
{
    "video": {
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        "description": "<p>The green anaconda can grow up to 20 feet long and weigh a whopping 200 pounds. That's a big body to feed. And the world's largest rodent, the capybara, is the perfect entree.</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "World's Deadliest: Anaconda Devours World's Largest Rodent", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/animals/reptiles-animals/snakes/deadliest-anaconda/", 
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        "related": {
            "link": [
                {
                    "url": "http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/green-anaconda/", 
                    "name": "Green Anaconda Animal Profile"
                }
            ]
        }, 
        "credit": "National Geographic", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/deadliest-anaconda.smil", 
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        "HTML5src": "/video/player/media-mp4/deadliest-anaconda/mp4/variant-playlist.m3u8", 
        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/54797_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>South America\u2019s jungles have their own versions of water-bound terror.</p><p>But only one group, the constrictors, uses sheer muscle power to become the apex predator.</p><p>They literally squeeze prey to death.</p><p>And the largest and most muscular of the constrictors: South America\u2019s green anaconda.</p><p>This is one of the most massive snakes on Earth.</p><p>It weighs over 200 pounds and measures close to 20 feet long.</p><p>To support this bulk, it spends almost all of its time in and around water.</p><p>Here, it can use stealth to its advantage.</p><p>Camouflaged to blend into plant-choked water, the anaconda usually waits for prey to come to it.</p><p>But when it\u2019s hungry, it searches for a meal.</p><p>The anaconda shares this flooded plain with the capybara, the largest rodents on Earth, often reaching more than 100 pounds.</p><p>Capybara are social animals and herbivores.</p><p>Much of their diet consists of aquatic plants, so they spend a lot of time near water.</p><p>Prime hunting ground for the anaconda.</p><p>Underwater, it can stalk without being seen, poking its head up just long enough to gage the distance.</p><p>Then it waits, lying in ambush.</p><p>The capybara stays within range.</p><p>The anaconda strikes\u2026latching on with six rows of teeth, coiling itself around the large rodent.</p><p>Every time the capybara exhales, the anaconda tightens its grip.</p><p>It constricts the blood flow to the capybara\u2019s heart causing cardiac arrest.</p><p>The anaconda can\u2019t tear its prey apart, so it has to somehow fit the entire four-foot meal into its stomach at one time.</p><p>Its lower jaw is not fused to its skull.</p><p>The jaw separates in the middle and flexible ligaments permit the jaw to open extra wide.</p><p>The remarkably elastic jaw and teeth that bend backward allow the anaconda to engulf its prey in one gigantic bite.</p><p>It\u2019s a huge meal.</p><p>The anaconda will rest, digesting its catch for more than two weeks.</p><p>A capybara this size will satisfy it for months, but eventually it will need to feed again\u2026and nothing will be safe from the ultimate death squeeze.</p>", 
        "id": "deadliest-anaconda"
    }
}
