The mating rituals of 7 kinds of animals, there are also wild animals
Horses crabs
Every spring, the ocean currents always migrate groups of horseshoe crabs to various places. They mate and lay eggs on the selected beach. After swimming upside down, they use their tails to flip their bodies over and begin their search for arthropod love. Male horseshoe crabs use their pincers to hook onto the female's crust and come ashore, which is where the mating magic begins. At this time, thousands of horseshoe crabs migrate to the shore and dig pits in the sand at the highest tide. The female horseshoe crabs lay 200-300 eggs in the pits. The male horseshoe crabs fertilize the eggs before being buried in the sand, and then let them fashion. .
It has long been thought that horseshoe crabs swarm to the coastline during full and new moon high tides. However, recent research suggests that horseshoe crabs actually mate based on water temperature. When the water is too warm or too cold, horseshoe crabs retreat to the depths of the ocean. But when the water is just right, pairs of horseshoe crabs mate on the beach.
However, horseshoe crabs are not the only species with complex mating methods.
Ossums: Saliva Slide
Ossums give birth to young that look more like embryos than furry, long-nosed mammals. But look closely and you'll see that the most developed parts of their little bodies are their powerful forearms and claws. When giving birth, the female opossum licks the birth canal and pouch. The baby possums then follow the trail of saliva, using their forearms and paws to crawl across the female's belly in a swimming motion before entering the pouch.
Birds of Paradise: Special Dancers
The Super Bird of Paradise is only found in a small area of ??New Guinea – and its dance to attract females is more complex than any TikTok choreography . The male's stunning black plumage absorbs 99.95% of sunlight, and part of his plumage is a shocking electric blue. When dancing, these blue feathers almost look like two eyes and a smile.
Hornbills: Buried Alive
Of the more than 50 species of hornbills in the tropics, most nest in sealed tree cavities and rock crevices. Sealing a nest is a team effort - male and female hornbills work together to form a wall of mud, saliva, feces and other tasty bits. Once inside, the birds create a slit narrow enough to allow male birds to feed but keep hunters (mainly humans) out. Internally, the female incubates the eggs for several weeks and then raises the babies for 3 to 5 months. If the male dies, food ceases and the hornbill family may perish within the nest.
Harp Seals: Abandoned
Harp babies are known as the cutest babies. Newborn harp seals born on ice floes only weigh about 25 pounds. Over the next 12 days, they gain about 55 pounds while absorbing nutrients from their mother's high-fat milk before weaning suddenly stops. When the mothers leave to mate again, the adorable pups remain trapped on the ice and will lose more than 50% of their weight. However, this hunger is a motivator: the pups enter the water after about six weeks of starvation and quickly begin hunting and foraging on their own.
Burial Beetles: The Cycle of Life
Bury beetles use club-like antennae to detect their food, have bright markings and tough forewings, and they will eat their nastiest babies. Although this practice may sound cruel, these insects lay their eggs on animal carcasses, which also happen to comprise the species' diet. Their larvae are fed by regurgitating digested carcasses, but the amount of food is limited. So the researchers found that burying beetles eat larvae that beg for too much food.
Garden Snails: Cupid's Darts
Common garden snails are hermaphroditic, possessing both male and female reproductive cells, and they are capable of self-fertilization (although this is less feasible than traditional mating). Unsurprisingly, sex between two snails is a squishy affair. It's like a "love dart" that shoots indiscriminately into another garden snail. If the dart were scaled to human size, it would be the equivalent of a 38cm dagger thrust into a lover's body. While the science behind it is not fully understood, garden snails that use the tool effectively successfully breed more baby snails.
Anglefish: Pencil Head
The order Nematoda, better known as anglerfish, has more than 200 species. The flesh usually has a fishing rod-like structure on the female's head. The "fishing rod" has a fleshy protrusion at the end that looks like a worm, and the anglerfish uses it to trap other voracious fish. Female angler fish are larger: male angler fish are small and parasitic. Depending on the species, they can be over 60 times smaller than their female partners. In most anglerfish, however, the male attaches himself to his mate, fusing his circulatory system with hers to absorb nutrients.