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Animal Powers

Focused Control

Strike with the tooth.

Animals grouped here express a similar power through their behavior in nature. Each species still has its own principle, lesson, meaning, and field-guide page.

5 species

Geography Cone animal lesson image on AnimalDex

Geography Cone

Species principle: Harpoon Precision

Strike with the tooth.

Power becomes serious when a small strike is exact.

Cone Snails use venomous harpoon-like radular teeth to subdue prey, combining slow movement with highly specialized predatory chemistry.

Indian Rock Python (Python molurus) thumbnail image on AnimalDex

Indian Rock Python

Species principle: Constriction Power

Coil the force.

Lasting strength needs less motion than panic does.

Indian rock pythons use camouflage, muscular constriction, and patient ambush rather than fast pursuit.

Madagascar Ground Boa (Acrantophis madagascariensis) thumbnail image on AnimalDex

Madagascar Ground Boa

Species principle: Grounded Force

Hold the ground.

Strength stays calm when it knows the ground can hold it.

Madagascar Ground Boas are heavy-bodied snakes that use earthy coloration, ground movement, and constriction to capture prey in forests and disturbed habitats.

Medicinal Leech animal lesson image on AnimalDex

Medicinal Leech

Species principle: Attached Patience

Hold with purpose.

Attachment becomes strategy when timing and release are both understood.

Leeches are segmented worms that use suckers to attach; many feed on blood or small invertebrates in freshwater or moist habitats.

Yellow Anaconda (Eunectes notaeus) thumbnail image on AnimalDex

Yellow Anaconda

Species principle: Marsh Coil

Coil in the marsh.

Strength is most effective where the body understands its element.

Yellow Anacondas are semi-aquatic constrictors of wetlands and marshes, using heavy bodies, camouflage, and powerful coils to subdue prey near water.

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