Nature's Most Wanted (Full Episode) | World's Deadliest | Nat Geo Animals
This episode welcomes viewers to the deadly world of the most armed and dangerous gangsters, assassins and con artists of the animal kingdom. A gang of flesh-eating fish take down a river rat; a Bengal tiger shows just how to get the job done—alone; a red-back spider lures, then eats, her date; a femme fatale like no other, mama brown bear goes head-to-head with another bear to protect her young; and a pack of killer whales demonstrate how they live up to their name. Watch and discover how these animals and more earned their spots on World Deadliest: Nature’s Most Wanted. World's Deadliest | S2 E6 Explore the World with National Geographic subscriptions: http://natgeo.com/ytngmagazine ➡ Subscribe: https://on.natgeo.com/41A7tf0 ➡ Get wild with more Nat Geo Animals Full Episodes: https://on.natgeo.com/3V2EOLO ➡ Get Nat Geo Full Episodes: https://on.natgeo.com/3V5ZfHI And check out more National Geographic series and specials here: ➡ Disney Plus: https://on.natgeo.com/3q6on5p ➡ Hulu: https://on.natgeo.com/3Qor0Ko ➡ NGTV app https://www.nationalgeographic.com/tv/ ➡ ABC app https://abc.com/ #WorldsDeadliest #FullEpisode #NatGeoAnimals About National Geographic Animals: National Geographic Animals brings you closer to the wild than ever before. Take a journey through the animal kingdom to discover fierce predators, surprising behaviors, adorable babies, and more through our fascinating wildlife documentaries, series, and specials. Get More National Geographic: Official Site: https://nationalgeographic.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/natgeo Facebook: https://facebook.com/natgeo Threads: https://threads.com/@natgeo X: https://x.com/NatGeo LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/national-geographic TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@natgeo Reddit: https://reddit.com/user/nationalgeographic Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/natgeo Nature's Most Wanted (Full Episode) | World's Deadliest | Nat Geo Animals https://youtu.be/9D_3FkAah7w National Geographic youtube.com/@NatGeoAnimals