All 4 Types of Non-Human Ape - A Detailed Comparison

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
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    As our closest relatives, apes are some of the most fascinating species on the planet. Theses intelligent creatures are quite different visually but share many of the same behavioural traits. In the video, we'll dive into the main differences and similarities between the 4 types of apes; chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans & gibbons.
    00:00 Reproduction & Life Span/Cycle
    02:50 Taxonomy, Location, Population & Conservation
    06:08 Physical Characteristics
    12:30 Ecology, Diet & Movement
    18:02 Behaviour
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    Creative Commons Attribution
    Tapanuli Orangutan * 3 - Tim Laman/WikiCommons - CC BY 4.0
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Chimpanzee nest in Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda - travelmag.com/Flickr - CC BY 2.0
    Gorilla Nest - Jefe Le Gran/WikiCommons - CC BY 2.0
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Maps
    Eric Gaba, Alphathon, Fobos92, Mariomassone, Luis Fernández García, Chermundy & IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, species assessors and the authors of the spatial data
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    All maps are traced from those on Wikipedia and are distributed under the same CC BY-SA 3.0 licence on Wikimedia Commons:
    tbtrvl.com/rangemaps
    Editorial Attribution
    Chimpanzee standing - Ng Chun Kiong / Shutterstock.com
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    Unless stated above, all still images are used under license from Shutterstock.com. Thank you to everyone who makes their work available for use. Covering all of the wonderful species in these videos would not be possible without your incredible work.
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    Sources & Further Reading
    Listed below are the sources used to create the video.
    Sources
    Encyclopaedia Britannica
    www.britannica.com/
    Animal Diversity
    animaldiversity.org/
    National Geographic
    www.nationalgeographic.com/
    WWF
    www.worldwildlife.org/
    IUCN Red List
    www.iucnredlist.org/
    Wikipedia
    en.wikipedia.org/
    Chimpanzee Diet
    www.nonhumanrights.org/blog/c...
    www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas...
    Chimps vs Bonobos
    www.bonobos.org/post/how-to-distinguish-bonobos-from-their-close-cousins-chimpanzees
    Chimpanzee Hierarchy & Behaviour
    news.janegoodall.org/2018/07/...
    pasa.org/awareness/bonobos-an...
    www.discoverwildlife.com/anim...
    Bonobo communities
    qz.com/1033621/scientists-ass...
    Chimpanzee baby care
    www.wildchimps.org/about-chim...
    Gorilla Social Groups
    gorillafund.org/dian-fossey/s...
    gorillafoundation.nl/social-s...
    Differences in Gorilla subspecies
    www.wildgorillasafaris.com/di...
    Gorilla diet
    safaripartner.com/blog/what-g...
    Gorilla social bonding
    gorillafund.org/uncategorized...
    Orangutan ecology
    neprimateconservancy.org/suma...
    Orangutan colour
    www.discoverwildlife.com/anim...
    Tapanuli Orangutan Morphology
    www.cell.com/current-biology/...
    Orangutan social behaviour
    nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/ne...
    Orangutan territory
    www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/blog/...
    Orangutan breeding
    www.orangutan.org.uk/orangutans
    Orangutan communication
    www.borneonaturefoundation.or...
    Orangutan tool usage
    www.nature.com/articles/d4158...
    Gibbon social structure
    www.gibbons.de/main2/08teachte...
    carta.anthropogeny.org/moca/t...
    Gibbon reproduction
    www.gibboncenter.org/gibbon-b...
    Gibbon sleeping
    pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9730212/
    About Textbook Travel:
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    #textbooktravel #animals #apes

Komentáře • 944

  • @c00mgoblin
    @c00mgoblin Před rokem +615

    Bonobo: make love not war!
    Chimp: War… War never changes.

    • @tylerwilson5769
      @tylerwilson5769 Před rokem +110

      Orangutan: where sleep.

    • @jurtheorc8117
      @jurtheorc8117 Před rokem +79

      @@tylerwilson5769 Gibbon: WOOP *swings away*

    • @nicholascharles9625
      @nicholascharles9625 Před rokem +17

      Makes you wonder. We share almost as much DNA with both apes as they do each other yet they and we a so different.

