Is this the Most Disrespected Animal in Nature?

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  • čas přidán 27. 01. 2022
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Komentáře • 4,5K

  • @mndiaye_97
    @mndiaye_97  Před 2 lety +1395

    Download Dragon City for free and become a Dragon Master and claim the exclusive rewards: dragoncity.onelink.me/DDHl/casgeo

    • @charlesriston8972
      @charlesriston8972 Před 2 lety +41

      My son's been on that dragon City for about a year now he loves that game

    • @EnderGoku9001
      @EnderGoku9001 Před 2 lety +34

      oh no bots

    • @KittenchaosYT
      @KittenchaosYT Před 2 lety +9

      @rakine bruh

    • @aestheticswim3397
      @aestheticswim3397 Před 2 lety +16

      I bet you can’t ruin hummingbirds

    • @ls-420stoner6
      @ls-420stoner6 Před 2 lety +11

      You bringing up Electric Eels got me to thinking about something. How many River Otters and Jaguars have been killed by Electric Eels?

  • @therandomuser5126
    @therandomuser5126 Před 2 lety +10774

    “Being related to a reptile that competed with dinosaurs just to get spawn-sniped by rodents” really got me. I feel really bad for Camen

    • @crinsombone5380
      @crinsombone5380 Před 2 lety +323

      Don't feel too bad. The largest crocodilian ever was a caiman, the purusaurus. Though if anything it's probably just ashamed that it's descendants that aren't the black caiman are so nerfed

    • @touremuhammad5983
      @touremuhammad5983 Před 2 lety +128

      @@crinsombone5380 Debatable. What about Deinosuchus (Alligator on Juice) or Sarcosuchus (Gharial on Juice)??

    • @touremuhammad5983
      @touremuhammad5983 Před 2 lety +72

      * Caiman *

    • @itzmanolo3438
      @itzmanolo3438 Před 2 lety +18

      A bot copy pasted your comment :(

    • @JackyIrony
      @JackyIrony Před 2 lety +21

      @@touremuhammad5983 purussaurus is the biggest, do some research

  • @kinjorex101
    @kinjorex101 Před 2 lety +3135

    Honestly the saddest part is that unlike the ones featured in his "animals that got the middle finger from evolution" video, Caimans didn't distribute their evolution points unwisely or anything; they just had the extremely horrendous luck of being in the same area code of other animals perfectly adept to screwing them over. Each point of life just brings a new variety of difficulty:
    Hatchling: Quick meal for Herons and Rats
    Juvenile: Target for Anacondas
    Adolescence: Preyed on by Jaguars and deals with angry Otter neighbours
    Adulthood: Deemed too dangerous to live by humans
    All while risking getting its life subscription suddenly cancelled by an electricity-wielding fish.

    • @sharonwong5688
      @sharonwong5688 Před 2 lety +353

      It's like having the Caiman on top of a food chain pyramid... But then there's another pyramid on top of that and it's those other apex predators 😂 poor Caiman

    • @barkyonyx962
      @barkyonyx962 Před 2 lety +303

      "finally i've reached the fully grown stage guys, i'm unstoppable 💪"
      -cai_man-gamer29, his last words before getting teamed up by humans

    • @somejerk5662
      @somejerk5662 Před 2 lety +174

      They took over the meta, and then everything else adapted to exploit them.

    • @enigmaticenigma7808
      @enigmaticenigma7808 Před 2 lety +25

      @4D1N imagine being sad because bad

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 Před 2 lety +7

      o.o

  • @painfish208
    @painfish208 Před rokem +459

    The Cayman is a pretty solid player in casual servers that unfortunately spawned in an an international ESports championship.

    • @kawaiionee-chan9557
      @kawaiionee-chan9557 Před rokem +21

      Cayman is like a new player to a sped lobby of gta 5

    • @kalterverwalter4516
      @kalterverwalter4516 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Not Really Black Kaiman Slaps. The smaller Caimans Like the Yacare Caimans are the Problem. For meassure between a Black Kaiman and a Yaccare Caiman lays a difference in 400 Kilo.

  • @spindash64
    @spindash64 Před rokem +92

    Man, the Jaguar sounds like a weirdly respectful cat. Most of em would toy with you first, these guys just take Thanos’ advice and give you a _relatively_ painless death

    • @Violetsong222
      @Violetsong222 Před 24 dny +3

      i mean it probably hurts a lot but only for a second

  • @trice286
    @trice286 Před 2 lety +2720

    One cool thing about the apex predators in South America (which includes anacondas, black caimans, jaguars, river otters, and harpy eagles) is that they all have such different diets and micro-habitats, they can co-exist with each other without much competition and conflict with each other unlike African carnivores. In essence, the top tiers of the Amazon signed a contractual agreement to not mess with each other as adults and now bully the entire jungle with no consequences.
    Of course, they sometimes break this agreement, especially jaguars as shown in this video.

    • @princessjello
      @princessjello Před 2 lety +388

      They're a mafia oh my god

    • @christinecomacho1576
      @christinecomacho1576 Před 2 lety +142

      @@princessjello this comment made me crack up

    • @dreadcthulhu5
      @dreadcthulhu5 Před 2 lety +131

      From this video I learned we should stay away from the Amazon as it is a scary neighborhood.

    • @bendykirby4828
      @bendykirby4828 Před 2 lety +87

      There’s a misconception that the old South American apex predators (terror birds and the like) went extinct due to competition with migrant species from North America, but they differed so much in their niches & hunting methods that I doubt they would’ve minded each other’s presence.

    • @lollivee6770
      @lollivee6770 Před 2 lety +57

      @@princessjello The ones they kill are just the ones who betrayed the Apex family

  • @weeblbob233
    @weeblbob233 Před 2 lety +2690

    Yeah. It is weird how everyone just accepts that an animal can produce electricty and utilises it as a weapon. Its basically a superpower.

    • @CaptainCJ97
      @CaptainCJ97 Před 2 lety +63

      Foreal

    • @pharaohsmagician8329
      @pharaohsmagician8329 Před 2 lety +324

      Chameleons as well. Like lizards that can change color??! In seconds? And thOse Octopuses and sea creates that can change not only color but also texture to match any kind of object! And birds that can mimic human voices, birds that can fly for 7 months without landing a single time, spiders that make bubbles of air to dive underwater with! Jellyfish and angler fish that have neon lights to attract prey and invisible skin!!! Madness!

    • @2k963
      @2k963 Před 2 lety +197

      @@pharaohsmagician8329 those animals are unique, but the eel is a real life pikachu. Electricity is seen in lighting and power plants, yet the eel just has it.

    • @MarcyTheKindaCoolWizard
      @MarcyTheKindaCoolWizard Před 2 lety +53

      I love when real life stuff sounds so surreal or fictional on retrospective, its so cool

    • @NotEvenOverThere
      @NotEvenOverThere Před 2 lety +14

      What are we supposed to do about it 😭

  • @remingtonwright6796
    @remingtonwright6796 Před 7 měsíci +39

    Fun literature fact: in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Frankenstein actually reanimated his creation not with lightning like the movies suggest, but with a giant tank filled with upwards of hundreds of electric eels.

  • @annebodee
    @annebodee Před rokem +198

    Your channel is one of the few I watch consistently on YT. Good job on making wild animals interesting in a very weird way.

    • @lollove9974
      @lollove9974 Před rokem +7

      For real though, like I don’t even like animals like that, but his jokes and overall personality just makes this topic more interesting

    • @Marvelfanatic3658
      @Marvelfanatic3658 Před rokem +2

      ​@@lollove9974 ok

  • @darkySp
    @darkySp Před 2 lety +2142

    I'm glad you hit on the bizarreness of electric eels.
    I was always amazed how an animal can just kill shit with electricity made by their body. How the f....

