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Known by the Nickname 'Deep Sea Flathead Gecko,' This Bold Figure Confronted the United States, Repeatedly Damaging American Submarines

The most fearless creature in the world is probably the Flathead Gecko. The Flathead Gecko's original name is honey badger, and honey badgers have lived on the African savanna for generations. They are small in size, but have the biggest guts on the savanna. If anyone provokes a honey badger, they must be prepared for the honey badger to retaliate. Even the iron fence of the zoo cannot stop the honey badger's revenge. However, the Flathead Gecko we are going to talk about today is not a honey badger, but another creature living in the deep sea – the Cigar Datto shark.

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In recent years, people's exploration of the ocean has become more and more frequent, and there are not a few weapons that have gone down to the sea every year. From our perspective, these strong weapons are a symbol of national strength. But for animals, these foreign iron blocks are dangerous. Animals' instinct is to avoid danger, so many creatures will immediately flee when they detect danger. However, the Flathead Gecko we are going to talk about today is different. It stubbornly 'faces the difficulty'. The saying 'oddballs have odd appearances' is perfectly suited to the Cigar Datto shark.

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The Cigar Datto shark has a very exaggerated appearance: huge eyes emit a faint green fluorescence, making it look a bit scary in the deep sea; its nose is shaped like a spiral; and its teeth are standard for sharks – neatly arranged saw-like teeth. Unlike ordinary fish, the Cigar Datto shark attacks secretly, biting its prey and rotating its body for several weeks until it digs the flesh of the prey. At the end of the last century, submarines became the new prey of the Cigar Datto shark. According to records, the Cigar Datto shark has repeatedly bitten the American submarine's chlorothrin rubber sonar dome, affecting the submarine's movement in the water. Of course, anything the Cigar Datto shark can bite is not spared. Cables and equipment are no exception. To protect the submarine, the United States decided to install a glass fiber on the sonar dome, but it didn't last long. Within ten years, the Cigar Datto shark bit the submarine's rubber sheath again, and the Americans had to study new ways to deal with the Cigar Datto shark.



No one could have imagined that the invincible United States would be baffled by a deep-sea animal. Indeed, when dealing with unreasonable people, you have to let the 'unreasonable' 'animal' deal with it. The fearless deep-sea Flathead Gecko left a very deep impression on the Americans.


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