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Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

author:Don't fool around

Author: Squirrel Sae Urine Shrimp

The article has been authorized by the author, and the theft must be investigated!

Pokémon from the Arora region is here again! Last time, The Shrimp Teacher introduced the Sun and Moon version of the Mizoya, the Mongoose Anderson and other roadside monsters, and today the Shrimp Sensei Teacher wants to popularize what cute Pokémon to everyone? Let's take a look!

Oricorio

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

The prototype is a bird of the Drepanidini family. Pipe-tongued finches have evolved different body sizes and ecological niches in Hawaii, with different habits such as eating seeds, eating nectar, eating insects, and eating snails, and have different attributes and characteristics according to different origins. The setting is fabulous, very much in line with real creatures, and it's fun to connect with different dancers.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

The beak of the flower dancing bird is thin and curved, and such a mouth is characteristic of the pipe tongue finches that eat nectar. This also fits its illustrated description.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Image from photo.net

Another group of birds known for evolving multiple forms on the island is the Darwin finch of the Galapagos Islands. When will the PM be out of the Galapagos region (hey, wake up)...

The Cutiefly family

This one is my favorite, and the prototype is the baby bee fly (Anastoechus.spp), also called the velvet bee fly. The cutest insects. Not one of them.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Image from buzzap.jp

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Image from www.opsu.edu

Adult velvet bee flies feed on nectar, and the larvae parasitize eggs of the order Orthoptera. The Chinese honeysuckle (Anastoechus Chinensis) prefers the Locusta migratoria manilensis, which is very harmful to agriculture, so the velvet bee fly is a very good insect (big grunt tone).

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

The Rockruff family

Dogs you all know, I won't say.

Shrimp Ball Jun:—. —

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Weak Ding (Wishiwashi)

This Japanese name is very funny, it is weak plus mane (sardine). In the Sun and Moon Atlas of the Roaring Whale, it is written that "eat a ton of weak ding fish every day" (more than 3,000 a day), and it is eaten as soon as it appears, which is simply the saddest PM of the sun and the moon...

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

I'm not good at identifying fish, but according to The Shell Linki's article, sardines refer to some edible fish in the herring family, mainly sardines (Sardina.spp), sardinops.spp, and small sardines (Sardinella.spp), which can also be broadly referred to as Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) and some similar small fish.

Weak Dingfish will gather into schools of fish when they encounter danger, and their race value will be greatly increased (they can form the "Fish Counterattack" club with the Carp King and the Ugly Fish). This feature comes from the habit of sardines to gather in flocks to defend against predation.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Filmed by Doug Perrine

Many animals encounter predators in swarms. They move in unison, sometimes with patterns that weaken their contours and blend into the group, making it difficult for predators to choose targets. Each animal gathers for its own benefit (safety) and does not harden its anus with predators (self-denial), which is called the "selfish group."

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

It is often seen in documentaries that a large group of herbivores, although numerous, will only run away in front of lions. It may seem like a provocation to say this, but they can at least escape in a neat step, and humans will have a stampede in this situation...

The mareanie family

The prototype is the Acanthaster planci, also known as the crown of thorn starfish. The surface of the body is covered with stingers, feeding on polyps, crawling on coral reefs when preying, turning the digestive organs out (like turning over a pocket), and digesting the polyps.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Filmed by Georgette Douwma

The body under the good or bad star is actually equivalent to the digestive organ of the starfish. Long-spined starfish are very destructive, causing serious damage to the Great Barrier Reef and also in the South China Sea.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

The Mudbray family

Donkey you all know, I just...

Why doesn't Mudsdale call it "teasing you" (Tianjin dialect)? This PM prototype is a trailer and a ploughing horse, probably a Clydesdale breed, very strong, large weight can be tons. The mud on the legs presumably mimics the ornamental hairs on horses' hooves. It is also the prototype of The Barley Brother in Rainbow Pony.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Image from Wikipedia

Below is an Ardennes breed of horseback.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

See watermark for image source.

The heavy mud horse is 2.5 meters high and weighs 960 kilograms, this body shape is very much in line with the real horse, the flame horse weighs 95 kilograms, it feels like the two collide together, the flame horse is going to fly.

There is anthropomorphism!

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

The Dewpider family

The prototype is Argyroneta aquatica, known in English as the diving bell spider, and is one of the few spiders that can fully inhabit the water. It uses bubbles to make temporary "oxygen cylinders" and nests. Other small aquatic invertebrates, such as rotifers, are also commonly known as "water spiders", but they are not spiders at all.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

Image by Stephen Dalton

Drip spiders and water spiders are opposites. Spiders breathe air, the respiratory organs are book lungs located on both sides of the abdomen, and the water spider wraps the abdomen with bubbles when breathing underwater. The spider wraps its head in water, indicating that it breathes dissolved oxygen and that the respiratory organs are in the head.

Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

In this regard, the spider is more like some aquatic animals that can land, such as mudskippers, which can move on land, but it must always keep the gills moist.

Strongly recommend the public number of the Sesai Shrimp Teacher: "Squirrel Nest of The Urine Shrimp"! Scan the code to pay attention! Isn't it convenient!

Shrimp Maru Jun: After thinking about it, I think I should still come to a Pokemon how to be good...

Don't fool around

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Cute crying! Do the flower dancing birds of the Arora region also exist in reality?

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