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00:00:00
this prehistoric animal thrives
00:00:02
eats everything and everyone that comes in
00:00:05
its way the
00:00:07
Nile crocodile is
00:00:20
one of the strongest predators in the world
00:00:25
since no one has seen it from the
00:00:30
inside the eyes from the predator itself
00:00:37
[music]
00:00:54
super predators crocodile
00:01:01
[music]
00:01:07
when the Nile crocodile jumps out of the
00:01:10
water grabbing the victim
00:01:12
to escape it is virtually impossible to make it
00:01:27
its jaw containing 65 teeth is one of the
00:01:32
strongest on the planet it can
00:01:35
crush bone a crocodile bites with the force in
00:01:39
hell tons and 100 kilograms this bite is
00:01:43
stronger than the bite of a white shark but
00:01:50
unlike the white shark the crocodile does not
00:01:52
tear its prey into pieces while it is still
00:01:54
alive
00:01:55
it uses its powerful jaws to
00:01:59
first drown its prey;
00:02:04
these jaws are capable of handling a
00:02:07
panicked animal weighing two hundred and
00:02:09
twenty-five kilograms; they are
00:02:13
one of the most advanced
00:02:15
biomechanical designs; fast-
00:02:20
twitch muscles
00:02:21
give all animals, including the cheetah, white
00:02:24
shark and humans, the ability to suddenly
00:02:27
release speed and strength
00:02:28
but This crocodile's jaw muscles
00:02:31
contract super fast and produce
00:02:34
65 percent more power than normal
00:02:37
fast twitch muscles and at the
00:02:41
jaw pivot point at the back of its
00:02:43
skull it increases the length of its jaw and
00:02:46
this helps it increase the speed of its
00:02:49
closing
00:02:51
[music]
00:02:54
it snaps its jaws shut at lightning
00:02:57
speed 9 meters per second is almost
00:03:01
four times faster than a rattlesnake does,
00:03:12
but while many crocodiles feast on the hunt,
00:03:15
others miss the whole event; getting food for
00:03:18
yourself is not always the most important thing; sometimes the
00:03:21
fate of the next generation comes first
00:03:24
and the crocodile jamon
00:03:32
will be focused exclusively on the next three months
00:03:35
on her children
00:03:42
she will not stray far, if at
00:03:45
all, from her nest
00:03:47
40 eggs
00:03:51
the day before she caught a tilapia fish weighing
00:03:55
five kilograms which gave her 10,000
00:03:58
calories
00:03:59
[music]
00:04:08
but this will not last long considering
00:04:11
that in the last six weeks she
00:04:13
has spent 5,100 calories per day
00:04:18
laying those 40 eggs
00:04:20
is the most energy consuming process
00:04:23
this crocodile will ever
00:04:25
engage in
00:04:26
[music]
00:04:28
especially since each egg
00:04:31
contains
00:04:32
food for her young, caring for the offspring
00:04:37
can cost her a lot of energy
00:04:41
to survive she will have to turn to the
00:04:44
fat reserves
00:04:45
stored in her abdominal cavity behind her
00:04:48
front paws and even at the base
00:04:51
of her tail
00:04:54
[music]
00:04:59
[music] a
00:05:07
thin squeak
00:05:08
tells her that the crocodiles
00:05:11
have begun to hatch
00:05:13
all 40
00:05:15
[music]
00:05:27
but for many the first moments of life
00:05:30
are
00:05:31
also the last
00:05:44
[music]
00:05:47
[applause]
00:05:50
adult crocodiles are at the top of the
00:05:53
food chain, there are
00:05:55
no predators threatening them but they are
00:06:01
not born at the very bottom of the food chain
00:06:11
if these newborn crocodiles
00:06:13
want to survive their mother needs to carry them away
00:06:16
from this dangerous place she will
00:06:19
bring them in the mouth of her jaws there is a line of
00:06:26
ticks that allows her to lock her
00:06:29
jaw at any time it closes and she
00:06:32
can adjust the tension like the ropes
00:06:34
of a suspension bridge
00:06:35
she can even lock her mouth
00:06:38
open just five centimeters
00:06:40
allowing her to bear 20 young
00:06:43
at a time without ever accidentally biting
00:06:47
them
00:06:54
she needs to carry almost 40 of her
00:06:57
offspring to the nearest body of water where they
00:07:00
will at least have a chance
00:07:04
[music]
00:07:06
she needs to make several visits and
00:07:09