    • @Jkd_77
      @Jkd_77 Před 2 lety +271

      Exactly! Idk why people don’t take a moment to comprehend that there exist a animal that can produce literal fking electricity but we all just forget about it! Now imagine if a mammal like a rodent had that type of ability. It would legit be a real life Pokémon.

    • @tetravega567
      @tetravega567 Před 2 lety +281

      @@Jkd_77 Here's a fun list of REAL elemental animals.
      Electric:
      Electric Eel
      Oriental Hornet (It's stripes are Solar panels that generate electricity)
      Ballooning Spiders (use their threads to fly on electric currents in the air)
      Echidna (sense not emit. This is Knuckles' Emerald radar in Sonic Advance 2)
      Electric Stingray
      Electric Catfish
      Sharks (Sense not emit, Ampullae of Lorenzini pores around snout.)
      Plant Pollen (Has static charge, that's how it sticks to Bees)
      Fire:
      Black Kite (carry burning twigs around to spread fire)
      Whistling Kite (carry burning twigs around to spread fire)
      Brown Falcon (carry burning twigs around to spread fire)
      Heat:
      Bombadier Beetle (shoots boiling acid)
      Japanese Honeybee (swarms enemy and generates body heat to cook)
      Pistol Shrimp (can do real Kamehameha/Hadoken)
      Mantis Shrimp (can do real Kamehameha/Hadoken)
      Water:
      Archerfish (Spit water at prey outside the water, can compensate aim for light bent by water surface)
      Walrus (Gush water at the seafloor to hunt)
      Whales
      Dolphins
      Octopus/Squid
      Ice:
      Pseudomonas Syringae (Creates ice, can freeze water above 0C)
      Metal:
      Scaly-foot Snail (Iron shell)
      Eucalyptus trees (absorb Gold into their cellular structure)
      Various plants (absorb metals into their cellular structure)
      Light:
      Fireflies
      Angler Fish
      Flashlight Fish
      Bioluminescent Plants
      Bioluminescent Fungi
      Bioluminescent Bacteria/microbes
      Octopus/Squid (Some use their chameleon skin to make light)
      Tons of deep ocean creatures communicate by producing light
      Dark or Ghost:
      Assassin bugs (wear corpses as disguises)
      Cordycep (parasitic Zombie fungus)
      Parasitic Worm (snail eyestalk zombie infection)
      Toxoplasma Gondii (reduces host's fear of danger/risks)
      Poison:
      Hooded Pitohui
      Ifrita
      Rufous Shriketrush
      African Spur Winged Goose
      European Quail
      Hoopoes
      Ruffed Grouse
      Bronzewing Pidgeon
      Red Warbler
      Maned Rat/African Crested Rat (Lophiomys imhausi) (Rubs poison from plants into specialized stripes of hairs)
      Various Reptiles
      Various Amphibians
      Various Fish, and Aquatic Animals
      Various Arthropods (Insects, Arachnids, Crustaceans)
      Various Plants
      Various Fungi

    • @mdv9831
      @mdv9831 Před 2 lety +83

      @@Jkd_77 an electric eel is basically a swimming Pikachu

    • @cartooncritique6625
      @cartooncritique6625 Před 2 lety +73

      @@Jkd_77 Not to mention the fact that Australia has a literal freakin' chimera.

    • @oiseaufeu
      @oiseaufeu Před 2 lety +47

      @@cartooncritique6625 You mean the platypus?

  • @Mandicke
    @Mandicke Před 2 lety +6478

    The crocodile family has changed quite a lot actually from massive to tiny from carnivores to herbivores terrestrial or semi and fully aquatic.

    • @seandewar47
      @seandewar47 Před 2 lety +431

      To be fair, the highly diverse Crocodylomorphs weren't true crocodiles, just related, most true crocodiles were had more or less the same body plan (with a few exceptions of course)

    • @TimeofRagnarok
      @TimeofRagnarok Před 2 lety +31

      @@seandewar47 semantics.

    • @tristanheaton2127
      @tristanheaton2127 Před 2 lety +31

      In some ways but the semi aquatic ones wavent

    • @RADukura
      @RADukura Před 2 lety +115

      Did you just say a herbivorous crocodile family?

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 Před 2 lety +60

      But they haven't evolved into crabs yet.

  • @carlvegeiii3756
    @carlvegeiii3756 Před rokem +26

    I'm an electrician, while in school we were told about test with electricity and something called the "Let go factor" in which people of varying sex and age where shocked at various amps to see at what amperage they could no longer let go of the circuit do to muscle contraction. What they came up with was between 4 and 6 millionths of an amp. So when G.F.C.I.'s where created they were designed to trip between those peramitors.

  • @yishaithegift9953
    @yishaithegift9953 Před rokem +31

    This guy's anecdotes, narration, and Supreme knowledge is downright epic. Being a person who loves watching national geographic videos. He gives information in a humorous, yet accurate way. He deserves the millions of views he receives. Stay blessed 💯🙏🏾

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache Před 2 lety +2365

    “Dragons are armor plated bench pressing weapons of mass destruction”
    *Starts an ad*
    His transitions though

    • @eb924
      @eb924 Před 2 lety +84

      it was so fluid that it puts cats being liquid to shame

    • @komorebi3555
      @komorebi3555 Před 2 lety +59

      i love when youtubers do smooth transitions like that or just skit transitions just to make it more entertaining and honestly makes me want to use the product/play the game more.

    • @CodeNameCheese_
      @CodeNameCheese_ Před 2 lety +2

      @@eb924 what

    • @cmjcj2ktn
      @cmjcj2ktn Před 2 lety +28

      Smoothest ad transition I've ever seen.

    • @reaper411b
      @reaper411b Před 2 lety +9

      right, very smooth

  • @Belenus3080
    @Belenus3080 Před 2 lety +1927

    The Amazon scares me because, as a man of the north woods, most of our predatory animals feed on prey animals. In the Amazon, it’s alpha predators feeding on other alpha predators.

    • @wagahagwa6978
      @wagahagwa6978 Před 2 lety +1

      same with gang violence in south america
      i wouldn't want to be born in their cities either

    • @gabrielbotsford791
      @gabrielbotsford791 Před rokem +51

      this

    • @ellidominusser1138
      @ellidominusser1138 Před rokem +92

      true that's probably what makes it so special to westerners like me

    • @yelhsanosnhoj6602
      @yelhsanosnhoj6602 Před rokem +114

      And then there’s about 80% of it that hasn’t even been explored because the conditions are too much I wonder what predators lurk deeper within

    • @eduardobarros5903
      @eduardobarros5903 Před rokem +17

      Eh as somebody from Brasil
      It’s kinda scary I guess

  • @goldengamestoday1674
    @goldengamestoday1674 Před rokem +56

    This man is not only educational, but funny. One of my favorites ⭐

  • @legend0110
    @legend0110 Před 2 lety +41

    Why hasn't Nat Geo or someone else given this dude a show yet? Damn good job sir.

  • @kevinschimmel8842
    @kevinschimmel8842 Před 2 lety +1261

    "Some alligators have to live in Florida", his humor is on point. Love the videos.

    • @nothingnothing5183
      @nothingnothing5183 Před 2 lety +11

      I laugh my ass off 🤣

    • @ragelord720
      @ragelord720 Před 2 lety +26

      An alligator's natural predator: Florida man

    • @tobiasboon346
      @tobiasboon346 Před 2 lety +7

      I literally spit my drink all over my screen because of that line lol.

    • @kevinschimmel8842
      @kevinschimmel8842 Před 2 lety +4

      After 1 watching one video I was hooked...he could do stand-up, his humor is off the cusp, very sharp and witty kid.

