They Recorded It in the Amazon Jungle and Nobody Can Believe It

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Published 2024-04-19
The largest remaining tropical rainforest in the world, the Amazon, is the most unexplored wilderness and hides the most bizarre and astounding finds.

From the biggest arachnid in the world to a walking tree, here are the 20 strangest things found in the Amazon!

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All Comments (21)
  • @user-it1hc9nn8i
    GOOGLE is illegally selling the C315/Chromebook which is designed to be inoperable for the price of $149.00/USD.
  • @Pbav8tor
    I guess I'm a weirdo. I quite like spiders. I haven't kept one as a pet since I was a child,(tarantula-Helen of Troy) but I'll always like them. They think all the wasps and mosquitoes are tasty snacks, and they are super heroes at catching them. They have cute little paws.
  • @user-yh3lt6sx1b
    If I see a spider that big, I would run like hell out of there. That guy has guts letting it walk over his hand. Wow
  • Not sure what to make of the dragon looking picture. I'm sure there are creatures yet to be discovered on our planet so...who knows?
  • @clivemacken552
    If you think about it plastic is a byproduct of petrol which is oil based which is actual vegetation matter so not a thing that should surprise people really
  • @heberje
    I would think mountain cultures may understand glider tech they watch the birds.
  • I lived along the Ucayalli River in Peru. The Common Potoo was my favorite nighttime singer. It woke me up at 1:00 am calling out “Ah-yaah-Ma-Ma”. It was locally called Ayamama by the Ashaninka. They told their children the Ayamama was crying for her lost children who wandered too far into the jungle and got lost. I saw many Common Potoo in Cali and Buga, Colombia. They are extremely cryptic and difficult to pick out of their daytime perch. But I was shocked to see one sleeping in a Cali neighborhood on an electric line. I saw one Long-tailed Potoo at Itiatia National Park in Brazil. The Potoos are marvelous birds.
  • Not an arachnophobe... I actually have a bird eater in my spider collection, they are AWESOME & also one of the fastest growing tarantula species which is also very cool. Mine is still molting (what they do to grow) at least twice a yr. Can't wait to see her at her max size, which really they don't stop growing... it just slows down as they age. They can live up to or over 20 yrs. Pretty impressive.
  • @dmonhuntr122
    I was lucky to experience the corpse flower blossom when I watched the Dennis The Menace movie. Lol
  • Btw the death bloom flower doesn't smell like burning flesh... which smells like pork cooking, it actually smells like ROTTING flesh to attract the types of bugs that would be attracted to that smell.
  • @flwrangler
    The corpse flower DOES NOT grow in or around the Amazon. While there are several varieties, all are indigenous to Indonesia. While there may indeed be some smelly flowers along the Amazon, " corpse flowers" are NOT among them. One of the local botanical gardens here in Central Florida had one on display. During the bloom it became a popular local attraction. Given that peticular variety blooms only once every 15 years. The " Jesus" lizard is now wel established in S. Florida among the 70 other species of invasive reptiles that now populate the the state.
  • @susieq6212
    The Capibarra was found next to a truck on a South Texas Nuclear Plant.
  • The locl Botanical Garden grews one , always in a glass house , as we arent Tropical . This one gerw tall enough that an adult could put their noses intowards the staemen , and it does smell like a rotting corpse - staff leave a couple of doors open , in that section of the glasshouse . Interesting to look at and to experience .