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People often go out of their way to help the needy. The sweet gesture of offering some help that is urgently required while others ignore the needy is and should be much appreciated. A video showing a man helping an injured snake by offering it water has surfaced on Twitter.
घायल सांप को पानी पिलाकर दिखाई इंसानियत pic.twitter.com/QpyJLx1Hmg— @kumarayush21 (@kumarayush084) September 30, 2022
A user shared the video on Twitter with the caption, “Man gives water to an injured snake and shows humanity.” The meaning of the word “humanity” doesn’t mean that a human is compassionate exclusively to only fellow humans. It means that humans are compassionate towards every living thing in the world. The video proves this right.
The 30-second footage shows a man offering water to an injured snake. The snake slowly opens its mouth at regular intervals to drink water as the man continues to pour it.
One of the most incredible scenes in nature documentaries. A hatchling marine iguana attacked by snakes hunting en masse[Full clip, BBC Planet Earth II: https://t.co/Si4FBgdtEO]pic.twitter.com/eA9PpFkS6z
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) October 2, 2022
Videos featuring snakes often go viral on the microblogging platform and one of them was shared by a user “Massimo” that showed snakes attacking a hatchling marine iguana and the iguana escaping their grasp. The video has over 1 lakh views on Twitter. The caption revealed the video to be footage from the BBC Earth documentary.
Think about the iguana hatchling, whose instinct is to crack open its shell & claw to the surface. Without any parental guidance, it knows that it has to run as fast as it can to reach the beach, but also that its predator is blind but senses motion. Genetic knowledge is amazing.— Fernhead (@AntonFernhead) October 2, 2022
People in the comments section appreciated the documentary footage. A user wrote, “Think about the iguana hatchling, whose instinct is to crack open its shell & claw to the surface. Without any parental guidance, it knows that it has to run as fast as it can to reach the beach, but also that its predator is blind but senses motion. Genetic knowledge is amazing.”
The Eurasian Wryneck, aka, the “snake bird,” will twist they necks to mimic a snake in order to scare predators away. pic.twitter.com/rBBPPBD8Y3— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) October 1, 2022
Another video featured the “snake bird”, the Eurasian Wryneck. The video showed the bird twisting its neck to imitate snakes to escape predators. The video has more than 8.67 lakh views and over 6,500 likes.
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