Male injures a woman with poison during sex to avoid eating octopus

Male injures a woman with poison during sex to avoid eating octopus


A male blue-integrated octopus mounts a woman during sexual intercourse and injects poison in her body

Ven-Song Chung

During sexual intercourse, some male octopus injections to paralyze women to injure them with their powerful poison – and avoid eating by your peers.

Usually, animals use poison to kill hunting or protect themselves from predators. For example, some species of pufferfish produce the most powerful poison of nature as a defense mechanism, one of the tetrodotoxin. Many blue-rung octopus species use tetrodotoxin as a powerful weapon, so that they can stabilize and kill their prey quickly.

Now, in oneâ€Ĥ

(Tagstotransite) animals