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"what_is_it": "\u201cWILDLIFE\r\n\"It can survive just about anything, including high doses of radiation and is virtually indestructible.\" 10 toughest animals on the planet\r\nProving that size doesn't matter when it comes to toughness, meet the world's top 10 toughest animals.\r\nApril 15, 2026\r\nNot all strength in the animal kingdom is about size. Some of the toughest creatures on Earth survive being frozen solid, crushed under immense pressure, or attacked by predators that would obliterate most life in seconds. Others endure extreme heat, toxic environments, or brutal battles for dominance\u2014and keep coming back for more.\r\nIt can survive without water in one of the driest, deadliest places on Earth, where just 1cm of rain falls a year. Meet the ultimate survivor \r\n5 ways to live forever: the secrets behind why some species live for a very long time \r\nToughest animal ever\r\nThe microscopically tiny, teddy bear-like tardigrade can survive just about anything. It\u2019s not fazed by extreme cold or extreme heat \u2013 temperatures from absolute zero to boiling point \u2013 high doses of radiation, pressure equivalent to the forces found in deep ocean trenches, being almost completely dried out for years and even being in a vacuum.\r\nIt does represent the ultimate in indestructibility but there are other animals that can also claim their share of fame as being the toughest animals on earth in a variety of ways.\r\nMeet the tiny water bear that are the toughest creatures on earth, able to survive being microwaved and sent to space \r\nMice, dogs, primates...10 animals that have been to space: Discover the incredible, tragic creatures that paved the way for human exploration \r\nToughest diet\r\nThe lammergeier, or bearded vulture, has a curious preference in food items. Although it is mostly a scavenger that feeds on dead mammals, it shuns a lot of the flesh and skin of a carcass, using this only to feed to its chicks, in order to concentrate on the bones.\r\nIt can swallow whole bones up to the size of a lamb\u2019s leg. Bigger bones it takes hundreds of feet into the air and drops onto rocks to shatter them. It will often do this repeatedly until the pieces are of a suitable size to fit down its throat.\r\nIt is also not unknown for the birds to drop living animals to their death, using their enormous seven- to nine-foot wingspans to drive larger animals over the edge of a precipice. The reason the bird can feed itself so successfully on a bony diet is down to its very specialised stomach acid that will dissolve the densest bone and cartilage in less than 24 hours.\r\nToughest in the cold\r\nThe North American wood frog can survive severe winter temperatures in Alaska even if 70% of the water in its body freezes. The effect of freezing on normal cells is for ice crystals to form and break up the cells\u2019 structure. Wood frogs prepare for this by accumulating urea in their blood and converting large quantities of glycogen in their liver to glucose that circulates with the urea.\r\nCan any animals survive freezing? How some species stay alive despite having a body temperature of zero or below \r\nThese substances combine to prevent the cells from being damaged when their water content freezes. With these protections, wood frogs can survive temperatures down to around -14\u00ba C (7\u00ba F) for about 200 days. For short periods they can tolerate even lower temperatures. The only other contender for such cold endurance is the Japanese tree frog that can survive freezing as low as -30\u00ba C (-22\u00ba F) for up to 120 days, but scientists are still unsure how it does it.\r\nToughest in the heat\r\nTemperatures in the water around hydrothermal vents on the Pacific Ocean floor are some of the highest on earth, but that doesn\u2019t bother the Pompeii worm. These 5-6in (12-15cm) members of the bristle worm family reside in tubes made of polymer layers, often with their tails right next to the vents \u2013 fissures in the seabed from which geothermically heated water emerges \u2013 where the water can be 80\u00ba C (176\u00ba F) in heat.\r\nHow long can animals survive without water? While humans can only manage a day in a desert there's one toughie that can last decades \r\nMeanwhile, the red feathery gills on their heads poke up into waters that, away from the vents, are a much cooler by comparison, but are still at 22\u00ba C (72\u00ba F).\r\nScientists think that a furry covering on the worms\u2019 backs, formed by colonies of bacteria that contain special proteins to protect them from heat, acts as an insulator. The worms, in return for the thermal shield blanket, secret a mucus that the bacteria feed on.\r\nToughest skin\r\nIf you\u2019re looking for impenetrable body armour, look no further than the saltwater crocodile, the skin of which can stop a bullet. This tough hide is made up of knobbly plates on its back, tail and head called scutes. These are composed of keratin, a super-tough protein that also forms the horns of a rhino, the hooves of a horse and our own fingernails.\r\n\"These are not ordinary teeth as not only are they razor sharp and coated with iron, they have a pair of venom glands in their lower jaws\" World's 7 deadliest reptiles \r\nUnderneath the scutes is a layer of overlapping plates of calcium phosphate and collagen called the osteoderm. This is essentially bony tissue, full of blood vessels, that not only protects the crocodile but also acts as a heat-exchanger, helping to regulate its temperature.\r\nStaggering crocodile photos reveal just how ferocious these apex predators can be \r\nCrocodiles need this heavy-duty hide to keep them alive in fights with other crocodiles because one of the other notable characteristics of the species is the power of its bite. This enables it to tackle prey animals much bigger than itself but is a bit of a drawback in domestic disputes.