What's this? Gummy candy, marshmallow, breast implant? No, it's a slug caterpillar, or a woodlice butterfly, which is part of the Limacodidae family.
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This large, pajama-hooded harpy lives in the forests of Europe, Siberia, and North Africa. From such an unusual caterpillar, an equally beautiful and fluffy butterfly is obtained.
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This is for you in case you have not seen how a spider weaves a web up close.
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Stars can be seen not only at night in the sky. The amazing Waitomo Firefly Cave is one of the most beautiful caves in the world.
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Praying mantises are naturally born hunters, but these killer cyborgs also have bad days.
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This is an aiolot - a reptile from the suborder of bipeds (amphisbaena).
It lives on the California Peninsula and leads a peaceful lifestyle, loves sandy soils, semi-deserts and spends most of its life underground, crawling out to the surface to ventilate only after rain. It feeds mainly on ants and termites.
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A glass frog that has transparent skin on its abdomen through which all the insides are visible.
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The common Medvedka lives almost all the time underground, digging a system of tunnels. In summer, tunnels are dug shallowly underground, but in winter long tunnels are built, located at an angle of 45-60 ° to the surface and going to a depth of 60 cm.
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If you already miss the summer mosquitoes - here is a wonderful specimen for you.
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I think you have not yet seen the confrontation between a fly and a haymaker spider.
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Have you ever wondered why butterflies that are shot close-up in documentaries don't get spooked by the camera and fly away?
Well, the camera is actually a drone disguised as a hummingbird, imitating as much as possible the natural flight of birds that butterflies are used to seeing in their natural environment. That's why they don't fly away from this intricate design, but continue to go about their business.
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The panda ant is not an ant at all, and not even approximately a panda, but just a shaggy, wingless wasp. Being as useless and aggressive as its winged cousins, the panda ant doesn't even bother building cardboard nests for itself. She leaves her foundlings in the nests of bees, and sometimes even her closest relatives - wasps! In addition, her poison can even kill cattle, which is why in her homeland (in Chile) she was nicknamed the “cow killer” or “cow ant”.
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Two-spined spider Poecilopachys australasia from Australia. More like a pretty pie.
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Butterfly Megalopyge opercularis is ready for the cold: here you have fleece pants, a hat, and a fur coat.
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If you look into the sink for a long time, the sink will start looking at you.
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Dung beetles of the genus Onitis are real hard workers. These beauties feed on the droppings of various animals, especially cattle and horses. In a certain season, males and females unite in a group and prepare a supply of food for their offspring. By joint efforts, the beetles dig a vertical mink under heaps of dung, where they put manure, in which they lay their eggs.
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