  • @shahsadsaadu5817
    @shahsadsaadu5817 Před 2 lety +2610

    I've read something about electric eels that goes something like this: during hot climates,when the water bodies gets drier,in order for oxygen,this absolute maniac of an animal will just shoot electricity into water to create oxygen by hydrolysis. It gets it's oxygen, and food from the fishes that comes looking for oxygen

    • @Stephanie-pe3zk
      @Stephanie-pe3zk Před 2 lety +267

      That is metal

    • @ytyoungrichnhigh
      @ytyoungrichnhigh Před 2 lety +32

      OH.

    • @drkrishnap
      @drkrishnap Před 2 lety +74

      Savage

    • @maxanderson3733
      @maxanderson3733 Před 2 lety +242

      OK seriously how the heck does something like this exist in *_real life_*

    • @iamcool544
      @iamcool544 Před 2 lety +34

      @@maxanderson3733 I mean a virus is basically a computer that injects its mRNA into a cell and has it replicate itself. A virus isnt alive, not even by the definition of how a single celled organism is alive. Its like a rock falling into your mouth and making you produce more rocks. Loads of shit in nature is odd if you really think about it.

  • @Bootyyyshaker-yx1fy
    @Bootyyyshaker-yx1fy Před rokem +37

    This guy actually makes things fun to learn.

  • @brentflora8965
    @brentflora8965 Před rokem +36

    Bro, I love the way you can explain life in the wild! You would be a riveting teacher, teaching about the animals from the Artic to the Amazon to the savanna's & Eastern Asia!

  • @Twelvegage30
    @Twelvegage30 Před 2 lety +576

    One thing that always makes me chuckle is the knowledge of what the Electric Eel's name was prior to the discovery of Electricity, before that it was known as the "Angry Catfish"

  • @b00g3yman2
    @b00g3yman2 Před 2 lety +1349

    The fact that the crocodile rages after not catching the zebra just proves it truly gets disrespected
    Edit: thanks for the likes 👍🏾

    • @J.A.huscher
      @J.A.huscher Před 2 lety +101

      I thought I was the only one who noticed that lmao

    • @LexYeen
      @LexYeen Před 2 lety +139

      "I SPENT MILLIONS OF YEARS EVOLVING TO GET HERE AND THIS IS WHAT I GET?!"

    • @Nerdnumberone
      @Nerdnumberone Před 2 lety +50

      They only need one good meal to be satisfied for weeks. Being cold blooded means saving a lot of energy. There will be another zebra soon enough. Everything need water eventually. The crocodile just needs to wait for food to come to it.

    • @williamgeorge3111
      @williamgeorge3111 Před 2 lety +56

      Jesus christ, how many spambots can be in one reply section?

    • @thevanillafeziant
      @thevanillafeziant Před 2 lety +48

      @@williamgeorge3111 I once saw a comment reply section with 10 in a row. It gets bad.

  • @JohnPulliam82
    @JohnPulliam82 Před rokem +12

    That transition into the dragon add was flawless. . . Well done and not too invasive lmao.

  • @rickypierson1813
    @rickypierson1813 Před 2 lety +48

    i love what you do on your channel bro. ive always loved learning facts about nature but you put a funny spin on it as well, sprinkled with your personality makes your videos a good watch. just wanted to thank you for your input. i appreciate it and im sure many people think the same way.

  • @lidialavender
    @lidialavender Před 2 lety +1338

    "He may be A caiman but he's not ok man" I almost choked to death. Friends, remember not to eat or drink while this guy is on the joke flow

    • @joeruck
      @joeruck Před 2 lety +17

      word lol he got me with that one too hahahaha

    • @Lionel4482
      @Lionel4482 Před rokem +35

      He gets mad respect from the dad joke community for that one🤣

    • @derekrobertson60388
      @derekrobertson60388 Před rokem +6

      This guy needs to do a collab with Moistcritikal

    • @MichelMawon4982
      @MichelMawon4982 Před rokem +4

      IKR!

    • @brucemingled
      @brucemingled Před rokem +1

      That last line really got me cracking up😂😂😂.

  • @andrewcrowley6331
    @andrewcrowley6331 Před 2 lety +1140

    I always did feel caiman were the least of the crocodilians, especially when I learned they get bodied by otters.
    On a side note, “it’s quite possible that no wild zebra has ever died of old age” is one of the best lines I’ve heard in a while.

    • @FWU100
      @FWU100 Před 2 lety +15

      Put a Nile Crocodile in South America and their fate would be the same.

    • @randomfacts1357
      @randomfacts1357 Před 2 lety +22

      @@FWU100 i doubt that if its a full grown one

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Před 2 lety

      What about those smol alligators they have in China?

    • @SashaTheDog
      @SashaTheDog Před 2 lety +1

      Im actually surprised that they havent died out yet seing that they seem to be.,............well kinda useless

    • @FWU100
      @FWU100 Před 2 lety +14

      @@OldZilla Someone didnt watch the entire video, fully grown caimans only get preyed by humans, last time I checked not a single animal is born fully grown, also kinda funny you link a video from Mexico when we're talking about South America, like you're not only bad in biology but also geography, the amazonian jaguar is the biggest jaguar in the world bigger than the north american variant, but even if you consider both the same for the sake of "keeping your point" the video is bad we can't see the animals, that can be a cougar, a dog or even another reptile, before you comment anything stupid again look it up Amazon river on google and learn a bit how different is the habitat, I mean there's a reason for the Nile having big herbivores casually drinking water by the crocodiles and not a single herbivore brave enough to get close to the Amazon river not even deers, forget turning everything into chew toys they won't even have enough to go trough the month.

  • @stefanhernold345
    @stefanhernold345 Před rokem +10

    Ain`t sure about the smaller members of the Cayman family, but the biggest of them all, the Black Cayman, is certainly *not* to be disrespected with impunity. Considering that the Amazon rainforest/river ecosystem is entirely devoid of megafauna, it is amazing that, without large herbivores to prey upon, not one, but two crocodilians endemic in that habitat (Black cayman and Orinoco crocodile) quite regularly reach a length of 5 m and weigh in at half a ton.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Not entirely devoid of megafauna. There are tapirs and spectacled bears - and, of course, the giant snakes mentioned in this video. The jaguar does prey on juvenile caiman, but adult caiman have been known to monch a cat in turn. Large specimens of capybara and anteater technically qualify as well - and giant otters and giant armadillos come close to megafaunal status, weighing in at 60-80 pounds or so. Also, if you look to the water (caiman can and will exploit seafood), there are giant stingrays that grow to six or eight feet long, as well as manatees (though, of course, only adult caiman will take only young manatees).
      Quite a buffet - and that's not even counting the relatively recent entrées like giant sloths and glyptodonts, who were around recently enough to feature in indigenous oral traditions.
      Also remember that predators often don't bother to take animals of similar body size. A wolf won't trouble itself with deer, if there are lots of rabbits and woodchucks about; same with caiman and modest-sized fish and terrestrial riverside nummies.

  • @truthseeker2000
    @truthseeker2000 Před rokem +7

    _'Cause at the end of the day, this might be a caiman. But he's not okay man..._
    I WAS NOT READY FOR THAT!!!

  • @Mongoosesummoner
    @Mongoosesummoner Před 2 lety +1934

    I think this is less nature disrespecting the caiman, and more showing just how goddamned dangerous the Amazon is.

    • @Mongoosesummoner
      @Mongoosesummoner Před 2 lety +118

      @@zoofari7505 OH, it is. If those poor things lived in Australia, they'd be extinct.

    • @Mongoosesummoner
      @Mongoosesummoner Před 2 lety +125

      @Ops Blac That's more a sign of how badass cats are.

    • @paschan
      @paschan Před 2 lety +98

      The Amazon is the most violent place on the planet, and we're not mentioning the virus and parasyte that can infect you if drinking water or getting cut by some plants.