each time she will have to leave some of the
00:07:12
newborns in danger the mother picks
00:07:21
them up puts them in her mouth and carries them to the river
00:07:25
returns and takes the rest and while
00:07:30
she is away the predators begin to hunt for her
00:07:33
cub they have a holiday hurray cub
00:07:42
[music]
00:07:52
[applause]
00:07:55
her own supply of energy is depleted
00:07:58
but this mother has no time to hunt she
00:08:02
needs to constantly protect the cubs from
00:08:04
danger but even getting up with an active
00:08:11
gaze of the 40 cubs in the litter
00:08:14
only 13 survived the first month of their lives
00:08:22
12 to be exact
00:08:26
[music]
00:08:30
if she weren't so absorbed in
00:08:32
caring for her children this mother would be near the
00:08:35
Mara River
00:08:36
waiting for her favorite food to arrive
00:08:39
[music]
00:08:43
every year a million wildebeest gallop
00:08:46
through Kenya and Tanzania eating the short
00:08:49
green grass
00:08:51
[music]
00:08:53
they pass up to 1600 kilometers in
00:08:56
search of green pastures why go to
00:09:00
such difficulties for the sake of grass
00:09:02
because a million wildebeest need a
00:09:06
lot of grass up to 4 tons per day
00:09:12
[applause]
00:09:13
and this path in search of grass
00:09:20
inevitably forces the wildebeest to
00:09:23
cross the Mara River twice a year where they are already waiting
00:09:26
crocodiles
00:09:34
you are sitting on the bank of the river and suddenly your
00:09:38
stomach literally begins to vibrate with
00:09:42
the sound of a million hooves galloping
00:09:45
towards you the
00:10:01
clatter of hooves gets louder and
00:10:03
louder
00:10:06
but when they reach the river the wildebeest don't
00:10:09
immediately rush to cross it after
00:10:13
weeks of travel they are dehydrated [ __ ] and what do
00:10:20
they want it's drinking and those behind are mooing and pressing,
00:10:24
saying let me pass, I'm thirsty
00:10:33
they're so thirsty that they don't
00:10:36
pay attention to the fact that just a
00:10:38
few meters from their noses there are crocodiles lurking
00:10:43
[music]
00:10:53
the crocodile has excellent
00:10:56
camouflage skills if you look at the
00:10:58
head of the crocodile sandalwood us from behind
00:11:00
then all you will see is a centimeter of the
00:11:02
nostril and the eye everything else is under
00:11:10
water he can submerge completely and
00:11:12
silently simply by expelling a little
00:11:15
air from his large lungs and
00:11:18
[music]
00:11:23
like a sensitive submarine
00:11:26
he is designed to operate under water
00:11:30
his ears, nose and throat are protected
00:11:34
special strips of skin and his eye is
00:11:37
covered with a thin transparent film
00:11:53
[music]
00:11:57
the crocodile kills prey at close
00:12:00
range he approaches the prey
00:12:02
sits quietly he waits until the wildebeest is
00:12:06
in the reachable area two meters away from
00:12:09
him if the prey is further his jump
00:12:13
will most likely be unsuccessful but if
00:12:19
prey is less than 2 meters away then that's
00:12:22
another story
00:12:32
[music]
00:12:40
and so how does this crocodile fly out of the
00:12:43
water at a speed of 12 meters per second
00:12:51
[music]
00:12:53
jagged scales increase the area of
00:12:56
contact with water
00:12:57
means it is easier for the crocodile to maneuver in the
00:13:00
water its hind legs work like pistons
00:13:07
and give him enough momentum to
00:13:10
push off the flat river bottom
00:13:13
but the real power lies in his lumpy,
00:13:17
muscular tail
00:13:18
exactly half the length of his body which
00:13:21
helps him accelerate towards his
00:13:23
prey faster than a jet
00:13:27
[music]
00:13:31
so in the blink of an eye his jaws
00:13:34
are exactly where he needs them, they are
00:13:37
ready to attack
00:13:48
[music]
00:13:54
now you can eat,
00:14:08
this clever method of hunting gives the crocodile a
00:14:12
very high-calorie reward of a dish of 50
00:14:15
thousand calories
00:14:16
[music]
00:14:21
returning to a secluded pond, we see
00:14:23
that the fat reserves of the mother of crocodiles are
00:14:25
almost running out, lay eggs and protect
00:14:29
their cubs are extremely
00:14:31
