When the scent of salmon comes a knockin', grizzlies come a callin'. However, it ain't easy being a bear when you're contending with courageous canines.
If cats have nine lives, this dog has at least three! This puppy survives a head-on collision with a car followed by a gunshot at point blank range to the head.
Having one or two bats in your attic can be a nuisance, but having 2,000? Well... Let's just say that this Scottish family has learned to live with them.
A sideshow performer tries to beat the record for holding the most live cockroaches in his mouth. These are 3-inch long, hissing cockroaches. Will he make it or will he be "roached" out?
Professional snake handler Jackie sits in a bathtub full of rattlesnakes trying to beat his own record. Can he survive 45 minutes with these venomous creatures?
An boy shares a glass coffin with 125 venomous orb-weaving spiders in the hopes of beating the world record. Can he handle the spiders or will he be entombed in a web of death?
The bald eagle is back with a vengeance in Homer, Alaska. With a local woman feeding the eagles 500 pounds of fish a day, their numbers have grown to dangerous proportions.
A Thai stunt woman shares a bedroom with 5,000 scorpions. Will she be able to break her own record and stay with her "difficult" roommates for 33 days?
Internet "super cat" Rocky is taking a stand against walking on four legs! Watch as he stands in place, legs fully extended, for 46 incredible seconds.
Officially the world's largest domestic cat, Scarlett's Magic is carrying the wildest genes of any pet feline on the planet. Scarlet's Magic is a savannah cat: a cross between a domestic cat and a serval.
Sebastian's two front teeth are worth their weight in gold, literally. The teeth are curved outwards instead of inwards. To protect them from breaking, his owner coated them in gold!
The Gambian pouch rat is about the size of an average house cat. It carries deadly diseases that could potentially cripple the population of Southern Florida.
A leg grows from a lamb's head in Cheles, Spain. The condition, called polymelia, is a birth defect where an additional limb grows from a random part of the body.
On this episode of Animal Planet's "Fooled by Nature," see how the Bengal tiger's speed and agility helps it capture prey. The tiger's amazing speed allows it to cover twenty feet in a single stride.