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This world is full of such strange and wondrous creatures that sometimes, you have to see to believe them. While some animals are beautiful or awe-inspiring, others make you do a double-take just because they’re so plain weird and unique. It can be tough to believe that these incredible products of nature really exist somewhere out there.
So in this video, we are going to show you “10 Unique Animals You Won’t Believe Exist”. The video is going to be amazing so make sure you stick to the end.
10. Tufted Deer:
Tufted deer are small deer characterized by their distinctive tuft of black hair on their forehead. The males’ antlers are small spikes, which rarely protrude beyond the tuft of hair.
The Tufted deer’s body has a deep chocolate brown coloration on the upper parts and is white below, and the coat consists of coarse hairs, almost like spines, which give it a somewhat shaggy appearance. The tail has a white underside which can be seen when the deer runs, holding its tail up.
9. Pangolin:
The Pangolin looks a bit like a creature you would see David Goldblum and Laura Dern gushing over in Jurassic Park. The shy, harmless pangolin is becoming increasingly well known for one reason: It’s believed to be the world’s most trafficked non-human mammal.
8. Christmas Tree Worm:
Scientists found this strange creature at the Great Barrier Reef’s Lizard Island and named it, aptly, the Christmas tree worm. The spiral “branches” are actually the worm’s breathing and feeding apparatuses, while the worm itself lives in a tube. These tree-like crowns are covered in hair-like appendages called radioles.
7. Whitemargin Stargazer:
The white margin stargazer likes to hang out on reef flats and coastal bottoms but is very rarely spotted because they like to stay buried under the sand with only their eyes showing. If it sounds creepy, that’s because it is.
6. Capybara:
Capybaras are the largest living rodents and are found across much of Latin America. They tend to live near bodies of water in large social groups, which can reach up to 100 individuals during the dry season.
5. Mata Mata Turtle:
This South American freshwater turtle is found in the Amazon and Orinoco basins, primarily in slow-moving streams and swamps where it can stand in shallow water and stretch its nose to the surface to breathe. It’s an unusual, ancient-looking creature that’s clearly made for camouflage. It has a horny snout and flattened, triangle-shaped head that looks like fallen leaves, and a brown/black shell said to resemble bark.
Measuring up to 18 inches long and weighing some 30 pounds, it’s a large, trippy-looking turtle. The Mata Mata’s oblong carapace is brown or black in color. The plastron is reduced, narrowed, hingeless, shortened towards the front, and deeply notched at the rear with narrow bridges.
4. Velvet Ants:
Confusingly, these insects are actually wasps of multiple different breeds. The females are wingless and hairy, and very much resemble ants. Some specimens in Chile have been found with black and white coloring, and when you see these you will understand why they are also called ‘panda ants’. All velvet ants belong to the family Mutillidae and have a dense pile of hair of a variety of striking colors that serve as a warning signal to potential predators.
3. Black Mambas:
The Black Mamba slithers up to 12.5 miles per hour, but hopefully, you can run faster. If it catches you, you have 20 minutes to find some anti-venom—or else you’re toast. The snake is responsible for an estimated 20,000 deaths each year. Black mambas live in the savannas and rocky hills of southern and eastern Africa. They are Africa’s longest venomous snake, reaching up to 14 feet in length, although 8.2 feet is more the average.
2. Star-Nosed Mole:
Star-nosed moles are actually great swimmers because of their front claws, and they were the first mammal that was proven to be able to smell underwater. They aren’t a very uncommon species, just rarely seen. Like black mambas, these animals are so gross they will make your skin crawl. And for an animal that’s nearly blind, the American species is astonishingly speedy: The world’s fastest eater, it can find and gobble down an insect or worm in a quarter of a second.
1. Aye-Aye:
The aye-aye is the only primate that uses echolocation, the process of locating something by producing sounds and then listening to the sounds reflected back. Other animals you may be familiar with that use echolocation are bats and whales. How scientists name the new species they discover. Madagascar is known for being home to a great many strange animals, most of which are found nowhere else in the world.
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What accent does the presenter have?