energy-consuming actions every day without
00:14:34
food takes away from him another
00:14:36
1200 calories
00:14:49
and the worst thing is that out of 40 crocodiles
00:14:52
there are only 12 left
00:14:59
[music]
00:15:05
but even in an unfavorable environment,
00:15:08
the age of just one month cannot
00:15:11
keep them from what nature intended for them
00:15:17
hunt and kill from the very beginning of
00:15:20
their lives they attack anything
00:15:26
small enough that they can bite and
00:15:29
that moves
00:15:30
these are insects small frogs small
00:15:33
fish they immediately grab them growing
00:15:38
crocodiles must eat 5 percent
00:15:41
of their body weight every week and
00:15:43
[music]
00:15:46
even at two weeks of age they already
00:15:50
know a maneuver that will help and eat larger prey
00:15:52
death spin
00:15:56
[music] in the
00:16:00
same way this crocodile on the
00:16:02
Mara River tears the prey into pieces one
00:16:09
crocodile will tightly grab the part and
00:16:11
the other will begin to spin or somersault
00:16:13
in the water
00:16:14
sometimes two crocodiles spin in different
00:16:16
directions while they they will tear a piece of meat in
00:16:18
half, but everyone will swallow their parts,
00:16:21
they will return the
00:16:22
crocodiles have no rock because of this, there is no
00:16:26
lever to tear the wildebeest into pieces,
00:16:30
so by turning over once, two or
00:16:32
even three times, they apply more than 200
00:16:35
kilograms of force and create a
00:16:38
torque and enough tension to
00:16:40
tear off pieces from the heart of the wildebeest,
00:16:47
but dismembering the prey is only
00:16:50
half the battle; the jaws of the
00:16:53
crocodile are designed for a death
00:16:55
grip,
00:16:56
but he cannot chew; his jaws
00:17:01
cannot move from side to side;
00:17:05
this predator has to swallow
00:17:07
huge pieces of the phone, and this is a huge
00:17:10
burden on the digestive system;
00:17:15
however, the stomach is designed
00:17:18
specifically for digesting these
00:17:19
massive pieces of meat and before it passes through
00:17:23
his esophagus
00:17:24
and enters a part of the stomach filled with
00:17:29
small pebbles
00:17:31
that he swallowed, they rub against each
00:17:35
other and grind part of the wildebeest,
00:17:37
bones, tendons, hoof horns,
00:17:40
crush anything,
00:17:45
then the small parts are mixed with
00:17:48
salt an acid of such a high
00:17:49
concentration
00:17:50
that it can corrode metal
00:17:58
but to protect his own stomach he
00:18:01
secretes an alkaline solution base that
00:18:04
neutralizes the acid
00:18:05
so the wildebeest is digested but the
00:18:08
crocodile itself is not, these are amazing
00:18:15
animals he will turn an 80 centimeter long leg into a
00:18:18
15 centimeter piece of
00:18:21
feces in two weeks
00:18:23
then he will bite off part your foot or he
00:18:27
can absorb a whole new one and it goes
00:18:30
straight to his esophagus with the nipples of the shoe everything
00:18:34
goes into the stomach during the wildebeest migration
00:18:41
across the Mara River
00:18:43
one crocodile can eat enough my
00:18:45
ass antelopes to last
00:18:50
2 years
00:18:52
[music]
00:18:57
this is important because through 2 weeks
00:18:59
after arrival the wildebeest leave and
00:19:03
[music]
00:19:08
hungry times may come
00:19:12
[music]
00:19:21
this mother crocodile heechee cubs are
00:19:25
dying at an alarming rate a
00:19:27
new problem has appeared their pond
00:19:30
is getting shallow it is drying up for
00:19:32
her and her offspring to survive they
00:19:35
will need to find a new pond this means
00:19:37
crossing overland is
00:19:43
dangerous for small crocodiles, so the mother waits for
00:19:46
cover of night to take her children on the
00:19:49
most dangerous journey of their young
00:19:51
lives
00:19:55
[music]
00:20:04
they only have to walk 160 meters it
00:20:09
will take them less than five minutes but it is a
00:20:12
long time considering what is behind each
00:20:14
around the corner there are hungry predators hiding
00:20:23
[music]
00:20:27
when crocodiles cross land
00:20:30
they become very vulnerable to
00:20:33
other species of animals that can eat them,
00:20:45
