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When photographing crocodiles, foreign photographers filmed a stunning scene of a hungry leopard biting the crocodile's back. Caimans have been struggling to break free.

When a foreign photographer photographs a caiman, a stunning scene suddenly appears and is recorded by the camera. A hungry leopard pounces on the crocodile! The leopard immediately bit the crocodile, and the caiman was painfully bitten.

The Paraguayan caiman yacare (scientific name: Caiman yacare) is a crocodile in the genus Caiman in the family Crocodile family. The Paraguayan caiman is a medium-sized crocodile belonging to the family Alligator family. The body color is prominent, with a dark olive back and a light belly, yellow-green to white. There are prominent bony protrusions above the eyes. Paraguayan caimans are generally up to two meters long and weigh 60 kg. Paraguay's longest caiman is 2.7 meters long. The skull is long and triangular. There is a small stratum corneum on the scalp attached to the rough skull. The eyelids are visible and protruding from the center of the nodule. The trunk and tail have a scaly epithelium.

When photographing crocodiles, foreign photographers filmed a stunning scene of a hungry leopard biting the crocodile's back. Caimans have been struggling to break free.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="3" > hungry leopard bites the crocodile's back. </h1>

Paraguayan caimans prefer to live in tropical and subtropical rivers with slow flowing water, silt at the bottom of the river and abundant vegetation. Living in fresh water, you rarely leave the water. In drought conditions, you'll leave the water and bury yourself in the mud. It floats on the water during the day and moves at night. Adult Paraguayan caimans eat fish and other reptiles, amphibians and waterfowl. Male crocodiles have territory and rank. In winter, sometimes paraguayan caimans do not eat for up to two months. If they eat, they are greedy. It is widely distributed in South America as well as in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay.

When photographing crocodiles, foreign photographers filmed a stunning scene of a hungry leopard biting the crocodile's back. Caimans have been struggling to break free.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="9" > Caiman has been struggling to break free. </h1>

When photographing crocodiles, foreign photographers filmed a stunning scene of a hungry leopard biting the crocodile's back. Caimans have been struggling to break free.

The photographer said: "When we were shooting, we found that this jaguar was not in good physical condition, and there were several obvious wounds on the stomach. It seemed desperate for food, and its attack was swift, breaking free of the caiman in just a few seconds, quickly fleeing and disappearing. ”

When photographing crocodiles, foreign photographers filmed a stunning scene of a hungry leopard biting the crocodile's back. Caimans have been struggling to break free.

Paraguayan caimans are widely distributed in South America, with hundreds of species found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay.

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