    • @Ninja12651
      @Ninja12651 Před 2 lety +127

      @@paschan fr I think I’d rather take my chances in Australia over the Amazon cuz there are things like bullet ants and other things I never wish to see in this lifetime

    • @83j049733rfe4
      @83j049733rfe4 Před 2 lety +28

      I mean,
      Death & Saint Peter still had to come for him in his sleep, but it was the Amazon that convinced Teddy Roosevelt to have a lie down in the first place.

  • @AzureCeleste
    @AzureCeleste Před 2 lety +1209

    Had to give a like for the “he isn’t okay man” pun. That was gold.

  • @floof3624
    @floof3624 Před 2 lety +6

    3:46, capybara killed me

  • @aaronfilcek8331
    @aaronfilcek8331 Před 2 lety +7

    0:05 is perfection 😂🪦🦦

  • @karenboy1005
    @karenboy1005 Před 2 lety +466

    Damn, the Cayman really is that kind of guy who picks the "extra hardcore" mode on the difficulty level selection screen thinking "what's the worst that could happen"

    • @gravehammer4095
      @gravehammer4095 Před 2 lety +22

      I've been playing Metro recently and I feel called out. lol

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 Před 2 lety +15

      I don’t want to sound like a party pooper, but I think it has something to do with the North America-South America fauna drift which led to many invasive species being sent to both continents until they reached equilibrium. Of course, caimans still have it dirty.

    • @NPC-nn4qe
      @NPC-nn4qe Před 2 lety +10

      Caiman* You're thinking of the Cayman Islands.

  • @TheBitingBat
    @TheBitingBat Před 2 lety +533

    Thank you for pointing out how a lot of the time the reason for jungle predators running fades with each other is because of humans destroying their habitat. The jungle is thick, diverse, and most of the time a fairly self sustaining environment but with the massive amount of deforestation it's driving a lot of these powerful animals into competition with each other and worse, humans.

    • @ivyinkwell1754
      @ivyinkwell1754 Před 2 lety +77

      I'm responding to this just because it's seriously uncool how your comment about deforestation was INSTANTLY replied by a porn bot.
      Like dude, serious stuff like this deserves more respect.

    • @Thawhid
      @Thawhid Před 2 lety +33

      @@ivyinkwell1754 It's crazy. And I swear this bot problem seriously became an issue during the start of the pandemic and it hasn't been fixed yet. They're literally spamming links of viruses and these social media platforms apparently can't fix it. I see some channels like the SIDEMEN channels suffer more with bots, I once saw someone post a comment and around SEVEN bots instantly replied like what?!!!

    • @2007ghettonissanaltima
      @2007ghettonissanaltima Před 2 lety +30

      @@Thawhid oh but instead of fixing the bloody bots, CZcams instead chooses to remove the bloody dislikes.

    • @sumayyahadetunmbi4347
      @sumayyahadetunmbi4347 Před 2 lety +3

      You are so right

    • @TheGraphicOz
      @TheGraphicOz Před 2 lety +17

      @@2007ghettonissanaltima Gee, it's almost like corporations act strictly in the interest of profit or something.

  • @youraveragephesh3173
    @youraveragephesh3173 Před rokem +3

    1:26 "Lollipop of the amazon"
    Me: *eating a lollipop while watching this*

  • @superiorgaming8086
    @superiorgaming8086 Před rokem +7

    My boi Black Caiman alone has to carry Caiman’s reputation cause of his weak cousins

  • @yiiyatschan1395
    @yiiyatschan1395 Před 2 lety +586

    "Can you imagine that? Being born into a family that competed with dinosaurs only to get spawn-sniped by a rodent." I never imagined I would be laughing this hard while watching animal documentary videos.

    • @Marvelfanatic3658
      @Marvelfanatic3658 Před 2 lety +1

      Ok

    • @DraydenX
      @DraydenX Před 2 lety

      @@Marvelfanatic3658 Ok

    • @KlavierMenn
      @KlavierMenn Před 2 lety +1

      That's the synapsid revenge, my buddy

    • @diobrando6131
      @diobrando6131 Před 2 lety

      But fr how tf are you gonna live in a family that could put a T-rex on a #R.I.P twitter thread but lose to a cat

  • @2l84me8
    @2l84me8 Před 2 lety +762

    The Caiman was in S tier during ancient times, but now it dropped in usage due to Gen 5’s monstrous power creep in the latest patch by evolution.

    • @demi-femme4821
      @demi-femme4821 Před 2 lety +42

      Excellent reference. Take my like.

    • @gamersthumbs4673
      @gamersthumbs4673 Před 2 lety +22

      Ahhh.. gaming terms, love it.

    • @zsu-23-4shilka2
      @zsu-23-4shilka2 Před 2 lety +48

      Black caiman: _chilling in water_
      Sparky catfish (since electric eels are more closely related to catfish than to actual eels): “You need a _spark_ in your life!”
      Emerald steroid serpent: “C’mere & gimme a hug!”
      Crip weasels: _sadistic chuckling that escalates into full on psychotic laughter_
      Caiman: “Aye, leave me alone; I’m just tr-“
      Jaguar: _”Hola. Prepárate para morir.”_ (“Hello. Prepare to die.”)
      Caiman awakening from nightmare: *_”AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA-“_*

    • @danielawesome36
      @danielawesome36 Před 2 lety +2

      @@demi-femme4821 Honest Question: What's the reference?

    • @chrisreyes5977
      @chrisreyes5977 Před 2 lety +7

      @@danielawesome36 TierZoo reference

  • @solmonno6935
    @solmonno6935 Před rokem +2

    3:24 i like the cat just haply walking away

  • @stacys8729
    @stacys8729 Před rokem

    Love your videos! Thanks for including u.s. measurements and metric. I've been binge-ing these for hours, so I just subscribed too.

  • @jacksonwilde3328
    @jacksonwilde3328 Před 2 lety +173

    “He might be a caiman, but he’s not okayman”
    The best thing I have heard all day!

  • @zebrahunter6956
    @zebrahunter6956 Před 2 lety +279

    To be fair, it's possible that rodent-like mammals or dinosaurs with similar niches did eat crocodilian eggs back in the dinosaur era, but it's still embarrassing

  • @agodsgod5131
    @agodsgod5131 Před rokem +3

    That transition into your sponsor was hella clean and smart...it started from the opening.

  • @keleighrey3123
    @keleighrey3123 Před 2 lety +7

    I simply love this young man’s commentary. 💕

  • @pathfindersavant3988
    @pathfindersavant3988 Před 2 lety +827

    Sure, caiman got it rough, but at least they're not Gharials. Those things can't eat anything tougher than a normal fish without breaking their jaw. Meanwhile the False Gharial, which can eat turtles, is actually just a pointy Caiman and not related to the Gharial at all.
    In fact, its actually because of how fragile Gharials are that many zoos have to keep a close watch on them because gharials dying from broken snoots is frightfully common. Heck, gharials can suffer from a deviated septum just like humans though which can cause them to suffocate to death.
    So while Caimans are disrespected constantly by its neighbors, Gharials were disrespected by evolution and genetics itself, they are just born on an entirely different difficulty setting.

    • @kenyaaragon3944
      @kenyaaragon3944 Před 2 lety +52

      When he said the reptile that gets clapped the most i immediately thought of gharials 😭😭😭

    • @DopeDisco
      @DopeDisco Před 2 lety +98

      Sounds like the pug of the reptile family almost

    • @moblinmajorgeneral
      @moblinmajorgeneral Před 2 lety +82

      Not to mention that gharials live in the nastiest river on Earth. I don't know how they or Ganges River Dolphins are supposed to live in that.

