Scientific name: Honey badger.
Family: Mustelidae, genus Honey Badger. (There is only one species of animal in this family)
Average life expectancy: 24 years.
Average body length: 91cm.
Average shoulder height: 39cm.
Average weight: 11kg. (equivalent to a healthy adult Thai-Ri-Tian)
Diet: It eats everything from birds and beasts to flowers, birds and fish. It prefers poisonous snakes and loves honey the most. It would even sacrifice its life for honey. Even its name has to have the word "honey" in it. To it, honey is faith.
The only partner in life: the honey bee, a bird that likes to tip off honey badgers. It is good at finding hidden beehives in the wild and notifying nearby honey badgers to come.
Natural enemies: So far, no species has been found to threaten its survival except itself.
Survival rate of cubs: 50%. Because they will fight in their cradles, and the probability of cannibalism is close to 100%, which is a typical example of seeking death from the womb.
Combat Power: A representative with amazing defense, and average attack power.
Results:
Record against Cheetahs: Fighting for 1-3 hours, draw or being killed.
Record against lions: Fighting with 8 sub-adult lions, killed in 20 minutes.
Against Python: fought for 6 hours, was defeated and killed.
Against the crocodile: was defeated instantly without a doubt.
Against Baboons: Tried to steal a baby baboon for breakfast, but was caught by a group of baboons and beaten to death.
Fans: Baby cheetahs. (In 1976, Randall Eaton, an expert in cheetah behavior and ecology, discovered an interesting phenomenon: from birth to two and a half months old, cheetahs have been imitating the fur color of honey badgers, that is, the upper part of the body is silver-gray or almost white, and the lower part is black, like honey badgers. He believes that this is the mimicry of honey badgers by baby cheetahs to protect themselves from being targeted by large predators.)
Honors: Multiple world record holder, known as "the world's most fearless animal."
Conservation level and status: It is listed in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species at LC (Least Concern), which is also known as the "Least Concern" level. However, due to the efforts of the population, it is about to become an endangered species.