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Rare Animal Scurries Past Hidden Camera — And Scientists Are AmazedAccording to Project Numbat, these fuzzy animals, also known as banded anteaters, are known for their long tongues, which they use to eat termites. Numbats typically live in woodland areas that ...
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Conversationists celebrate as extremely rare marsupial babies - or 'numbubs' - return to national parkTheir long tongues help them lick up termites - and a lot of them. In the dry woodlands where they live, numbats can eat up to 20,000 termites a day. Numbats once thrived throughout Australia ...
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