    • @pathfindersavant3988
      @pathfindersavant3988 Před 2 lety +27

      @@moblinmajorgeneral Very carefully

    • @moonsun9602
      @moonsun9602 Před 2 lety +7

      @Erisa liani no

  • @manzac112
    @manzac112 Před 2 lety +650

    There used to be two giant dangerous crocodiles that lived in prehistoric times in South America, after the dinosaurs died out. Barinasuchus, a big land crocodilian cousin, and Purussaurus, the giant caimin, both lived in the same areas in the Miocene epoch in South America.

    • @brunoalessandrocalero4255
      @brunoalessandrocalero4255 Před 2 lety +38

      There also use to be an species of crocodile that could run as fast a dog

    • @jhonnoilcringeincarnato8593
      @jhonnoilcringeincarnato8593 Před 2 lety +4

      @@brunoalessandrocalero4255 really? What's their name?

    • @lonekyoko
      @lonekyoko Před 2 lety +1

      @@jhonnoilcringeincarnato8593 actually its her. czcams.com/video/O78CxqRl7NE/video.html&ab_channel=NathanSweeting (im only joking, shes extremely cute tho)

    • @kotorandcorvid4968
      @kotorandcorvid4968 Před 2 lety +2

      @@brunoalessandrocalero4255 Cuban Crocodiles can do that

    • @JackyIrony
      @JackyIrony Před 2 lety +8

      @@jhonnoilcringeincarnato8593 kaprosuchus and postosuchus

  • @devonlewis6320
    @devonlewis6320 Před 2 lety +2

    Man that otter was pissed 😂🤣😭😭 4:10

  • @19mindmechanic55
    @19mindmechanic55 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I just stumbled across this show on CZcams a couple weeks ago, and since then, it has become my go-to watch. Given that politics, war, and a number of other grim subjects can deplete my energy store to exceedingly dangerous levels, it has been a blessing to find a show that is interesting, about animals (species I much prefer for the most party over homo sapiens), very well put together, smart, entertaining (the m.c. is knowledgable, funny, and is not afraid to do, say, and be things that many others shy away - if not run and hide - from), and has enough Black content to keep me doubly entertained, happily reminding me of one of my adopted families back when. It is also always a joy to see Black men who are bright-to- brilliant, scientists, unafraid to demonstrate their intellectual and verbal prowess, and still remain cool enough to scare racists all the way to the next Klan meeting. Most of all, just really interesting stuff by someone who genuinely knows and loves animals, as do I... well, at least 1/2 - I do love them. And am learning things while enjoying the show. So thank you young man!

  • @ycsimko9181
    @ycsimko9181 Před 2 lety +495

    A quick note on the orca: Scientists just documented orcas hunting a fully grown blue whale and eating its tongue while the whale was still alive before devouring it completely

    • @mattek519
      @mattek519 Před 2 lety +37

      Where can i see this tongue fuckery?

    • @AntoDesormeaux
      @AntoDesormeaux Před 2 lety +167

      may those hannibal lecters of the ocean never re-evolve legs

    • @Tyranid_HiveMind
      @Tyranid_HiveMind Před 2 lety +30

      @@AntoDesormeaux hippos

    • @KlavierMenn
      @KlavierMenn Před 2 lety +64

      @@AntoDesormeaux they are too big to have functioning legs. However, hippos are related to cetacians. You can tell by the amount of disrespect a hippo have!

    • @AntoDesormeaux
      @AntoDesormeaux Před 2 lety +28

      @@KlavierMenn Thank goodness for physics then. If the buddhists are right after all I hope I reincarnate as a hippo or a honey badger. Yeah. That would be awesome. Not an orca though, I'm not depraved

  • @Larss86
    @Larss86 Před 2 lety +1483

    “Seals get griefed by everything.”
    Killer whales to seals: “Looks like a great day to launch you eighty feet into the air.”
    Seagulls to seals: “It’s the perfect day for you and me to reenact Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds.”
    Otters: “I likes ya, and I wants ya. Now we can do this the easy way or the hard way. Choice is yours…”

    • @Farhan_049
      @Farhan_049 Před 2 lety +47

      I heard the otter version on Aba & Preach's video - was it Flake Johnson? It definitely was some F. Johnson person. That aside, the use of words is absolutely perfect!🤣👍🏻

    • @NewEraMovementOnThaGrind20
      @NewEraMovementOnThaGrind20 Před 2 lety +61

      Lmmfaaoooo, not the Chris Hanson special! 😤😭😭🤣

    • @spook5756
      @spook5756 Před 2 lety +13

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @carolinem.6747
      @carolinem.6747 Před 2 lety +37

      ever since learning about otters and seals i can't ever look at emmett otterton the same way again

    • @peacemaker1317
      @peacemaker1317 Před 2 lety +22

      Lolol the boondock's reference

  • @cleitonoliveira932
    @cleitonoliveira932 Před 2 lety +2

    That Jaguar doesn't live only in Amazon. Any small forest in Brazil can have one of these beautiful monsters. Farms always have a lot of dogs to bark and scare them, but if the dog doesn't bark, he becomes Jaguar lunch.

  • @BandidFourLife
    @BandidFourLife Před rokem +3

    I remember reading a book when I was little that said Crocodiles and Alligators would take over the world since they had no predator and would lay a shitload of eggs. Few years pass after reading the book and I learn about people hunting species into extinction, learned too that Gators and Crocs get turned into fashion accessories. I would get mad knowing people I knew would buy Crocodile belts and boots.
    Remembering this now, I still hope Crocs take over X} and sharks.

  • @hello-yk3tj
    @hello-yk3tj Před 2 lety +170

    “He might be a caiman, but he’s not okay, man”
    That hit hard.

  • @Soilfood365
    @Soilfood365 Před 2 lety +433

    Just a quick FYI - jaguars are not the only big cat that goes for the head; leopards that hunt gorilla usually puncture the back of the skull to damage the cerebellum and subfossil human skulls in southern africa have leopard bites in the same spots. Different approaches for different prey.

    • @alucardican9785
      @alucardican9785 Před 2 lety +38

      I think he was referring to only the head first.
      But yea leopards do that

    • @Mason-vz2kl
      @Mason-vz2kl Před 2 lety +7

      And you want me to let that bullshit? I’d kill even if it wasn’t gonna kill me.

    • @Mason-vz2kl
      @Mason-vz2kl Před 2 lety +6

      @@Me-yq1fl God these animals are horrific

    • @ijustwanttowatchtheworldbu4664
      @ijustwanttowatchtheworldbu4664 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Mason-vz2kl nature my guy, it have always been horrific

    • @ReptilianTeaDrinker
      @ReptilianTeaDrinker Před 2 lety +23

      @@Mason-vz2kl Humans are horrific too. The shit poachers do, fur farms, the meat industry, etc. lol Surely, you're not really as naive as your comments suggest... You're acting as if humans don't do even crueller shit.

  • @randyadamsjr
    @randyadamsjr Před 10 měsíci +1

    This dude is one of the best content creators hands down because he makes learning funny and informative and educational all at the same time and for all ages YOU CAN'T BEAT THAT

  • @Borg101001
    @Borg101001 Před 2 lety +1

    I still can not get over your writing and information skill sets. Kudos, Bravo! ✍🖖

  • @_Shay_
    @_Shay_ Před 2 lety +199

    Finally someone acknowledges we share a planet with an aquatic creature with electricity powers. But imagine electric eels grew to the size of anacondas or bigger and lived in the ocean instead of the Amazon river. We would have a real life electric leviathan, a sea monster straight out of fantasy. Idk why but that sounds terrifying and cool at the same time.

    • @stevenrasche3159
      @stevenrasche3159 Před 2 lety +14

      And that's why I'm developing such a story. Along with space dragons, because we need more science fantasy and dragons. We always need more dragons.

    • @ThePress00
      @ThePress00 Před 2 lety +6

      Im wondering why that didn't happen. It'd be super cool... And lethal.