fortunately the whole family reaches the
00:20:48
new reservoir safe and
00:20:50
sound but their troubles do not end there
00:21:02
[music] there
00:21:05
is a predator from which the little ones
00:21:07
can escape
00:21:10
[music] a
00:21:12
fearsome hunter 3000 times
00:21:15
larger than them
00:21:18
[music]
00:21:20
this predator and the least they expect to
00:21:23
meet
00:21:32
is their own mother
00:21:37
[music]
00:21:42
how can she eat one of her
00:21:44
cubs whom she so desperately protected
00:21:49
eat her offspring this the last
00:21:53
resort to get the energy that
00:21:55
she needs to survive and to protect the
00:21:58
rest of the kids and there leaving everything that she
00:22:09
can just to survive
00:22:13
while the crocodiles by the river feast on the glory,
00:22:18
everyone on average absorbs more than 150 thousand
00:22:21
calories in less than two weeks
00:22:43
radically slows down his metabolism,
00:22:46
including and the heart that does something
00:22:49
extraordinary slows down from 40
00:22:52
beats per minute to 5. A
00:22:55
crocodile can spend a year in this
00:22:58
state, just
00:23:01
like winter hibernation in mammals.
00:23:04
Summer hibernation allows the crocodile
00:23:06
to save strength until it
00:23:08
really needs it
00:23:13
[music]
00:23:18
while these crocodiles lie in and tasks
00:23:20
the mother makes a difficult choice she needs to
00:23:24
leave her cubs
00:23:26
[music]
00:23:28
although they have grown 10 centimeters in the
00:23:32
four months she has been looking after
00:23:34
them they are still at the mercy of other
00:23:37
larger predators but this mother must
00:23:44
find food to prepare for the
00:23:46
next mating season the time has come for the
00:23:49
11 remaining cubs to take care
00:23:52
of themselves
00:24:04
10 years have passed
00:24:07
[music]
00:24:19
[music]
00:24:27
during this time the mother crocodile x argued
00:24:30
ten more times
00:24:35
[music]
00:24:38
each cycle in our production takes
00:24:40
six months from the moment of conception
00:24:44
until the mother leaves her cubs
00:24:48
others For 6 months she accumulates the fat
00:24:51
reserves that she will need to
00:24:53
endure this painful cycle, but during
00:24:59
this time the crocodiles whose
00:25:01
mother so desperately cared for did not succeed too much
00:25:03
in the art of survival; of them, there
00:25:06
was only one
00:25:13
survivor from that litter, a male who
00:25:16
grew by 30 centimeters every year and
00:25:18
now reached almost three meters in length
00:25:24
all this time he ate fish,
00:25:27
small animals and the remains of other people's
00:25:29
prey
00:25:30
[music]
00:25:34
but as he grew, his appetite grew and
00:25:38
he became too large to
00:25:41
be able to survive by eating birds, rodents
00:25:44
and lizards does he need large
00:25:47
mammals he needs calories
00:25:49
to support his growing body of
00:25:56
wildebeest is approaching and even if
00:26:00
he had to share the antelope with
00:26:02
5 more crocodiles he would receive as much as
00:26:05
fifty thousand calories 5 times more than
00:26:08
if he ate a large fish but this
00:26:14
transition will not be easy
00:26:15
[music]
00:26:27
they have a certain hierarchy the
00:26:32
largest the animals will eat first he
00:26:35
also needs to remember that he is competing
00:26:36
with adults
00:26:37
if he does not respect their rights to
00:26:40
territory and does not get out of their way they will
00:26:42
kill him it is amazing but a crocodile
00:26:50
never stops growing so if
00:26:55
he is the youngest crocodile in the river he will rather
00:26:57
of all and the smallest when you are against
00:27:00
large adults there is no telling
00:27:03
what can happen
00:27:05
he finds himself surrounded by
00:27:07
crocodiles twice his size
00:27:12
[music]
00:27:26
this is the best territory it is only for
00:27:29
big guys in the end he will be able to
00:27:33
take a place here but now the big
00:27:35
male is just will kill him
00:27:44
[music]
00:27:45
[applause] the
00:28:06
larger male drives him away
00:28:12
already feeding from his fat reserves
00:28:15
he swims down the river in search of a place
00:28:18
where there will be fewer rivals but all
00:28:22
