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The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The Amazon Rainforest is the world's largest rainforest, with warm and humid air currents blowing from the Atlantic Ocean and encountering the Andes Mountains blocking their rise, bringing in large amounts of precipitation, and the rainy season forms the world's largest floodplain.

The black vulture waits for the jaguar to drink water to rest and grab the carrion.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon
The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Giant otters are the most vocal otters.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The arapaima, up to a meter long, jumps out of the water to feed on insects in trees, also known as Arowana.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The largest predator in the Amazon, the Caiman can reach up to six meters in length.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

South American pit viper, disguised as a prey on rats, kills with poisonous fangs and swallows them whole from the head.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Wang Lian, the leaves are huge, more than two meters in diameter.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

It grows and multiplies quickly, occupies the surface of the water, and is a favorite food of manatees.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon
The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Pauline lamp fish

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Angel fish

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Axefish

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Catfish, whose facial tentacles probe prey in muddy water.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Leaffish are masters of disguise, creating a vacuum by extending and folding their mouths and sucking on prey.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Black stingray with stinging spines on the tail.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The Amazon pufferfish, also known as the pink freshwater dolphin, is the world's largest freshwater dolphin, with pink skin as an adult and excelling at hunting in muddy waters, with a focused sound on the head to assist the puffer fish in hunting and navigation.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Red-faced bald monkey with a jaw strong enough to bite open a nut.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The stinging rat tracks the monkey herd on the surface to pick up fruit.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Dark Monkey, monogamous, male monkey responsible for the care of the baby monkey.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

The red swordtail splash fish, jump on the weeping leaves together to lay eggs on it, and the male uses the tail fin to hit the water surface and splash the water on the leaves, keeping the eggs moist until they hatch.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Discus fish, spawning deep in the jungle, hatches with adults sucking on the mucus secreted by the adult skin, called discus fish milk.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Beetle larvae eat jungle fungi. Marching ants sweep across the rainforest surface, destroying animals and insects encountered on the road, and even hives in trees, fighting scorched earth, and constantly moving forward.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

Parrot snakes, with slender bodies, travel through branches to prey on frogs, lizards and birds.

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

ocelot

The Wild Equatorial Amazon

West cat

The Wild Equatorial Amazon