Water drop fish
The drip fish, also known as the sad fish or the soft hidden thorn dubu fish, the bobo fish, because of the weeping face, is known as "the world's most sad expression" fish. There is a real reason for this seabed monster fish to be depressed: Scientists warn that the dripfish is threatened with extinction due to deep-sea fishing operations. The dripfish live on the coast of Australia and Tasmania, at depths of up to 1200 metres, and are rarely found by humans due to the difficulty of reaching the fish's habitat. The body of the water drop fish is gelatinous and can grow up to 12 inches.

Refers to lemurs
Lemurs belong to the primate proto-monkey suborder Lemur family. Wild lemurs are found only on the island of Madagascar. The lemur has some similarities in appearance to bats, and it is the only species of primate mammals that use echolocation capabilities to hunt, and lemurs are unusually distant relatives of humans
Naked mole rat
Naked mole rats are prominent examples of mammals, and their population lifestyles are as organized as bees, ants, and ants, bees, wasps, and termites. However, naked mole rats are larger and more ugly than they are. Naked mole rats have almost no hair on the surface of the skin and are completely painless. These eccentric animals live in underground nests and can number as many as 100. Naked mole rats make holes with disproportionate porch teeth that sit in front of their lips so they don't swallow the dirt. Naked mole rats can live up to 30 years, which is 10 times the lifespan of other rodent organisms. Its body has a natural resistance to cancer, for which the naked mole rat has become a favorite of health scientists.
Star-nosed mole
The star-nosed mole lives mainly in humid environments and feeds on small invertebrates, aquatic insects, earthworms and mollusks. Like other species of moles, the star-nosed mole also forages for food in tunnels not far from the ground, and the outlets of these tunnels are usually underwater. Scientists at Vanderbilt University in the United States have found through research that the star-nosed mole is the fastest-moving mammal predator in the world. With the help of a high-speed camera, it can be seen that the "star nose" can touch more than 12 places per second. As a result, the star-nosed mole can complete the entire process of determining the position of the prey and preying on the prey in a very short time of a quarter of a second.
Healthy fish
Squid, also known as toadfish, stuttering fish, etc., is a kind of deep-sea fish, they are all over the world's temperate ocean 50 meters to 100 meters deep seabed, in China's coastal waters are produced. There are more than 250 species of salmon known to mankind, and because of its unique appearance, some people also call it "sea ghost fish". The sturgeon is edible and the meat is rich in gum and has a high nutritional value. The liver of the trout is delicious and is known as "foie gras in the sea".
Proboscis monkey
Their noses are surprisingly large, in which male monkeys have larger noses as they age, and finally form a large red nose like eggplant, and when excited, the big nose will stand up or shake up and down, while the female nose is more normal.
Possum toad
The possum toad is a variety of primitive frogs found in South America and Africa. Fully aquatic. The back and abdomen are flat and the body is streamlined. The posterior webbed is well developed. The skin is smooth. There is a side line system. Small head, no tongue. The eyelids cannot move freely. During spawning, the skin on the back of the female toad softens like a sponge, the cloaca wall extends outward to form a tubular ovulation band, which bends up to the back, and the male toad presses the spawning belt on the back of the female toad, squeezes the eggs out, presses them into the nest of spongy skin, and is covered with gelatin. The eggs develop in the skin fossa on the back of the female toad, pass through the tadpole stage, and become a young adult before leaving the female. The possum toad is named after this "possum" habit.
Vampire fish
A small carp found in Myanmar is presumed to have been breeding on Earth for nearly 100 million years. Nicknamed the "Vampire Fish" for its sharp teeth and terrifying appearance, resembling a vampire in European legends.
Tube eye fish
American biologists have found a strange fish in the deep sea, which has a transparent head and tubular eyes, and is figuratively called the tube-eye fish, and its scientific name is the large-finned posterior fish. Since the fish was discovered in 1939, biologists now know that the eye is particularly capable of focusing light. However, their shape only gives the fish a tubular line of sight, so the field of view is very narrow.
Sphinx cat
The Canadian hairless cat, also known as the Sphinx cat, was bred by cat lovers in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in 1966 from a litter of almost hairless catlets, specially bred for cat lovers who are allergic to cat hair. This cat is a pet cat produced by natural genetic mutations, in addition to some thin and soft fetal hair in the ears, mouth, nose, front of the tail, feet and other parts, the rest of the body is hairless, and the skin is wrinkled and elastic. The Canadian hairless cat is docile, independent, non-aggressive, and can get along with other cats and dogs.