    • @bobcat24
      @bobcat24 Před rokem +17

      Happy/ content gorilla: Chill homie
      Angry gorilla: King Kong

    • @guntcheck
      @guntcheck Před rokem

      The bonobo females learned what human females haven't, they could run the world if you give the males all the play they want

  • @Vespyr_
    @Vespyr_ Před rokem +554

    More needs to be known about the Bonobo. Putting them together with Chimps is a disservice to how unique they are.

    • @blaizewunup2677
      @blaizewunup2677 Před rokem +13

      100%

    • @Grzmichuj2137
      @Grzmichuj2137 Před rokem

      They are like Chimps, but peaceful, and addicted to sex but that's how it is

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Před rokem +51

      Pan troglodytes and Pan paniscus are the same genus, as Homo erectus, Homo neanderthalensis, Homo Heidelbergensis, Homo floriensis, etc are all genus Homo (humans). So it makes sense to compare them somewhat.

    • @CherryJuli
      @CherryJuli Před rokem +40

      They’re always the forgotten ones even tho they’re the most similar in behavior to humans.

    • @slammysammy9555
      @slammysammy9555 Před rokem +25

      @@CherryJuli The way sex is engrained as a part of their socialization I think is much more similar to humans

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870
    @theflyingdutchguy9870 Před rokem +916

    anyoje who can walk up to a gorilla and shoot it will have no less trouble shooting a person for their own gain. i have never experienced seeing them in the wild. i know its a very emotional experience and makes you have so much respect for them. you have to be a monster to be able to poach them. anyone who gets caught should never be set free

    • @thegameranch5935
      @thegameranch5935 Před rokem +61

      Why gorillas? I think all of the great apes should be included in this comment

    • @johnh.mcsaxx3637
      @johnh.mcsaxx3637 Před rokem +67

      Like sharks, many people believed gorillas were monsters for the longest time. This was used to justify killing the gorillas.
      In the Virunga region, stories were told of "Ngagi" stealing women and destroying farms. Fortunately attitudes are changing about the "wild men of the mountains."

    • @zsu-23-4shilka2
      @zsu-23-4shilka2 Před rokem +44

      Feed the poachers to a band of chimpanzees. I’d say feed em to the gorillas, but gorillas are vegetarians

    • @GeraltofRivia22
      @GeraltofRivia22 Před rokem

      @@thegameranch5935 chimps are bastards though.

    • @flyingeagle3898
      @flyingeagle3898 Před rokem +27

      @@thegameranch5935 chimps, and adult male orangutans can sometimes be genuinely dangerous to humans, So in rare circumstances self-defense might be a viable reason. However, Gorillas almost never attack unless provoked.

  • @Jabber-ig3iw
    @Jabber-ig3iw Před rokem +126

    I was fortunate enough on my honeymoon in 2009 to visit a family of mountain gorillas in Rwanda. That experience will stay with me forever. From the silverback lying only a few metres from us, just keeping tabs on his family to the 2 youngsters playing in the trees to the juvenile having a massive sulk slightly apart from the family, looked just like a child who has just been told they can’t have that toy they wanted. Amazing creatures, so much like us.

    • @TSUNAMI-MAMI
      @TSUNAMI-MAMI Před rokem +1

      @boy Afrika beautiful News

    • @Sylbester_
      @Sylbester_ Před rokem +2

      I think its better to say we're just like them

    • @dagtheking5739
      @dagtheking5739 Před 7 dny

      @@Sylbester_We as a species are probably newer I guess.

  • @JohnDrummondPhoto
    @JohnDrummondPhoto Před rokem +231

    Orangutans are fairly easy to see by humans; but they co-evolved with predators like tigers, which are basically colorblind. Their chroma (brightness) is similar to the surrounding forest, so tigers would have a hard time seeing them. It's the same reason orange tigers are hard to see by their prey.

    • @Gianno_
      @Gianno_ Před rokem +9

      I never knew this, great insight!

    • @JohnDrummondPhoto
      @JohnDrummondPhoto Před rokem +23

      @@Gianno_ it's interesting that of today's vertebrates, it's mainly birds and primates that can see in color. Both groups are primarily arboreal and social, relying on vision to identify and communicate with each other. OTOH many, many invertebrate groups not only see in color, but have color vision that exceeds ours at either or even both ends of the light spectrum.

