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WHITE LIONS

White lions communicate with the vocalization pattern. They make groundbreaking roar to warn potential threats or keep away predators from their family. White lions are soft and caring, and they use chuffing sounds while interacting with member of the pack or with their offspring. The way they communicate and alert their pack is also one of the amazing facts about White lions.

Lions typically kill their prey by strangulation, the pack consumes the carcass at the site of the kill. The pack patiently stalk the prey and attack at the right moment. The study suggests that white lions are equally apex predators as tawny lions. 

White lions have significant cultural importance to the local Sepedi and Tsonga of the Grater Timbavati/Kruger park region. White lions are considered sacred in these communities. White lions are symbols of leadership, pride, and royalty and are viewed as national assets in countries like Kenya and Botswana. These facts about White lions show their cultural value and importance.

KILLER ANACONDAS
Green Anaconda | National Geographic
A member of the boa family, South America’s green anaconda is, pound for pound, the largest snake in the world. Its cousin, the reticulated python, can reach slightly greater lengths, but the enormous girth of the anaconda makes it almost twice as heavy.
 
Green anacondas can grow to more than 29 feet, weigh more than 550 pounds, and measure more than 12 inches in diameter. Females are significantly larger than males. Other anaconda species, all from South America and all smaller than the green anaconda, are the yellow, dark-spotted, and Bolivian varieties.  
 
Anacondas live in swamps, marshes, and slow-moving streams, mainly in the tropical rain forests of the Amazon and Orinoco basins. They are cumbersome on land, but stealthy and sleek in the water. Their eyes and nasal openings are on top of their heads, allowing them to lay in wait for prey while remaining nearly completely submerged. 

APES

Scientists Study Tourists to Protect Great Apes | Lab Manager
Apes are a clade of Old World simians native to Africa and Sourh east Asia, which together with its sister group Cercopithe cidae form the catarrhine clade. Apes do not tails due to a mutation of the TBXT gene. 

In traditional and non-specific use, the term "ape" can include tailless primates taxonomically considered Cercopithecidae (such as the Barbary ape and black ape), and is thus not equivalent to the scientific taxon Hominoidea. There are two extant branches of the superfamily Hominoidea: the gibbons, or lesser apes, the hominids, or great apes.




 


 

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