\r\nToughest in a fight\r\nDubbed \u2018pound-for-pound the most powerful creature in Africa\u2019 the honey badger wins the crown for fearless behaviour. Aggressive and intelligent, about the size of a red fox but much, much heavier, this mustelid will take on any other species if threatened.\r\nHead-butting, drowning and dive-bombing \u2013 discover 10 badass animals that aren't afraid to put up a fight \r\nHoney badgers have been reported attacking horses, Cape buffalo, lions and hyenas that have disturbed their burrows or cornered them in some way. They are equipped with a variety of defences \u2013 loose, thick skin, five sharp-clawed toes on each foot, a pungent yellow liquid expressed from anal glands, a tendency to charge headlong at an adversary, and an unnerving scream.\r\nIs this the world's most aggressive animal? Just the size of a fox, this badass raids beehives, steals from lions, shrugs off snake venom and never backs down\u2026 \r\nTheir skin, particularly around the neck, protects vital organs and resists insect stings, porcupine quills and bites from other mammals and its looseness also prevents a predator from getting a good hold on it, as it can twist itself free.\r\nToughest migrant\r\nThe amazing feat of endurance of Arctic terns cannot be bettered. The birds fly a round trip of 44,000 miles (70,000km) on their migration from their summer quarters in Antarctica to their breeding grounds in north America, northern Europe and the Arctic.\r\nArctic terns travel faster in large flocks \r\nDespite having a wingspan of only 36cm (14in) and weighing only 86-130g (3-4.5oz) they navigate the offshore coasts of Europe and Africa, north and south America in three to four months twice a year, using the prevailing winds to assist with the flight.\r\nCraziest and most dangerous animal migrations: From tiny insects to giant whales, 10 reckless journeys that will blow your mind \r\nBecause they feed mainly on small fish and crustaceans, they are rarely seen by humans on their epic journeys, sleeping on the wing and only landing for any length of time when they arrive at their destinations. They are long-lived birds, so in a 30-year lifespan it\u2019s possible that they will have travelled some 1.5 million miles (2.4m km) \u2013 from the earth to the moon and back three times!\r\nToughest defence system\r\nPredators are given warning that a porcupine is annoyed. First it raises its quills \u2013 spines of modified hairs up to 20in long, each covered in around 800 microscopic overlapping barbs of keratin. There are 30,000 of them covering most of the animal\u2019s upper body.\r\nDoes anything eat porcupines? Surely its spiky quills protects it from predators? \r\nNext, the porcupine rattles the special cluster of hollow quills attached to its back end. At the same time, it chatters its teeth and emits a foul smell from the skin above its tail. If these powerful signals are ignored, the porcupine follows up its tough stance by running backwards into its attacker, impaling it with the quills of its back and tail.\r\nWatch amazing video of a cute leopard cub sussing out a porcupine and testing the sharpness of its quills... Is it worth attacking? \r\nThe backward-facing barbs on the quills make them very difficult to remove, rather like tiny arrows embedded in the skin. If the attacked animal survives but any quills are left in place, they can cause infection. It\u2019s a defence mechanism that is at least extremely painful and maiming, at worst lethal.\r\nToughest to identify\r\nImagine you\u2019re a marine predator \u2013 a shark or moray eel \u2013 in search of a meal, and a small defenceless octopus will do nicely. What you would not expect is for your quarry to suddenly change into something you\u2019d rather avoid, like a poisonous sea snake or a scorpionfish with its deadline spines. That\u2019s the handy trick employed by a mimic octopus that can alter its shape and colour drastically in order to \u2018become\u2019 any one of about 15 different sea creatures.\r\nIt can look like a lionfish by turning a stripy brown and white and holding its arms out to emulate the fish\u2019s spines. Or it can colour up in black and white rings to become a banded sea snake, curling up six of its arms but leaving two trailing together to appear like a pair of serpents.\r\nOr, if it wants to sneak up on its own prey, it can choose to be spotty beige in colour and bunch all its arms together to stream out behind its body as it glides close to the seabed, looking just like a flatfish.\r\nToughest at climbing\r\nFor sheer skill on steep cliffs, you can\u2019t find a nimbler climber than a mountain goat in north America or an ibex in Europe, Asia and Africa. Thanks to their unique narrow, two-toed hooves, that combine a hard outer rim to protect the feet on rocky ground with a pliable, rubbery pad that grips even smooth stone, both species can scale almost vertical slopes.\r\nThey have an enhanced sense of balance and their centre of gravity is nearer to the front end than the back quarters. This enables them to perform a pivot if they are standing on a narrow ledge and want to turn back, by doing a \u2018hand stand\u2019 on the front legs and placing the hind legs on the rock face to push themselves round. It\u2019s not unknown for mountain goats and ibex to miss a step and slip, but they have a self-preservation technique. By spreading their sturdy legs and using their grippy hooves they can usually slide to a stop.\r\nDISCOVER MORE INCREDIBLE WILDLIFE:\r\n\u25cf The 10 deadliest animals to humans\u2028\u25cf The world's most venomous animals\u2028\u25cf How one of the world's cutest creatures packs a killer bite\r\nEnjoying BBC Wildlife?\r\nRead the latest issue in full. Now on Apple News+\r\nThe undisputed authority on the natural world, bringing readers expert insight and extraordinary photography for over 60 years\u201d",
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