    • @isaacstone7899
      @isaacstone7899 Před rokem +1

      I believe all animals can see colors and and some of many see few colors.
      My car has black interior and mosquitoes like to hide during the daylight.

    • @JohnDrummondPhoto
      @JohnDrummondPhoto Před rokem +18

      @@isaacstone7899 detecting light and darkness is different from detecting colors. I know insects can see color, including colors that we humans can't.
      As for other animals: I did write "basically" colorblind because animals do have some cone cells in their retinas and can presumably see a little color. But they may not be able to see all colors, and they may have too few cones to see colors very well. Nocturnal animals have many more rod cells than cones.
      It's still birds and primates that have the best color vision among vertebrates. On the other hand, many invertebrates have far better color vision. I believe, off the top of my head, that mantis shrimp can see the most colors of any animal, based on the variety of cone cells in their eyes.

    • @docu-menter2702
      @docu-menter2702 Před rokem

      @@JohnDrummondPhoto so does that mean the Tiger vision's basically stronger yet blander than us humans?

  • @randomkinkajou5747
    @randomkinkajou5747 Před rokem +241

    Other than Gorillas, gibbons have to be my favourite primate. Specifically the Siamang gibbons. I really love the sound they make and how they make it.

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +27

      Totally! I think the silvery gibbon is my favourite but it's hard to choose!

    • @lorefreak94
      @lorefreak94 Před rokem +4

      I hadn't even heard of gibbons untill a couple years ago. They are adorable and move like the perfect abominable snowman. Probably my favorite type of ape.

    • @technoraptor7778
      @technoraptor7778 Před rokem +4

      Gibbons are the best...they are always hilarious comedians.

    • @BayuSeta
      @BayuSeta Před rokem +4

      @@Textbooktravel I Love the video! and for what it's worth Siamang is pronounced "See-uh-mung" with a barely there 'h' on the second sylable.

    • @adrianaslund8605
      @adrianaslund8605 Před rokem +2

      Orangutans are underrated I think. They're just so pudgy, curious and goofy. And they're much quieter. But yeah. There's an entire column on the Wikipedia article on Gibbons about how they were viewed in ancient China when Gibbons lived there. They were considered the aristocrat gentlemen of the forest. Compared to the Macaques who were the noisy rabble of the forest. Gibbons were considered graceful in their movements, aloof from humans and generally got along. Macaques were thought of as grabby with humans, greedy and as often bullying and fighting one another.

  • @FoxFighter-HellBringer
    @FoxFighter-HellBringer Před rokem +70

    I remember watching an episode of Orangutan Island where there had been a flood. One orangutan learned how to catch catfish and taught the rest of the group to catch them too. They all started eating catfish along with their fruits and veggies. It was so interesting to see them behave this way. Even their main carer even stated that this was very unusual and fascinating behavior.

    • @minephlip
      @minephlip Před rokem +3

      makes me wonder how many useful things we could show them and introduce them to that they will adopt and pass down to their young

    • @FoxFighter-HellBringer
      @FoxFighter-HellBringer Před rokem

      @@minephlip Such as?

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Před rokem +4

      Eating meat could change them dramatically. They wouldn't need to spend nearly as much time looking for food. Spare time is what accelerated human civilization.

    • @FoxFighter-HellBringer
      @FoxFighter-HellBringer Před rokem

      @@Bob_Adkins That's true, but I'm pretty sure the keepers bring food for them on the island. It's a protected area and they are split up by age, so I don't think wild orangutans would be able to learn this unless they are fully released into the wild. I haven't seen the show in a long time, so I can't remember how they handle the orangutans once they're grown up, but it would be quite amazing if they could pass that on to wild groups.🤔

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před rokem

      @@FoxFighter-HellBringer democracy and freedom.

  • @dudbolt2719
    @dudbolt2719 Před rokem +233

    Always been a fan of orangutans, love seeing something so related to us, yet so different! (Also poor gibbons aren’t allowed to join the great ape club)

    • @PupperTiggle
      @PupperTiggle Před rokem +29

      orangutans are the best they are so cool and awesome i love orangutans

    • @dudbolt2719
      @dudbolt2719 Před rokem +3

      @@PupperTiggle yes

    • @rxzmuvv3288
      @rxzmuvv3288 Před rokem +11

      Im glad that humans are helping young orangutans and raising them I hope we can save them before they go extinct or if they ever do go extinct

    • @doctorbobcat7123
      @doctorbobcat7123 Před rokem +19

      @@PupperTiggle Sounds like something an Orangutan would say...

