to cool down

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Purple water pheasants live in groups to take care of their young birds, constantly swinging their white tail feathers to guard against osprey sneaking attacks when foraging

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The brown bear subspecies burrows to prey on pikas

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The clouded leopard is a master tree climber and hunts lorises

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The mother and son of the hornbill trap themselves in the tree hole and rely on the male hornbill to feed

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Big mudskipper

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Lao tall spiders, scurrying through dark burrows to prey on insects

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The three-spined proto-spearhead pit viper uses the heat senses and smell to prey on

Tibetan foxes prey on pikas

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The red-necked crane is nearly two meters tall, dancing and courting, and accompanying him for life

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

The stranded window crab eats sand to filter food

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

Spotted fish dogs circle in the air aim to dive into the water to catch fish

Fantastic Beasts of the Day in Latin America

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