    • @luviathan9706
      @luviathan9706 Před 2 lety +1

      @@stevenrasche3159 hmu if u finish the story

    • @4Curses
      @4Curses Před 2 lety +3

      They might not get as big as anaconda, but if you look at videos of giant electric eel, they get too close for comfort.

    • @4Curses
      @4Curses Před 2 lety

      I mean, look at it :
      czcams.com/video/rkWfxOp6m9w/video.html&ab_channel=RiverMonsters%E2%84%A2

  • @mr.cobalt1668
    @mr.cobalt1668 Před 2 lety +234

    It's like that trope in anime or video games where what was once a boss or major threat early on becomes a stock enemy at later levels/seasons just to show off how much things have escalated.

  • @superepic9336
    @superepic9336 Před 2 lety +4

    2:38 when the sponsor ends

  • @communistyoutube
    @communistyoutube Před měsícem

    bro thank you for such great educational content. your delivery is so good too. love animals and thanks for teaching us so much

  • @thenitpickchannel9993
    @thenitpickchannel9993 Před 2 lety +713

    The Alligator Wendy's story has some background. The culprit, Joshua James, threw the 3.5 foot 'gator into the drive thru window after receiving his drink. Apparently his mom stated that it was done as a "stupid prank," with no intention of death or harm. The gator was said to have been plucked off the streets by Joshua, and stored in his pick-up truck which he would soon drive into the wendy's. The man was fined $6,000 bail a day after his arrest and the alligator was restored to the wild where he hopefully still lives.

    • @ReptilianTeaDrinker
      @ReptilianTeaDrinker Před 2 lety +96

      Humans are so cruel to animals...

    • @aspiringadonis1253
      @aspiringadonis1253 Před 2 lety +37

      @@ReptilianTeaDrinker funny gator prank doe

    • @partygoer1930
      @partygoer1930 Před 2 lety +54

      @@aspiringadonis1253 youre not doing such a good job at being a giga chad

    • @aspiringadonis1253
      @aspiringadonis1253 Před 2 lety +55

      @@partygoer1930 I'm joking bud, making fun of a fellow Florida man's stupidity

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 Před 2 lety +14

      6,000 dollars worth of bail a day? That’s a lot, holy crap.
      Also, that alligator was probably eaten at a Cajun restaurant.

  • @David-ni5hj
    @David-ni5hj Před 2 lety +185

    I can confirm that seeing the crocodile get murked everytime both in fiction and in documentaries was a struggle when it was your favorite animal as a kid.

  • @rafaelcarvalho7727
    @rafaelcarvalho7727 Před 2 lety +2

    Look up for the story of Sgt. Silvio Delmar Hollenback.
    On August 27, 1977, the sergeant on a walk with his family at the Brasília Zoo, witnessed the accident of a 13-year-old boy falling into the giant otter pit and managed to save him from attacks by jumping into the pit, but he was bitten. by the giant otters and due to an infection he died in hospital.
    Today the Zoo bares his name.
    As a veterinarian i worked there in the early 2000's. Those otters are very scary when you are up close and personal. They larger and faster than you think.

  • @randomperson9390
    @randomperson9390 Před rokem +1

    After this guy said “it’s the amps that kill.” I could hear styropyro yelling in the background.

  • @CT-sf8wd
    @CT-sf8wd Před 2 lety +66

    "Jaguars go straight for the head"
    Damn, a Jaguar should've thrown stormbreaker!😂😂

  • @mystictomato9466
    @mystictomato9466 Před 2 lety +223

    Fun fact: The biggest crocodilian ever (current thought in paleontology) was a Caiman, the Purassaurus.

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před 2 lety +4

      Pussasaurs? Rumor has it they still exist.

    • @mystictomato9466
      @mystictomato9466 Před 2 lety +31

      @@jaybingham3711 It is throughoutly impossible for them to still be alive. They definitely went extinct. There is no way that a 12 meter (40 foot) crocodilian wouldn’t be noticed swimming around in a river/swamp or resting on a shore.

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před 2 lety +14

      @@mystictomato9466 @Mystic ToMato I don't know... pussasaruses do run around on a bunch of the corners of my neighborhood. So, in that respect thay are extant. And I've even been told that some are queer. I just tell people who bring up such facts that dem duhway nature (and her designer...evoultion) do. Me personally, it sure don't bother me a lick. Speaking of licks, you gotta be careful attempting the lick of a pussasarus. A) They cover a lot ground trying to zero in on where the players intend to congregate to open the bubbly. After a full day's successful reconnaissance, it's hard for anyone to remain perfectly fresh.
      B) Some pussasaruses get more work than the average. Be careful with these kind because all that volume they partake in bring in a litany of conditions one must contend with. So yeah, lick carefully.

    • @ytyoungrichnhigh
      @ytyoungrichnhigh Před 2 lety +3

      @@jaybingham3711 YOOOOOOO ☠️☠️☠️

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ytyoungrichnhigh Thank you. Trying to keep it fun. Thought for sure I would have had a "my ex" comment by now.

  • @caseyself2134
    @caseyself2134 Před rokem +3

    Great presentation combined with funny jokes straight face line delivery love the videos dude would love to see you do one about the book man-eaters and jungle killers published about animals from Teddy Roosevelt and other explorers hunts

  • @S0rar1a
    @S0rar1a Před 2 lety +1

    Crocodile in Australia: once they are grown, only need to worry about other crocs, humans, and maybe sharks.
    Crocodile in Africa: hippos, humans, and other crocs.
    Alligators: idk... bears? Humans, definitely.
    Caiman: literally everything.

  • @MakoSica
    @MakoSica Před 2 lety +160

    To be fair, it’s more like “The Amazon as a whole is even more OP ridiculous than a large crocodilian.”

    • @belkYT
      @belkYT Před rokem +1

      Ah yes because everyone knows that billions of animals together all against just one big crocodilian would probably lose

    • @SharktopusUltima6064
      @SharktopusUltima6064 Před rokem

      It isn't. If a jaguar jumped in the water with a Nile or even mugger crocodile, it doesn't come back out

    • @serhumano3692
      @serhumano3692 Před rokem

      ​@@SharktopusUltima6064 it doesn't come out alive against black caiman either. There is a distinction between black and normal caiman, that being that the black caiman is basically twice as big, only being killed by us, because humans will be humans, we invade an animal's habitat, call it our own, and then brutally extinguish any species we don't like. Or at least try to.

    • @SharktopusUltima6064
      @SharktopusUltima6064 Před rokem

      @@serhumano3692 True. Large crocodilians are pretty much untouchable by other carnivores unless they're in open ocean

  • @LeoTheYuty
    @LeoTheYuty Před 2 lety +70

    The alligator being able to co-exist with the Florida Man makes it the most impressive crocodilian.

    • @Neion8
      @Neion8 Před 2 lety +3

      I think it's less like co-existence and more like Florida man tolerates their existence. Then again, since he could probably create a makeshift nuclear device out of nothing more than a clock, a banana, a coathangar and some dishsoap, perhaps we all live at the whims of Florida man...

  • @JLoveJasminLove
    @JLoveJasminLove Před rokem

    My god!! You’re transitions to the sponsors are sooooo swifty!! You smoooove lol

  • @blacktemplar1139
    @blacktemplar1139 Před rokem +2

    Funfact about Crocodiles (or was it alligators? Or both?), they were around before the first tree even sprung up.

  • @BluGiant14
    @BluGiant14 Před 2 lety +54

    “Some alligators have to live in Florida.” I’m dead LMAO

  • @HomemadeEcosystems
    @HomemadeEcosystems Před 2 lety +27

    It is actually night where I live and I got the notice of this video. Guess i'm awake now! Best reason to get up: watching a casual geographic video

  • @jameslawrence9125
    @jameslawrence9125 Před 2 lety

    These videos are sick man, love the format.