    • @forrestl5597
      @forrestl5597 Před rokem +8

      it's funny to me that orangutans are both orange and tan

  • @martijn9568
    @martijn9568 Před rokem +93

    This always makes me wonder how the first humans were actually like outside of the archeological record.

    • @Panteni87
      @Panteni87 Před rokem +18

      I wondered about this too, and at some point I started calling humans: Grassland chimpanzees. As I do think that our evolution is highly bound to the retreating of the jungles and forrests for savannah.

    • @martijn9568
      @martijn9568 Před rokem +19

      @@Panteni87 I personally would like to call us grassland Bonobos as well. I'd like to imagine humans back then not as violent as Chimpanzees, but I could only dream of humans being as peaceful as Bonobos.

    • @jasonedenburg9427
      @jasonedenburg9427 Před rokem +3

      @@martijn9568 that last line hit hard 😭

    • @mauddib696
      @mauddib696 Před rokem

      @@Panteni87 we were never chimpanzees guys. The ancestors of both of was probably an upright walking great ape in Europe I believe. Knuckle walking evolved later.

    • @mauddib696
      @mauddib696 Před rokem

      @@martijn9568 our ancestors are speculated to be monogamous because we actually are pretty peaceful as far as primates go. Not bonobo level but we aren’t so violent as chimpanzees and it’s probably because of us being the most co-operative apes. It’s because of that some scientists think is why we have white in our eyes to better communicate via eye focusing and signalling. Take rolling your eyes for example as a form of body language.

  • @zerlichr426
    @zerlichr426 Před rokem +18

    "as both species age, some of their hair also tends to turn gray and the forehead can also become bald".
    As male from homo genus i found it very relatable

  • @Anonymous-bi5pv
    @Anonymous-bi5pv Před rokem +16

    18:39 19:06 Bonobos? More like BonoBASED. This is what we need more of in human society.

    • @tell-me-a-story-
      @tell-me-a-story- Před měsícem

      Definitely not.
      They have sex I front of their children so much that they mimic it, even when they’re to young to want that on their own.
      I do NOT want to live in a society like that!

  • @EresirThe1st
    @EresirThe1st Před rokem +54

    So sad how every video of animals is full of "endangered due to habitat loss and poaching". I wish humans could collectively hurry up and realise that the beauty of the wilderness means more than however much money they could get through destruction.

    • @theblobfish9614
      @theblobfish9614 Před rokem +11

      The Problem is an extreme gap in wealth between people. In africa there are many who do not really have anything so they are open to poaching for money. On the other side you have people in the western world or asia who have so much they develop a taste for shenanigans such as poached animals, or parts thereof

    • @bobcat24
      @bobcat24 Před rokem

      The only way to solve this problem is to legalize MURDER so we can murder poachers, pedophiles, psychopaths, severely mentally ill, disabled, and other undesirable people. That’ll significantly reduce human population and habitat loss.

    • @jeremySwerbs
      @jeremySwerbs Před rokem

      They...they love mangos too...they... are vegi giants... who Need more good...then an...elephant...if size...compared... and...would...still be... vegetarian... is honorable.... king koKong... no...food...

    • @theblobfish9614
      @theblobfish9614 Před rokem +1

      @@jeremySwerbs are you having stroke?

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      No, it doesn't.
      Where you live there was wilderness before.

  • @Superkoolaid857
    @Superkoolaid857 Před rokem +46

    Must say as an animal enthusiast I LOVE your detailed explanations off multiple species, you do it in a way which is easy to understand especially for someone who is autistic like me

  • @theflyingdutchguy9870
    @theflyingdutchguy9870 Před rokem +30

    * non human apes. remember the homo genus is still a genus of great apes. btw gibbons are one of my favorite primate species. there really is nothing like them. being the only family of lesser apes

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +9

      Thank you! I've just re-worked the title and thumbnail, appreciate the feedback. I think gibbons are my favourite too! I love the variation of their fur, the silvery gibbon is just beautiful!

    • @tell-me-a-story-
      @tell-me-a-story- Před měsícem

      I don’t know, there are so many things that apes have in common with each other that they don’t have in common with us.

