Footage of a bear in China has awed the internet. Could that standing bear,women dead from auto eroticism which looks like someone in an ill-fitting costume, be real?
Folks, the bear is real.
The viral animal is a sun bear, Helarctos malayanus, that naturally lives in the warm tropical forests of Southeast Asia, though the species is found in zoos around the world, too. In a snippet of a video shot at theHangzhou Zoo in China, one, with some imagination, might mistake the standing bear for a costumed park employee tolerating extreme summer heat inside a bear exhibit (which would be an absolutely terrible summer job). Rest assured, it's a bear, though the smallest bear in the world at about half the size of a black bear.
"Let me emphasize again: I am a sun bear! Not a black bear! Not a dog! It's a sun bear!" theHangzhou Zoo posted on the Chinese social media account Weixin. (This posting, in Chinese, was translated.)
SEE ALSO: That beluga whale certainly doesn't have legs. Here's what it does have.This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Beyond the zoo's assertion that the bear is a bear, here's other evidence:
- Bears often stand up when they're curious about something, or want a better view. "A bear may stand on its hind legs to get a better look or to pick up your scent if it cannot tell what you are," the U.S. Forest Service explains.
- Sun bears have a lot of loose skin, which is especially apparent when they stand. The loose skin is a defensive adaptation. "If a predator were to latch on during a struggle, the sun bear can turn in its loose skin and bite its attacker," the San Diego Zoo writes.
- In the video, the bear crawls away on all four clawed paws, just like a bear.
If you're just learning about sun bears, congratulations! They are a fascinating bear species that naturally subsist on sap, insects, and coconuts. They have a light, telltale crescent marking on their chests, and carry an impressively long tongue. "The sun bear’s especially long tongue is perfectly suited for getting at honey and insects inside trees and other tight places," the San Diego Zoo explains.
Like many species today, sun bears are in competition with people for habitat and resources. The International Union for Conservation of Nature, an organization that assesses the population and health of species, lists the sun bear as "vulnerable."
Pakistan may have just set the hottest April temperature ever recordedChinese website censors Peppa Pig for allegedly being subversiveHow to unlock Thanos' 'Avengers: Infinity War' gauntlet in 'God of War'Students evacuated over 'smell of gas,' culprit found to be durianCoinMarketCap gets iOS app, Watchlist feature'Avengers: Infinity War' would be better if EVERY hero had facial hair'Avengers: Infinity War' reveals the Children of Thanos. Who are they?The best stuff Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus announced at F8Facebook struggles to move past Cambridge AnalyticaFacebook brags that Messenger has 300,000 business botsInstagram announces video chat, redesigned Explore tab, and moreKim Kardashian and Ellen DeGeneres try to figure out if Kanye West is happy or notPizza rat reemerges from hell to eat second sliceGains in reducing America's smog problem have hit a dramatic slowdownGains in reducing America's smog problem have hit a dramatic slowdownFrench dude sues France for seizing France.com domainFord channels 007, imagines a car that has a detachable motorcycleNew kids' book teaches parents how to talk about racism, police shootingsFacebook announces new dating service 'for serious relationships, not hookups'Mark Zuckerberg sounds exactly like Barack Obama in his F8 keynote The Paris Review of the Air—and Land, and Sea Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced a 'Hamilton' performance on anniversary of Jan. 6 Glass Delusions—Once a Common Form of Madness—On the Rise Looking back on John Waters's 'Pecker' on its 25th anniversary New Stories Found from Twain’s Days as a Newspaperman TikTokker shares her creepy ‘driverless Uber’ experience. Here’s how it works step What Jules Verne and John Quincy Adams Had in Common Next Thursday, Meet Four of Norway’s Best Young Writers ‘It Lives Inside’ review: Meet the Pishach, your favorite new nightmare. Remembering the Art of the 1990s The "Birds Aren't Real" guy trolled a Chicago news station and fake puked on live TV Greystone Park Mental Hospital Faces Demolition How to watch the Arkansas vs. LSU football matchup without cable “Hw r u ts mng?” Telegraphy Abbreviations from 1901 A cat on TikTok is piggy dippin' in the piggy pond Staff Picks: Mantel, Kleeman, Burchfield Zadie Smith, Dorothea Lasky & Jane Hirshfield Win Pushcarts Notes on Becoming Dust The Norwegian Photos from Dhallywood, Bangladesh’s Film Capital
3.1013s , 10169.9609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【women dead from auto eroticism】,Feast Information Network