  • @badger297
    @badger297 Před 2 lety +2

    "Could earn a stage fatality"
    That one almost got past me hahahaha

  • @Undomaranel
    @Undomaranel Před 2 lety +265

    Caiman earns it simply by being around for so long. But others on the list of being most disrespected?
    - House sized cats, predators so efficient yet bodied by foxes/ coyotes/ jackals and hawks and anything in water, getting griefed by raccoons and opossums and weasels and such. Considering the only reason the Scottish Wildcat survived against badgers and such is it's attitude?... should be indicative of what kind of life they live.
    - Crabs and lobsters. They've been around longer than crocs. Have you ever gone to the beach? Then you've walked on their graveyard. They get eaten by everything under the water and above, nowhere is safe, and even after their remains are pecked over and mutilated by everything. Octopus, starfish, cormorant, salmon, human, bear, doesn't matter the delicious sea spider is gonna get eaten. That and lobsters supposedly have immortality unlocked, yet they're literal bottom feeders while being at the bottom of the food chain...
    - Mosquitos. No one wants them around, everyone eats them, they're unknowing vectors of countless multi-species infections, they survive on other animal's blood (Think about that life, and not in a romanticized teen book drama sense. Surviving on other creature's body fluids. How disrespectful while being disrespectful), they are eaten by everything as larvae (frogs, fish, dragonflies) and are still eaten as adults by the above and more (bats, birds, other insects, plants...). The only reason they survive is because they breed so much... which makes us all hate them even more.
    -Arguably bats. They've been aroundish since the late cretaceous yet can't catch a break. The insectivores are size capped due to their prey and flight, so can't get big enough to fight back against the hordes of snakes, owls, cats, and such that camp their homes. Seriously, you have to fly past snakes to leave your cave just to be stealthed by owls all night you know you're weak sauce. Vampire bats are glorified mosquitoes, hunted by the same predators as their cousins. Fruit bats and others lucky enough to live in habitats that support that life... aka Australia? They contend with everything their cousins do but are weaker in strength and sense because their food doesn't fight back... with far more arboreal snakes, venomous snakes, and habitat competition.

    • @zakazany1945
      @zakazany1945 Před 2 lety +29

      But mosquitos at least can claim a high human body count with their diseases. There are big carnivores that never could dream of killing as much humans as mosquitos and their diseases.

    • @-beanhead_blobbles-3891
      @-beanhead_blobbles-3891 Před 2 lety +19

      @@zakazany1945 Does it really count, though? More like a kill-assist if anything. Imagine having a body count *that* high, but in the end it’s 99% half-wins.

    • @patrickhector
      @patrickhector Před 2 lety +30

      Lobsters don't die of old age, but at some point they get too large to molt properly and die

    • @cartooncritique6625
      @cartooncritique6625 Před 2 lety +12

      @@patrickhector I guess Mother Nature really doesn't like when you try to enact "God Mode".

    • @normalhuman9878
      @normalhuman9878 Před 2 lety +21

      House cats are arguably one of the most respectable animals
      They just decided one day to enslave the apex predator of the world and it worked

  • @cynhanrahan4012
    @cynhanrahan4012 Před 2 lety +134

    Speaking of us, Alligator Alley, a highway in FL across the Everglades from Ft Myers to Miami, was a two lane road at ground level for many decades. It was called Alligator Alley after how may alligators crossed the road from one body of water to the other, and were hit by cars. Yes, eff up your wheels if it was big enough, then you get to sit in the dark swamp in your car waiting for roadside assistance to tow you to the closest city, Ft Myers or Miami. Florida finally raised most of the road, fenced it and put under passes for the critter that unfortunately had Mayhem on the Highway paved through their homeland.

  • @ryanpetersen9736
    @ryanpetersen9736 Před 2 lety

    So great man! Love your stuff!

  • @DyspotikOriginal
    @DyspotikOriginal Před 2 lety +1

    I like the gamer terms you throw in there. Great presentation

  • @joshuahunt3032
    @joshuahunt3032 Před 2 lety +427

    “Being related to a reptile that competed with dinosaurs only to get spawn-sniped by rodents” Weren’t some dinosaurs themselves occasionally spawn-sniped by proto-mammals?

    • @wd3185
      @wd3185 Před rokem +75

      Pretty much any animal that lays eggs is going to be spawn-sniped by small mammals at least a few times.

    • @Lumberjack_king
      @Lumberjack_king Před rokem +17

      Yeah early mammals were egg eaters

    • @salvadortoscano2534
      @salvadortoscano2534 Před 9 měsíci

      Proof that mammals are historically a menace

  • @4nero_Dem0n1c
    @4nero_Dem0n1c Před 2 lety +95

    "Someone breaks in to your house you defend your self then the police comes in and knocks out your entire family tree" this is so true especially these days not to the Cayman almost all wild animals in general
    do people seriously not know what wild animals are
    I honestly feel bad for them not to the animals but for those humans being stupid

  • @J_Clean_1996
    @J_Clean_1996 Před rokem +1

    "Sweet Release", and, "Coming", are some words that should only be used together in certain situations.

  • @peterresetz1960
    @peterresetz1960 Před 7 měsíci

    What a sharp witted tongue this young man has. He is a 180° polar opposite of David Attenborough, who can lull you to sleep while you're learning about nature. Our favorite nature narrator here has me in anticipation of his next cheeky quip.

  • @att1917
    @att1917 Před 2 lety +209

    I would say impala. It’s the main target in the African savannah and is even considered prey for secondary consumers. The impala needs to be careful cause it’s a target in the plains, bushes,waterhole, etc.

    • @DinnerForkTongue
      @DinnerForkTongue Před 2 lety +17

      Except impalas are pure prey, they don't got a standing to lose like a predator.

    • @ASBDYTheAwesome
      @ASBDYTheAwesome Před 2 lety +1

      hartebeest get it worse in my opinion

    • @oluwakayodefavouraiyepeku6310
      @oluwakayodefavouraiyepeku6310 Před 2 lety +5

      It's not disrespected though😂, First of, it's a prey it feeds on grass like other herbivores that's what it's meant for (predator food) on the other hand Crocs are apex predators
      Secondly, the crocodile is a type of dinosaur, one of the few which are still in existence, so that alone deserves some respect. Trust me the Impala isn't even disrespected at all, more like the opposite.

    • @farhanrivin934
      @farhanrivin934 Před 2 lety +4

      Humans were naturally the most disrespected before we became intelligent and decided to become the biggest bully the world has ever seen. I think caimans and impalas see us as a source of inspiration to end their suffering.

    • @lnarenkumar2327
      @lnarenkumar2327 Před 2 lety +3

      @@oluwakayodefavouraiyepeku6310 crocs and dinos along with some Jurassic bullshit compromise the archosaurs

  • @tunasci
    @tunasci Před 2 lety +143

    About the habitat destruction: we decreased it for some 20 years, but it has worsen in the last 5 years. Check out what illegal mining has done to the Crepori river, one of the polluted rivers that end up in the bigger Tapajós river, one of major importance in the Amazon ecossystem.

    • @Eminster
      @Eminster Před 2 lety +3

      Isn't theree away to stop this?

    • @tunasci
      @tunasci Před 2 lety +15

      @@Eminster It's not easy, and it will take a very long time to do it and still develop our country, while protecting our soverinity.

