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Slithering through their subterranean aquarium, three "baby dragons" have gone on display in an aquarium at Slovenia's Postojna Cave, where they hatched in 2016 in a rare successful breeding. Pictured above: A young olm or proteus (Proteus anguinus) an aquatic salamander is seen in an aquarium in Postojna Cave.
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The cave-dwelling animals, officially called proteus or olms, have pale pink skin, no eyesight, a long thin body and four legs. They live only in the waters of dark caves of the southern European Karst region.
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Olms are ancient underwater predators, which can live up to 100 years and only breed once in a decade, are resistant to long-term starvation, an adaptation to its underground habitat. Rare occasion of egg hatching occurred in beginning of 2016 where 64 eggs were hatched. 21 young olms surrvived and are now slowly being released into an aquarium in the cave open for visitors.
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Only 30 visitors per day will be allowed to visit the so-called baby dragons - ancient underwater predators that can live up to 100 years and only breed once in a decade.
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Containers with young olms are seen in the makeshift laboratory in Postojna Cave. "We are proud to present three out of the 21 baby olms, the world-famous 'dragon's offspring', which we have kept a close eye on since 2016," the Postojna cave said in a statement.
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The three are among 21 offspring that hatched in 2016 when one of the olms at the cave lay around 60 eggs in one of the observation tanks.
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To ensure their survival and gather more information about the creatures, cave authorities kept them far from visitors in a cave laboratory as their "best kept and most carefully guarded secret" - until now.
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Reaching a maximum length of 35 centimetres, the blind animal with its four tiny limbs is a far cry from the scary monsters conjured up in national folklore.
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Sometimes also referred to as "human fish", the slim vertebrate sports three feathery gills on each side of its elongated snout. The body's sheer pink skin makes it easy to spot the internal organs.
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The protected eel-like species can go without food for up to a decade.
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Found primarily in Balkan cave rivers, the olms have been living in the world-famous Postojna cave, 50 kilometres southwest of the capital Ljubljana, for what researchers say is millions of years.
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The baby dragons' presentation comes only days after the cave - one of Europe's largest that usually draws 700,000 visitors a year - reopened its doors following three months of closure due to the coronavirus epidemic. Pictured above: Stalagmites, stalactites, and formations called curtains in the Postojna Cave.
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Biologist Katarina Kanduc overlooks the containers with young olms in a makeshift laboratory in an aquarium in Postojna Cave.
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Biologist Primoz Gnezda prepares to release a young olm into an aquarium.
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