15 Times Land Animals Messed With The Wrong Opponent

15 Times Land Animals Messed With The Wrong Opponent
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Free life lesson: pick your battles well. Because if you don’t, you may end up with no legs. That’s really the lesson of today’s video, and one that many, MANY land animals have had to learn. Buckle up, kids. It’s gonna be wild. From a 3000-pound-plus battle to a battle of the big cats, let’s take a look at 15 Times Land Animals Messed With The Wrong Opponent!

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42 Comments

  1. Tigers usually remain as the victorious one in a 1v1 fight to the death with an adult male lion. Tigers are just naturally stronger even if they are the same weight as the male lion. They’re also more intelligent in terms of hunting and killing due to their nature of solitude.

  2. When you show an image of a cheetah while talking about a leopard incident all credibility is lost. The 'bull' in your video clip is a Cape buffalo. Be knowledgeable of your subject.

  3. Elk numbers have barely been affected by the grey wolf. No, the presence of wolves keeps them in hiding, meaning Montana hunters have a harder time pulling up on a dirt road and just shooting into a herd, taking home whatever falls down. Now they have to learn a skill Michigan hunters are intimate with – tracking an animal. Because elk stay out of aspen groves now (too vulnerable), they’re not eating the aspen shoots like they used to, meaning the groves are returning and these groves retain water. Water retention as welcomed the beaver back to many of these areas and BEAVERS lifestyle FURTHER adds to an area’s water retention via dams. This is good for moose too. It’s called the circle of life. This video spreads far more ignorance than knowledge.

  4. I seen an old video of a lion and tiger fighting and the lion won. It’s hide helped protect it and had far more endurance in the end the tiger ran out of juice and laid in defeat

  5. The spider was not actually hunting the wasp, it wanted to escape. Those wasps go hunting for spiders to feed to their bebbies.

    About 15 years ago I saw a tarantula hawk (a wasp that kills spiders) trying to drag what I'd assumed to be a dead spider up a fibro wall. The wall was too smooth for the spider to get a grip, so it kept slipping down. It kept trying for hours until it finally lost its grip and lost the spider a crevice. The wasp just sat there for a while, probably recovering (or swearing).

    It was only later I learned that the spider would have woken up at some point and gone on its way.

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