According to expert estimates, there are only 500 monk seals in the world, living in the Mediterranean Sea. Affected by the deterioration of the ecological environment of seawater and beaches, they are hunted in large numbers by fishermen. The L. Kemp's Ridley turtle is currently the only animal among the world's 12 most endangered animals with increasing numbers. It must go through a growth period of 11 to 35 years. The 12 endangered animals in the world 1. Also known as Baiji and Baiji, it belongs to the beaked dolphin family and its scientific name is Lipotesvexillifer Miller. It belongs to the order of cetaceans and the Baiji family. The identifying characteristics are: the muzzle is long and narrow, approximately 300 mm long. The forehead is round and raised. The dorsal fin is triangular, located 3/5 of the body, with a low skin crest connected to the caudal fin. There is a breathing hole on the sideLeft side of the head which can be opened and closed freely. The caudal fin is horizontal, concave towards the edge and crescent-shaped. The population of Baiji dolphins is very small. It is a rare aquatic mammal, unique to China, which urgently needs protection. .Produced in the main rivers of the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River in Hubei, Anhui and Jiangsu sections. They have lived in the Yangtze River for around 25 million years and are known as "living fossils." Due to its extremely small numbers, it is listed as a first-level protected wild animal in China. 2. There are only 20 Sumatran tigers in the wild. With the extinction of the Bali tiger in the 1940s and the Caspian tiger in the 1970s, this species is also expected to disappear from the planet in the near future. 3. Garamba National Park in Congo has less than25 northern white rhinos in the world, and northern white rhinos could completely disappear from the earth. The northern white rhino is genetically very different from the southern African white rhino. They once bred in large numbers in Uganda, but gradually disappeared due to lack of local protection. In Gualamba National Park, their numbers reached 35 in the late 1980s and 30 in April 2003. Since then, 6 have been killed and 4 have been born. Last month, two more elephants were hunted and nearly a thousand elephants were killed. at the same time. 4. Orinoco Crocodile: The largest carnivore in South America and one of the 12 most endangered species in the world. 5. Monk seals (monachus-monachus or monk seal) According to experts' estimates, there are only 500 in the world, living in the Mediterranean Sea. Affected by the deterioration of the ecological environment of sea water and plages, they are hunted in large numbers. by fishermen. 6. The mouse lemur, the smallest monkey in the world, lives in Madagascar. 7. L. Kemp's Ridley turtle is currently the only animal among the 12 most endangered animals in the world with increasing numbers. It must go through a growth period of 11 to 35 years. 8. Orénac Crocodile (OuinocoCrocodile (scientific name: Crocodylusintermedius), only 250 to 700 survive in the wild. Mainly in Cuba and Venezuela. 9 Thai pig-nosed bat 10. Hawaiian snail 11. Micro- pig (pigmyhog, scientific name Sussalvanius) The world's smallest pig, a type of wild boar, lives mainly in northeast India 60 centimeters long, about 25 centimeters high and less than 10 kilograms for a pig. adult Once found in large numbers in the Himalayas, only a few individuals are now found in Manas National Park, Assan region.in India. Its genes are not much different from those of domestic pigs. 12. Spix Parrot: In the wild, Spix Parrot is not completely extinct but is extremely rare. Ornithologists searching for this bird in 1990 found only one surviving male living in northeastern Brazil. The approximately 31 birds currently captured constitute this bird's only hope of survival.
It depends on the extent of the damage he suffered...
If the injury is serious, he will not live long.
p>If the injury is not serious, it's okay. It's no big deal... In fact, many sea creatures have survived propeller cuts