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The Yakuts in the Arctic, who live on this "food", have seen a long time.
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What kind of food do Yakuts people living in the Arctic eat to survive? After reading it, I was envious.
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Arctics??
The Arctic is an ocean, uninhabited. If you are a tourist, please bring your own dry food ......Hehe.
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Fish, and shrimp have what to eat, because as long as you can survive there, it's high-protein, high-fat, high-calorie things.
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In the Arctic, there is little vegetation and arable land, and the Inuit never have vegetables or grains on their menus, only meat such as fish, seals, arctic rabbits, arctic foxes and even polar bears can be eaten on their plates. Of course, humans are also in danger of becoming prey, and the Inuit have a high mortality rate, or fall to their deaths while catching birds, or fall into the ice while catching dolphins, or be bitten by polar bears, although it sounds cruel, but to a certain extent, it also makes the Arctic region's natural resources and human consumption tend to a relatively balanced state.
When hunting seals, the Inuit often look for some "blowholes" on the ice, and where there are blowholes, seals will emerge from time to time to ventilate, so as to wait for them to appear and then kill them with knives and arrows. Seals have an extremely thick layer of fat and are an excellent reserve food for the Inuit.
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Hello, if you are in the North Pole, it is recommended to bring something to eat, such as dry food, biscuits, or something? Because you can only eat some wild creatures in the Arctic, like some fish, it is easy not to try it.
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Adapted to the high fecundity, the lemming eats an astonishing amount of energy in order to replenish the energy it consumes when reproducing.
It can eat twice its own weight in a meal, and it has a wide range of diets, including almost all Arctic plants such as grass roots, grass stems and mosses, and it can eat 45 kilograms of food a year.
Call lemmings "fat busy harvesters".
The lemming is a very ordinary, cute little animal, living in the Arctic all year round, with an oval body, short limbs, smaller than ordinary mice, up to 15 cm long, with a stubby tail, small ears, and a timid glint in its eyes, but when cornered, it will also be furious and fight back. The Eskimos called it an animal from the sky, while the Scandinavian peasants simply called it a "sky mouse". This is because, in a given year, their number will increase dramatically, as if they are heavenly soldiers and generals, and they will come suddenly.
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Polar bears are serious carnivores in the bear family, and their diet is all meat. They mainly prey on seals, especially ringed seals, as well as bearded, saddle and hooded seals. In addition, they also catch walruses, beluga whales, seabirds, fish, small mammals, and sometimes carrion.
In the summer, they will occasionally eat berries or plant rhizomes. In late spring and summer, they go to the seaside to fetch seaweed to replenish the minerals and vitamins that the body needs.
Unlike other bears, they don't hide their uneaten food and eat it later, or even eat it after eating fat, knowing that high-calorie fat is more important than meat for them, because they not only need to maintain a fat layer for warmth, but also need to store energy for food shortages.
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There are more than 100 species of flowering plants, more than 2,000 species of lichens, more than 500 species of mosses, and plants not found in Antarctica, such as ferns and gymnosperms.
Characteristics of Arctic plants:
There are many kinds and strange things.
Clonal propagation is carried out mainly by rhizome extension.
The flowers are large and fresh, and most of them are evergreen. Can't eat.
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We know that the Antarctic continent is the coldest, windiest and driest place on Earth, so what do the Antarctic expedition members eat in Antarctica? Let's take a look. There are few vegetables in the recipe, the climate of the Antarctic continent is special, and it cannot produce its own food, and the food of the expedition team members in Antarctica is completely transported from their own country, due to the long distance and the long ice time on the coast of the Antarctic continent every year, they can only be supplied by ship every year.
There are few vegetables in the recipe.
Greatly increase the amount of meat eaten in order to adapt to Antarctica.
As the saying goes, a good breakfast should be eaten well, and a good Antarctic breakfast can best reflect its scientificity;
I often take liquor to the field to fight the cold.
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bones, which may get into the esophagus or stomach.
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Sea cucumbers, shark fins and other highly nutritious foods.
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