  • @jamarswope2341
    @jamarswope2341 Před rokem +8

    Just found your channel and now it’s definitely one of my new favorites! Keep up the good work

  • @jorkor
    @jorkor Před rokem +3

    THANK YOU! The best video about apes on CZcams, great info with amazing clips🙌 And right after I rewatched Planet of the Apes film series, what a timing!

  • @MrMarinus18
    @MrMarinus18 Před rokem +31

    20:30
    Actually one of the silverback's most important duties is to protect the children. Many females can kill the young of other females or at least abuse them. They also dominate and abuse each other. The Silverback often displays dominance to put such females in their place, reminding them that they are all equal under him and that he won't tolerate his young being abused.

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 Před rokem +6

      It’s a lot like that in modern day humans too, the evil step-mother trope is as old as primates.

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 Před rokem +9

      @@bendover9813 It's more the abusive jealous aunt trope. There is an internal hierarchy with the females as well and most abuse happens by lesser females to the young of higher ones.
      There is a reason why most human cultures have branded that the ultimate form of pettiness and destructive envy.

    • @jeremySwerbs
      @jeremySwerbs Před rokem

      Yes

    • @jeremySwerbs
      @jeremySwerbs Před rokem

      @@bendover9813 that's just an "auntie" 🐜

  • @stevenguevara2184
    @stevenguevara2184 Před rokem +14

    Gibbons pack a lot of life into 25 years. The ability to swing through the trees seems like a super power

    • @CactusMuffin
      @CactusMuffin Před 2 měsíci +1

      They're like natural acrobats with long flexible noodle arms.

    • @PowerScissor
      @PowerScissor Před 24 dny

      You can do it with a little practice.

  • @teem8997
    @teem8997 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I love this channel, helps me learn and it's also really relaxing & calming to watch because animals just make me happy

  • @Ferril21
    @Ferril21 Před rokem +12

    Orangutans are my favourite animals of them all. Big adult male orangutans with flanges are so majestic.

  • @akashmitra6411
    @akashmitra6411 Před rokem +39

    Please do a detailed video on Non-simian Primates! Big respect to you for your hardwork and dedication. Much love from India 🇮🇳
    Keep up the good work!

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +7

      Thanks so much!! It's on the way! I have two monkey videos to do and then one on prosimians to finish the primates series. Indian National Parks is also on the way, which I'm really excited for, you are so lucky to call India your home :)

  • @beteabbaynessagne3842
    @beteabbaynessagne3842 Před rokem +11

    I appreciate your work, well made!

  • @PotooBurd
    @PotooBurd Před 8 měsíci +1

    This is so informative!!! Fantastic reporting; I enjoy this kind of content!🌻🌼🐝

  • @seamusreilly123
    @seamusreilly123 Před rokem

    Great video well made learnt things I didn’t know thanks keep it up

  • @mewnashi2372
    @mewnashi2372 Před rokem +4

    I used to not like apes when I was a kid, but today I find them so fastinated! awesome video!

  • @wordsdistorted
    @wordsdistorted Před rokem +30

    Apes in particular I find pretty despicable to poach and more so the people actually wanting trophies of them. I see us in their eyes especially.
    While I do find all of them very interesting, I have always admired Gorillas the most. What fierce and majestic creatures.

  • @ttabata
    @ttabata Před rokem

    the ad bit was so funny, very creative!!
    loved the vid, subscribed 😉

  • @dougdouglas3945
    @dougdouglas3945 Před 5 měsíci

    Really informative and entertaining. Thanks for the upload.

  • @Green_Eyed_Monster
    @Green_Eyed_Monster Před rokem +4

    When I was in 8th grade, my biology class took a trip to the zoo and we each had to choose an animal to do an assignment on. They had a male gibbon named Caruso and when we were looking into his habitat, he came swinging forward and kicked the glass to try to scare us and I immediately decided I wanted to do my class project on gibbons.

  • @ElderUnikirin
    @ElderUnikirin Před rokem +26

    we've learned a lot about bonobos in recent years. and it's some time since we determined that they are a distinct species to chimpanzees. their life and behaviour is different to chimpanzees in so many ways. there is no good reason to lump them in together in an otherwise interesting and informative video.
    ETA also, the nuclear family is not the most common family structure in humans globally, the extended family is!

