The anteater-eater is one of the few known natural predators of anteaters. Evolution has equipped them with a host of tools to hunt down their primary source of food. They are an aggressive, dangerous species, and a threat to any humans who have a habit of poking things into anthills. Though they will not actually ingest human prey, their powerful jaws are sufficient to render any human into a pulpy mass of red. The species is listed as 'Kinda Endangered' on the IUCN red list, given their scarcity, low reproduction rates, and poor table manners. They are thought to be the third largest carnivore after the polar bear and T-Rex.
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| - The anteater-eater is one of the few known natural predators of anteaters. Evolution has equipped them with a host of tools to hunt down their primary source of food. They are an aggressive, dangerous species, and a threat to any humans who have a habit of poking things into anthills. Though they will not actually ingest human prey, their powerful jaws are sufficient to render any human into a pulpy mass of red. The species is listed as 'Kinda Endangered' on the IUCN red list, given their scarcity, low reproduction rates, and poor table manners. They are thought to be the third largest carnivore after the polar bear and T-Rex.
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abstract
| - The anteater-eater is one of the few known natural predators of anteaters. Evolution has equipped them with a host of tools to hunt down their primary source of food. They are an aggressive, dangerous species, and a threat to any humans who have a habit of poking things into anthills. Though they will not actually ingest human prey, their powerful jaws are sufficient to render any human into a pulpy mass of red. The species is listed as 'Kinda Endangered' on the IUCN red list, given their scarcity, low reproduction rates, and poor table manners. They are thought to be the third largest carnivore after the polar bear and T-Rex.
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