There are gestures capable of combining a nation, especially in disdain. A recent example was staged in Australia, where a viral video aroused the generalized anger of the population, attracting unanimous criticisms even by the leaders of the two main political sides, in the middle of the election campaign for the next elections on May 3. The protagonist of the video, the influencer, hunter and lover of outdoor life Samantha Stroble, aka Sam Jones, recovered as she separated a puppy of the mother, and then catch him and keep him for a minute in his arms, in favor of a camera, before freeing him again on the eyelash of the road.
Influencer takes away a cub of the mother for a like: now he is in trouble
“I suggest to this so -called influencer of trying with other Australian animals who can react. Take a coccorrillo puppy to the mother and see how it ends,” said Prime Minister Anthony Albanian, on the occasion. And if it is certainly true that the encounter with a crocodile would probably have had a much more bloody outcome, in reality the good -natured aspect of these animals must not deceive: they are very capable of defending themselves using a unique adaptation in the animal kingdom; And when violence is inevitable, unexpected combative abilities bring out, which make them dangerous even for our species.
The Vombati are a family of marsupy widespread in south-eastern Australia and in Tasmania. They are herbivores, and have a massive dentition, reminiscent of that of rodents, adapted for chewing chewing, bark and roots. They live in complex systems of underground galleries, which they dig using the teeth and the powerful claws, and which usually abandon only during the night, to go in search of food with the favor of darkness. There are three species: the common vombed (Vombatus Ursinus), the vombed with a southern hairy nose (Lasiorhinus Latifrons) and the vombated by the northern hairy nose (Lasiorhinus krefftii).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RP-7Z2AZ_G0
The dimensions are those of a medium size dog, which make it susceptible only to the attacks of the Australian predators of major size, such as Dingo and Devils of Tasmania. To defend themselves and their puppies from these dangers, the wombati – as we said – have developed a very peculiar evolutionary adaptation: a often layer of skin and cartilage that makes their back resistant as an armor.
Animals use this anatomical peculiarity to defend themselves from the attacks of the predators, to whom they react quickly into their tunnels, keeping their heads and upper part of the body sheltered, and caping entry with their impregnable Deretan, devoid of queue not to offer holders to the bites of the predators, and so resistant to dissuade any attempt to continue the assault.
As we said, despite their dodging nature and the tendency to hide when they find themselves at risk, the womb can be dangerous if they decide to attack. Their long claws can easily cause wounds, and their charge is able to throw a man of medium stature on the ground. Finally, the long massive teeth allow the powerful jaws of these animals to cause extremely harmful bites. For example, an attack in 1993 is documented in 1993 to the detriment of the naturalist Harry Frauca, who reported a wound two centimeters deep in his leg despite wearing rubber boots, trousers and thick wool socks. Many, probably, that’s how they wanted to see Samantha Strable’s video conclude. For (his) luck the woman has only each with a wave of international indignation, and a rapid escape from the Australian territory, where evidently the welcome will no longer be welcome.