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Live Streaming: Great Adventure in the Wilderness

In the swamp, mosquitoes danced, and a five-meter long bay crocodile was firmly bound at the snout, its vertical pupils gleaming with ferocity. At that moment, a young man cover in mud was straddling it, and he was very modest in the face of audience's praise. "I'm Bi Fang, a professional explorer. I have trekked atop the roof of the world and traversed through the Valley of Death, and I've even challenged the mysterious Amazon. Even the National Geographic has named me the world's premier survival expert, the king of the wild at the top of the food chain, but trust me, that's all an overstatement..." Under the crimson clouds, Bi Fang silently tightened the rope in his hand and, seeing that the bay crocodile beneath him had finally stopped struggling, he pulled out the Hunting Knife and killed it with a single strike to the underside of its jaw. "Today is the second day of survival. I thought I would have to endure another hungry night, but now it seems, dinner has taken care of itself."

Shell Ant · Ciencia y ficción
Sin suficientes valoraciones
878 Chs

Chapter 728: Light (Combined)

Twenty years ago, no biologist conducting research in the Arctic would have used words like "emaciated" or "frail" to describe polar bears.

In the common perception, polar bears were always the robust sovereigns of the Arctic.

They had no natural predators in this land and could roam the ice caps carefree, their massive bodies making the earth tremble beneath them.

When swimming in the ocean, their robust forelimb paws acted like flippers, allowing them to glide through the water with ease.

Some polar bears could even migrate between land masses hundreds of kilometers apart via the ocean, spending most of their lives drifting on sea ice, only coming ashore during breeding seasons.

The sea ice also provided polar bears with a stable food source—seals.

When seals came up onto the ice to breathe and rest, they were likely to end up as a meal for polar bears. In addition to seals, polar bears occasionally feasted on the carcasses of whales.