he finds is more competition
00:28:30
so he leaves the river mara
00:28:34
[music]
00:28:41
four hours later he is still crawling across the
00:28:44
sun-scorched savannah in search of a
00:28:46
new home
00:28:48
[music]
00:28:50
meanwhile a herd of wildebeest arrives at the Mara River
00:28:56
[music]
00:28:58
first they stop by the river
00:29:00
bend down and quench their thirst
00:29:08
they cannot escape the inevitable
00:29:11
but they can delay its arrival
00:29:19
[music ]
00:29:21
they need to cross the rift to get
00:29:24
to the pasture on the other side they know
00:29:27
something in the water there
00:29:28
will be more and more of them
00:29:30
until they literally explode like a
00:29:32
balloon and decide okay let's
00:29:35
go and someone will be the first to break down and
00:29:40
jump into the water
00:29:43
[music]
00:29:47
1002 34 thousand animals will cross
00:29:56
this 100 meter river strip;
00:30:02
wildebeests do not have many means of protection against
00:30:04
crocodiles, but one of them is simple
00:30:08
numbers over millions of years ante nos
00:30:15
one thing has adapted to life, you will stand up and
00:30:17
the reason for this is the safety of the species
00:30:20
thanks to the numbers you have there are more
00:30:24
chances to cross to the other side if
00:30:26
thousands of wildebeests are jumping along with you,
00:30:34
some wildebeest end up in the mouths of 30
00:30:37
hidden crocodiles, while
00:30:43
most manage to avoid this, but the
00:30:50
current of the river throws the herd off course,
00:30:56
they miss the place where they
00:30:59
were supposed to go ashore and their panic begins
00:31:13
the hooves cannot grip the mud and
00:31:15
hundreds find themselves trampled by them while the
00:31:18
herd tries to climb out onto the steep and
00:31:20
slippery bank
00:31:21
these crocodiles are superbly
00:31:23
constructed and skilled hunters but they do
00:31:26
n’t even need to hunt this prey the
00:31:28
wildebeest have made a fatal
00:31:30
mistake and it costs the predator nothing to feast on them
00:31:48
[music] there are
00:31:52
so many dead that in a narrow part of
00:31:55
the river a dam is formed from the carcasses of
00:31:57
wildebeest
00:32:13
less than one percent of the entire herd
00:32:15
died during this transition,
00:32:17
however, the losses number in the hundreds
00:32:28
if you were a young crocodiles just
00:32:31
waited, he would have gotten part of this
00:32:33
flow of wildebeest and he could easily
00:32:36
eat as much as the others but
00:32:43
now he is tired and hungry
00:32:46
trying to find another body of water his mistake
00:32:49
could be fatal
00:32:56
[music]
00:33:10
[music]
00:33:13
having difficulty crossing the savannah he smells the
00:33:15
smell of a rotting corpse
00:33:19
[music]
00:33:22
but this does not give him the slightest idea
00:33:25
where he will find water and the sun continues to
00:33:28
blaze hotly above his head
00:33:31
[music]
00:33:40
we often think that risks only like
00:33:43
to sunbathe and bask in the
00:33:45
sun, but if it gets too hot
00:33:48
he can overheat and die
00:33:50
[music]
00:33:56
on the verge of overheating
00:34:03
he sees something in the distance
00:34:15
ahead of him, a lioness from the pipes of the hippopotamus
00:34:19
right next to the reservoir, he is dying of
00:34:27
hunger, but it is more important now to get into the water
00:34:30
to cool down,
00:34:39
so he can only watch in agony
00:34:41
as a pride of lions eats such a
00:34:44
tasty carcass
00:34:51
[music]
00:34:55
and by the time his temperature
00:34:57
is back to normal, the hippopotamus does not
00:35:00
there is nothing left except a few dry
00:35:03
bones
00:35:05
[music]
00:35:14
until his new pond has brought him nothing,
00:35:16
he is about to move on when
00:35:20
suddenly he catches a splash in the water that
00:35:23
cannot deceive him, he sees nothing,
00:35:29
but there is definitely something there, there is some kind of prey,
00:35:37
he knows it thanks to hundreds of tiny
00:35:40
bristle-like receptors
00:35:43
located along the entire length of its body,
00:35:45
especially at the jaw and directly
00:35:48
connected by nerves to the brain
00:35:50
[music],
00:35:54
