163cm Lifelike Sex Realistic Dolls

$468

SKU: P00052 Categories: ,

Details

Unit price USD768 with shipping cost by sea or Railway

Many adult dolls USA, Germany and Belgium warehouse in stock, fast delivery! 

Term of payment: TT/Western Union/Money Gram/Payoneer/Paypal

Height

163cm

Material

100% TPE with Skeleton

Height(No Head)

146cm

Waist

55m

Upper Breast

85cm

Hips

84cm

Lower Breast

47cm

Shoulder

33cm

Arm

62cm

Leg

81cm

Vaginal depth

17cm

Anal depth

15cm

Oral depth

12cm

Hand

16cm

Net Weight

35kgs

Feet

21cm

Gross Weight

46kgs

Carton size

151*38*28cm

Applications:Popular used in Medical/Model/Sex Education/Adult Store

Meet the dog who can find rare sea turtle nests at a shocking success rate

From May to October in the southeastern U.S., five species of turtles, from loggerheads to Kemp’s ridley, Life Sex Doll crawl ashore under the cover of night to lay their eggs on the very beach they were born.

During this time, thousands of turtle-loving volunteers comb the shorelines looking for the reptiles’ tracks as part of an ongoing effort to gather population data and protect the nests from predators and human disruption.

Yet tracks in the sand can be misleading, as female turtles frequently make “false crawls,” clambering out of the water but returning without laying eggs. And since sea turtles disturb huge areas of sand to conceal their nests from predators, human monitors are often left guessing where the eggs are. (Read more about the dogs that put their noses to work saving wildlife.)

Now, a new study suggests man’s best friend can do it better. A scent-detecting dog named Dory pinpointed the location of sea turtle eggs more accurately than human volunteers, according to recent experiments published in the journal PLOS ONE.

“Conservation sniffers” like Dory could help scientists get a more complete picture of sea turtle nesting habits—crucial information when all U.S. sea turtle species are threatened or endangered, Torso Sex Doll says study leader Rebekah Lindborg, a conservationist with Disney’s Animals, Science, and Environment division. (The Walt Disney Company is majority owner of National Geographic Media.)

A friendly competition

Lindborg teamed up with Pepe Peruyero, a dog behaviorist and former police K9 handler who has trained scent-detection dogs for more than 20 years. Peruyero selected a rescue dog named Dory, a two-year-old terrier mix found wandering along a Florida highway, as the project’s poster dog.

Over months of training on a 50-by-50 square foot artificial beach, Peruyero trained Dory to alert at the scent of “cloacal mucus,” a sticky substance that coats a sea turtle’s freshly laid eggs, The Sex Doll with Lindborg as her handler.

Then, the team convinced the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to allow a friendly competition.

During the peak nesting seasons of 2017 and 2018, two dueling groups patrolled a stretch of shoreline about five miles long in Vero Beach, Florida.

Some days, Dory and Lindborg were responsible for flagging the location of sea turtle eggs based on Dory’s sense of smell. The rest of the time, it was up to a team of volunteers—some with a year’s experience, others with decades of dawn patrols under their belts.

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