    • @k1m6a11
      @k1m6a11 Před rokem +2

      This is exactly why I read the title and decided not to watch the video. An unforgivable oversight.

    • @k1m6a11
      @k1m6a11 Před rokem +2

      @@Me-yq1fl "The bonobo (/bəˈnoʊboʊ, ˈbɒnəboʊ/; Pan paniscus) is an endangered great ape. It is one of the two species making up the genus Pan, the other being the common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes).[4] While bonobos (formerly known as the pygmy chimpanzee) are now recognized as a distinct species in their own right, they were initially thought to be a subspecies of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) due to the physical similarities between the two species." - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonobo

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Před rokem

      @@Me-yq1fl
      "Chimps" are Pan troglodytes and "Bonobos" are Pan paniscus. They are the same genus, not the same species.

    • @guitarjunkie2065
      @guitarjunkie2065 Před rokem

      @Me You're not making sense. In order to be analogous to the different gorillas and orangutans, the pans would have to be the bonobo chimp and the [something else] chimp. They're not.
      But it was mentioned in this video that prior to discovering (and proving via DNA analysis) that they are seperate species, they WERE thought of that way. IIRC bonobos were known as pygmy chimps, being a bit smaller on average. Are you sure you didn't pick this up from a source that is now outdated?

  • @hugong8518
    @hugong8518 Před rokem +2

    Another amazing video!

  • @thegameranch5935
    @thegameranch5935 Před rokem +10

    Great video!
    Im having trouble choosing my favorite ape but its or orangutans or chimpanzees (which also include bonobos)
    I love orangutans because the babies are mega cute and the relationship between the mother and son/daughter is both wholesome and fascinating, but i also love chimps because their babies are cute and their mini societies and primitive politics really interest me.
    Gibbon are also very cute, the babies are ugly but in a cute way and i love how acrobatic they are and their sexual dimorphism, and the air pouch that Siamang have reminds me of frogs so thats a bonus

    • @PupperTiggle
      @PupperTiggle Před rokem +1

      orangutan best because they are orange and cool and smart but sad because satu orangutan died :(

  • @spudeism
    @spudeism Před rokem +9

    For me it is Pongo, the lone monk of the forest, packed with plenty of Antediluvian wisdom and soul.

  • @Mizt_Sim
    @Mizt_Sim Před rokem +5

    I hope that the apes can continue the journey alongside us. It would be so sad for our cousins to go extinct, when they are the only other animals that can remind us of ourselves.

  • @bootstrapbill98
    @bootstrapbill98 Před rokem +1

    This was a beautiful video, and possibly the smoothest ad Segway I've ever seen 😅

    • @guitarjunkie2065
      @guitarjunkie2065 Před rokem

      That's "segue". Not trying to put you down for not knowing. Just an fyi. Now you know.

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun Před rokem +1

    @Textbook Travel Nice work. I would have loved it if you had played those ending gibbon calls with a disco backbeat, because that's what it sounds like when humans of that era would "oo-IH! oo-IH!" on the dance floor. Anyway, videos like this should be extensively used in classrooms. With minors in Biology and Anthropology, and watching others' video productions frequently, I still learned things here I had not been taught or learned elsewhere. That's a unique gift; thank you.

  • @randquadrozzi1280
    @randquadrozzi1280 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Great video.I find apes, dolphins and whales to be the most interesting animals.Forgot the awesome octopus.

  • @wrballew
    @wrballew Před rokem +8

    Pretty interesting video but really annoyed that Bonobos got lumped in with Chimpanzees. They're their own separate species, they should have gotten their own commentary, not just added in as basically other chimps

  • @beth-rg8bm
    @beth-rg8bm Před rokem

    Thank you this was very well done! 🤔 👍😁🙌☺️😊

  • @swordturtles5401
    @swordturtles5401 Před rokem

    That was the best sponsor transition I've seen. Would join that class.

  • @donchonealyotheoneal5456

    That last part really got me I thought of a bunch of kids hooping and hollering in a tree and that's what we used to do on our farm in Ada Oklahoma we used to sit in the apple orchard or the pair Orchard up in the trees and just hoping holler and Howl at the Moon and that's what those Gibbons sounded like to me sounded Almost Human

    • @TuesdayDulin
      @TuesdayDulin Před rokem +1

      They are like kids! So cute and innocent. It's a shame we as humans don't make it a huge priority to care for the world we live in. I wish we could do more as everyday people but sadly it's the big corporations and governments that need to change. May mother nature have mercy on us.