the wave reaches the crocodile's jaw and it
00:35:57
can instantly calculate which
00:35:59
side it hit harder and in what
00:36:02
proportion
00:36:03
[music]
00:36:09
if the source of this wave nearby and this is
00:36:14
prey
00:36:15
then in 200 milliseconds twice as fast
00:36:18
as we blink he makes a dash and
00:36:21
attacks
00:36:22
[music]
00:36:29
but right before the source of
00:36:31
the wave approaches
00:36:32
he is suddenly startled by the sound it is mom crocodile
00:36:39
x dives into the water and heads straight towards
00:36:41
him a
00:36:43
sudden source of tears becomes
00:36:45
clear a two-day-old crocodile swims
00:36:48
less than a meter away from him ten years
00:36:54
ago he himself was a baby who
00:36:56
was threatened by every predator in the pond
00:37:03
now the roles have changed
00:37:09
but the mother crocodile x is much larger than the
00:37:12
young male
00:37:13
she rushes to protect her baby she
00:37:21
protects them all the time and she is very
00:37:23
aggressive she is not our crocodile will give him peace,
00:37:32
much smaller than this mother
00:37:35
crocodile he has occupied the pond he needs to
00:37:38
get out of here as quickly as possible and
00:37:40
find another body of water
00:37:49
[music]
00:37:53
he needs to stay in a small pond where
00:37:56
he will be alone if this small body of water
00:37:59
does not attract big prey he may not
00:38:02
survive
00:38:05
[ music]
00:38:16
two weeks have passed and no suitable
00:38:21
prey has come close to this pond
00:38:24
every day he spends more than 1200 calories
00:38:28
and does not have enough strength to get
00:38:31
to another pond
00:38:41
[music]
00:38:49
if this young crocodile cannot
00:38:52
find something to eat
00:38:53
he will weakening day by day he spends
00:38:56
more energy than he has to
00:38:59
find food he will eventually become too
00:39:01
tired to grab anything
00:39:03
suitable
00:39:04
his position is desperate suddenly his
00:39:08
receptors pick up on something he cannot see
00:39:14
through the murky water but feels the waves on the
00:39:17
surface of the water
00:39:19
[music ]
00:39:22
receptors give him accurate information about
00:39:25
where the waves are coming from,
00:39:32
he swims closer and pokes his eyes
00:39:35
out of the water, two meters away from him there is an
00:39:45
impala weighing 45 kilograms, it contains more than
00:39:53
60 thousand calories, they are able to help him
00:39:56
last another four months, but if
00:40:00
he misses this opportunity, it will could
00:40:03
cost him his life to get
00:40:12
this impala into the water he will need every one
00:40:15
of his evolutionary advantages
00:40:22
exhaling 20 percent of the air from his lungs
00:40:24
and tilting his tail 20 centimeters to the
00:40:28
side he quietly swims into the optimal
00:40:31
throwing zone
00:40:38
[music]
00:40:41
his amazing tricks help him
00:40:44
get closer but if he is going to
00:40:47
grab something 10 times more than everything he
00:40:50
caught before, the most important thing will be the
00:40:53
last jerk, will he be
00:40:59
fast enough to surprise them with a balloon
00:41:21
[music]
00:41:38
pushing off with his paws and a powerful
00:41:41
muscular tail using jaws
00:41:44
that can crush the bone our
00:41:47
young crocodile and sank his teeth right
00:41:49
large mammal
00:41:56
[music]
00:41:58
in the end this ten-year-old youth
00:42:01
becomes a full-fledged male crocodile
00:42:08
[music]
00:42:14
sixty thousand calories gives him the strength
00:42:16
to hunt again and after five seasons
00:42:23
when the wildebeest arrive he will return
00:42:27
to the Mara River and take his place next to the
00:42:30
adult males
00:42:37
by that time his ideally
00:42:39
designed body will be
00:42:42
large and strong enough, and after the feast,
00:42:46
when hungry times come, he will be able to
00:42:50
sharply lower his metabolism in order to
00:42:53
conserve energy
00:42:54
and despite everything,
00:42:58
he has proven why the Nile crocodile am is
00:43:01
always successful and why they are the
00:43:05
kings of the river. The program is voiced by
00:43:12
Arc Studios. those read by Alexander Kovrizhnykh

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