    • @tunasci
      @tunasci Před 2 lety +8

      @@Eminster I just wrote an essay answering you, and in the end I accidentally deleted everything u_u

    • @tunasci
      @tunasci Před 2 lety +19

      @@Eminster The way I see it, the first thing we have to do is to vote out Bolsonaro. His government is the main force behind this recent blow up in forest destruction, not only in the Amazon rainforest, but also in the Pantanal wetlands. It would be great to see him impeached, but he bought enough deputies (our version of representative) to make sure this didn't happen, despite the several crimes he engaged in. But our general elections are this October, and it looks like our former president, Lula da Silva, will be elected president again, if not in October, then in November, if we need a second turn of elections.
      The Worker's Party presidencies (Lula's and Dilma Roussef's) had many flaws regarding environmental protections and protections for native peoples and other traditional populations of the forests, but they still represented advancement in those areas, and in those years the destruction of the Amazon forest continued, but it slowed down.
      What to do then? We have some key institutes responsible for monitoring and protecting our "wild" ecossystems and a National Foundation responsible for the protection and relations between the government and native people - all of those working along with our Federal Police. Bolsonaro spent his 4 year term removing as much scientists and professionals commited to their work, from those institutions, and transfering federal police directors who did their job, from those environmental protections positions to other offices. In their place he put several lackeys who believe in his message of obliterating the forest and natives in the name of progress (especially military officers and military policemen), and those people stalled and dismantled the work of serious public servents. He also cut a lot resources from those institutions.
      Our next president will, first of all, have to reinvest in those institutions and remove the far-right-wingers from the director positions to put in place people who believe in climate change and in the necessity of protecting biodiversity in our ecossystems. We'll need several operations to fiscalize and detain illegal miners, illegal lumbers and illegal settlers.
      While those ecossystems are being secured, the government will need to sit down with Native peoples and other traditional peoples of the forest and environmental NGO's and movements to discuss policies that do more than just take us to the level we were during the 2010s, but to improve more than we have ever.
      We'll need new agreements for protection policies and we'll need economic policies that boost production activities that strengthen the peoples of the forest while keeping the balance with the ecossystems.
      And this is just talking about Brasil, which holds the largest amount of the Amazon rainforest and of the Pantanal wetlands. Out presidency will probably have to mend relations with countries like Bolivia and Venezuela and celebrate new agreements with them, Colombia, Peru and Paraguay.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss Před 2 lety +13

      @@tunasci Something to keep in mind:
      The Amazon Rainforest maintains its own climate via feedback loops. Disrupt any of those feedback loops, and the _entire area covered by the Amazon_ will change to a different climate … a much, much drier one that won't be able to sustain farming to the level of does right now.
      Cut down more than 25%-30% of the Amazon Rainforest, and the rest goes - it all turns into savannah, like the Serengeti.
      And all of that is _before_ we consider the effects from losing so many trees will have on CO2 (and oxygen) levels in the atmosphere.
      Bozonaro is destroying Brazil's future with his policies.
      And, if you ask me, the rest of us humans should be _paying Brazil an oxygen tax_ to keep the Amazon Rainforest intact. You guys _own the Earth's lungs._ We should be paying you to take good care of them.

  • @tetragaming6332
    @tetragaming6332 Před 2 lety +3

    The more I hear about other cats, the more sure I become that Cheetahs were designed to be Nature’s Disappointment

  • @TheSmeado
    @TheSmeado Před 2 lety

    I really love animal fact videos like this. Easily earned Sub. Keep going, my friend!

  • @dogukanmi6904
    @dogukanmi6904 Před 2 lety +140

    But despite being disrespected that much, they are still alive for +110 million years which is more than enough to gain respect in my eyes. Pound for pound, they are one of the best survivors ever on the planet alongside sharks

  • @SpaceRaptorsInfiniteAR5001
    @SpaceRaptorsInfiniteAR5001 Před 2 lety +42

    Despite all that, Caimans actually are almost at the top of the food chain. As nowadays the whole endangered species law thing is being enforced more and more.

  • @lorddarkrai7712
    @lorddarkrai7712 Před 19 dny

    I love putting your videos on in the background, I usually have trouble focusing so whenever I do something I play some of your vids to help, also thanks for being an irl Pokédex

    • @blakecharles4501
      @blakecharles4501 Před 15 dny

      Do you have ADHD? If not you should get checked for it.

  • @starrxx1991
    @starrxx1991 Před 2 lety

    I loge your brute honesty havnt seen another CZcamsr who's like you your straight up with people and makes your videos so much better

  • @TheMassiveGamer
    @TheMassiveGamer Před 2 lety +67

    Yep. Always thought it's weird how we acknowledge an animal has the superpower of electricity and we're just like: "Okay..."

    • @blackpajamas6600
      @blackpajamas6600 Před 2 lety +23

      Don't most animals have what we'd consider superpowers, though? Migrating birds can sense and navigate Earth's magnetic field. Octopuses have the equivalent of invisibility cloaks. Bats and dolphins see with sound. I'll admit that generating enough electricity to straight up switch other creatures OFF like a damn light bulb is pretty OP, though.

    • @TheMassiveGamer
      @TheMassiveGamer Před 2 lety +4

      @@blackpajamas6600 exactly 😂

    • @Superkangaroox
      @Superkangaroox Před 2 lety +3

      @@blackpajamas6600 Those others don't, essentially, shoot electricity.

    • @blackpajamas6600
      @blackpajamas6600 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Superkangaroox Okay, point taken. I guess we can view the animal kingdom as the original Avengers. XD

    • @Superkangaroox
      @Superkangaroox Před 2 lety +4

      @@blackpajamas6600 That's....pretty accurate, lol

  • @viniciusmarchetti6924
    @viniciusmarchetti6924 Před 2 lety +73

    5:16 I just wanna point out that actually the Green Anaconda can grow way beyond 20 feet. In Brazil, those snakes can easily grow past 20 feet, with many around 30 feet being found. But in fact, the bigger ones grow up to 36 feet and weight just under 900 pounds.

    • @seismicvertigo345
      @seismicvertigo345 Před 2 lety +3

      my goodness!

    • @billybones1694
      @billybones1694 Před 2 lety +11

      You know there's a standing US$50,000 reward for anyone who can catch an anaconda 30 feet long or more, or really any snake for that matter. I believe it's being offered by the New York Zoological Society.

    • @brianshaggy
      @brianshaggy Před 2 lety +3

      I think you're over exaggerating a bit there, the world record is 500 lbs

    • @viniciusmarchetti6924
      @viniciusmarchetti6924 Před 2 lety +4

      @@brianshaggy Maybe up in Central and North America, but not down here in South. There are many articles about massive snakes with some almost reaching 900 pounds. There are articles with snakes even bigger than 36 feet, some saying that Anacondas can grow up to 50 feet and are even heavier, but those usually don't have proof about the actual size or weight of the snakes.

    • @j.m.p.m.9671
      @j.m.p.m.9671 Před 2 lety

      Just...

  • @e.viciousfifaking7367

    You made learning about animals fun I must subscribe to your channel made my day

  • @malikwilliams2598
    @malikwilliams2598 Před 10 měsíci

    I thoroughly enjoy your content! This is a very interesting way to be a teacher. Amazing job!

  • @danirey425
    @danirey425 Před 2 lety +22

    "This aquatic honeybadger is long enough to not have to lie on tinder" the thought of a damn otter bieng equal length with me is mind blowing

  • @corcor7871
    @corcor7871 Před 2 lety +48

    I will never get over how smooth his Segway in and out of ads are. Likely the only channel idk about ads/sponsors break

    • @HoV326
      @HoV326 Před 2 lety +1

      Oversimplified is also usually really smooth with their ad transitions

    • @Karak-_-
      @Karak-_- Před 2 lety +1

      And then there are channels when you look forward the sponsorship segment. For example Neytrix and Terrible Writing Advice.
      Especially since the Sponship War is now near finale.

    • @Ekkaisara
      @Ekkaisara Před 2 lety

      Should check out the history channel oversimplified. He loves doing that

  • @ra2.0yeetedition17
    @ra2.0yeetedition17 Před 2 lety

    I love how the music turned really chipper when you started talking about how humans are the main predator