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The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

In nature's food chain, there are animals that are born to face their nemesis. The British "Sun" reported that photography enthusiast Peter Brannon witnessed a wonderful scene of half-webbed sandpipers preying on a beach in Florida, USA, and recorded the footage of half-webbed sandpipers fighting sandworms.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

It was noon, and a half-wetted sandpiper accidentally found a long sandworm while foraging on the beach, which was a good meal for the half-webbed sandpiper, but the sandworm did not want to obediently become the other's food, and tried to resist.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

Peter said the sandworm was more than 30 centimeters long, and its body was very elastic, like a rubber band, sometimes shrinking and sometimes extending, refusing to become prey.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

Because the sandworm is very long, the half-webbed sandpiper cannot pull it out of the sand for a while, but the bird is also very hard, a look of determination, because its mouth is not long enough, so the bird sometimes puts its foot into the sand to borrow power, sometimes shakes its head, exerts more force, and sometimes tiptoes its feet, which looks very cute.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

Witnesses said that usually such a fight would end quickly, but this time the bird also felt that the bug did not want to give in so quickly.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms

After several rounds of fighting, the birds finally won, the bugs popped out like rubber bands, and the half-webbed sandpipers began to enjoy the food.

The half-webbed sandpiper shook its head and tiptoed, fighting 30 cm large sandworms