00:00Hey, Petra. How you feeling?
00:06You're such a sweet heart.
00:30You're such a sweet heart.
01:00You're such a sweet heart.
01:30You're such a sweet heart.
01:59You're a male, and they love it.
02:12I'm 105 years old, this guy.
02:15Which is actually the center of Guam.
02:21How cool is that?
02:25This is Mr. Jibbers, the clouded leopard.
02:35This is Mr. Jibbers, the clouded leopard.
02:47It's closest relative is the saber-toothed tiger.
02:50It's actually pretty heavy.
02:52It comes from Southeast Asia.
02:54And a really cool, fun fact about these guys,
02:57it's got ankles that can turn around,
02:59which gives it an advantage to hunting prey and climbing trees.
03:03Check this guy out.
03:05Look at this amazing cat.
03:11Oh, here she comes.
03:24Come on, Marge.
03:26Check her out, baby.
03:28There she is.
03:29Large and in charge.
03:30Come on.
03:31It's Marge.
03:32Let's get her all out here.
03:35She'll follow us right out.
03:36Right out.
03:37All right, Marge.
03:38How you doing, kid?
03:39Marge came from Fred Grunwald's house.
03:40Let's see.
03:41This is a harder one for her to eat.
03:42She has to, see, that's what happens.
03:44She gets fixated on me, and I need her to get fixated on the food.
03:48Hi, Marge.
03:49You going to bite my nose?
03:50Yes, you are.
03:51She will nail me, dude.
03:54So sometimes I got to do this.
03:56Look at this.
03:57She just doesn't care.
03:58She's just, I think it's just me.
04:04Gosh, Marge, what are you doing?
04:07Oh, there's a big old baby turtle.
04:10There's a baby turtle here.
04:11Come here.
04:12Stop.
04:13All right.
04:14I thought we could feed her.
04:15Here we go.
04:16Come on.
04:17This is hysterical.
04:18The thing is, Marge hasn't gotten much bigger than this.
04:21Can she eat?
04:22Oh, look at this.
04:23Watch this.
04:24All right.
04:25Whatever you do, Marge, be careful.
04:27All right.
04:29Yeah, watch this.
04:30Whoa!
04:31No, Marge!
04:48I'm a gold male Galapagos tortoise butcher.
04:55These guys can get enormous 600 pounds plus.
05:01Now, the Galapagos tortoises come from the Galapagos Islands, and in fact the islands were named after the
05:09tortoise.
05:10Galapagos is tortoise.
05:11Galapagos is tortoise in Spanish because they discovered the islands and they belong to Ecuador.
05:25Now, the difference between the Galapagos tortoise and Galapagos tortoise is the nuchal scurt
05:32scoops here, right above the neck, and the wide broad head.
05:37In my hand right here is the red-eyed armored skink.
05:40It is a small, ground-dwelling lizard that lives in New Guinea, and as you can see how
05:46it gets its name, it's got really cool scales on the back there, orange rings around its
05:51eyes.
05:52And this is an adult female.
05:53Now, females can be somewhat docile and just chill in your hand, but when scare and threaten,
05:58they can run pretty fast.
05:59A cool fact about these is that they live on the forest forest, and when the female lays
06:06the egg, which only lays one egg at a time, it only has one working ovary, which is the
06:11right ovary, the female will protect the egg, and if it ever becomes uncovered, she'll come
06:16in, recover back up, and find it in her passage.
06:19Females are pretty beautiful, this little girl.
06:36So let's
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