Unique Hunting Behaviour in the Animal Kingdom

in Amazing Nature2 years ago

Every ecosystem is filled with different kinds of living organisms with varying nutritional habits. However, the food chain or food web of all ecosystems follows similar patterns. The producers form the bases while the primary consumer's survival depends solely on the producers. Secondary consumers feed primarily on the primary consumers, but in some cases, secondary consumers can feed on the primary producers as well. The latter group is known as omnivorous animals. Other categories of organisms such as the tertiary and the quaternary consumers depend primarily on the group below them and can secondarily feed on those that are not below them.

Beyond the producers and the primary consumers, organisms at higher trophic levels are predators and potential hunters. In most cases, the predators at lower trophic levels themselves serve as prey to predators at the higher trophic level. At the highest level which is the quaternary consumers, the organisms are known as super predators and even these often serve as prey for humans - hunters. While some super-predators are dangerous to humans, the intelligence of humans is such that no animal is too dangerous or too big to be killed.

Animal predators have to devise ways to kill their prey, otherwise, they will die starving. The preys, on the other hand, also have to find a way to escape predators, otherwise, their species will go to extinction. Hence it is a chicken and egg situation. This has made some predators devise really unique, in the human sense, ways of going about hunting for food. A few of the most unique ways are discussed below:

The American Woodcock

Scientifically known as Scolopax minor and with a wide variety of common names ranging from timberdoodle, the bogsucker, to hokumpoke. It is a species of small bird native to North America and feeds primarily by preying on earthworms. One might say there is no special skill for preying on worms in the soil beyond just digging up soils and pecking on them. However, the American Woodcock is known to walk like in the gif below:

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The last one is particularly interesting. I really imagine what this snake does to get food!

PS: why has this post been muted by moderators?

why has this post been muted by moderators?

I wonder too

How amazing animals are. I keep wondering how even spiders feed. How they stay for a long time creating cobwebs amidst dry room,yet they are still alive.

The more you kill them, the more they reproduce.

The walking gait of the woodpecker got me giggling. Lol

This unjustified almost made me not enjoy this article to the fullest. Regardless, the Links are still accessible.

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