  • @adrianrutterford762
    @adrianrutterford762 Před rokem +6

    Thank you for a fabulous video.

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +1

      Thanks Adrian! Hope you're having a great weekend :)

  • @lilcursebreaker5571
    @lilcursebreaker5571 Před rokem +2

    Keep doing what you’re doing, the views will come

  • @andrewryan7583
    @andrewryan7583 Před rokem

    That was great. Thanks

  • @hondaaccord1399
    @hondaaccord1399 Před rokem +8

    Orangutans feel hauntingly human. In an uncomfortable way too. There's _soul_ behind what they do and how the look at things, and nobody can tell me otherwise.

  • @peasant8246
    @peasant8246 Před rokem +3

    The thumbnail for this video looks like a meme:
    >Left: an average coconut fan
    >Right: average banana enjoyer

  • @jwolf3114
    @jwolf3114 Před rokem

    Great vid

  • @calebscrazyamazinglife1795

    Can you do a video on the classification of big sheep

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +3

      I really want to dive into Bovidae at some point so I will get to sheep for sure!! Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @Irgnsoontyp
    @Irgnsoontyp Před rokem +4

    Would love to see my League of Legends teammates to be included in a follow up video

  • @clivematthews95
    @clivematthews95 Před rokem

    Very fascinating ❤

  • @mytube12
    @mytube12 Před rokem +1

    Pls do a top ten largest owls video!

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Před rokem +3

    It seems like a natural thing for not only humans to have a midday rest but for chimps as well. I guess it's a trait we share.

  • @jeremeymiller3406
    @jeremeymiller3406 Před rokem +3

    Always thought it was crazy the biggest and baddest great ape was strictly a herbivore despite the occasional insect casualty Wonder if it’s a coincidence that the declining population of some of these are because of how many predators are in the area like large snakes, leapords, crocs, and the most dangerous tigers who’s followed by leopards because they have the ability to enter their element up in the trees

  • @2008Dev
    @2008Dev Před měsícem

    Chimpanzee : we will attack you for no reason!
    Gorilla : Just dont disturb me or else
    Orangutan : Hello fellow humans!, do you guys have some food for me?

  • @throwsmachete4671
    @throwsmachete4671 Před rokem +1

    my god that sponsor segue was incredible

  • @legakattack4771
    @legakattack4771 Před rokem +4

    Thank you for this. I love great apes!!!

  • @yotimusic
    @yotimusic Před rokem +5

    I am just a primate watching a video about other primates

  • @FromRussia_With_Love
    @FromRussia_With_Love Před rokem

    11:38 That picture of the Bonobo on the right looks like my old grandpa smoking a cigarette on the front porch in the morning lol

  • @shanevinzant6935
    @shanevinzant6935 Před rokem +2

    22:22 that's actually adorable

  • @teaburg
    @teaburg Před rokem +3

    I take it they all still have their palmaris longus so the babies can hang onto their mothers. And to make it easier to be in trees. I've lost the one in my left wrist. I did a test in a group and some people still had both, one person had none, but most had lost one.
    I don't want any of these relatives to go extinct.

  • @jmenbaca1364
    @jmenbaca1364 Před rokem +3

    Apes are so amazing considering they’re so close to use, we are not the only ape capable of excess, or murder.
    As we live our lives unbothered, they live theirs filmed and hunted. Constantly relocating thanks to us. The greatest of the apes.

  • @YellowPredator92
    @YellowPredator92 Před rokem +2

    could you please do one on the other simians like monkeys or maybe even lemurs in the future 🙂

  • @djuanbenjamin9149
    @djuanbenjamin9149 Před rokem +2

    I’m just watching this so I can get a good reference of what a Sasquatch might look like.

  • @ultrae4628
    @ultrae4628 Před rokem +4

    I really hope I get to hold a baby Gorilla once in my lifetime

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Před rokem +3

    Humans have been foreshadowed in the video by saying 'habit destruction'.

  • @heichan8657
    @heichan8657 Před rokem

    Where to sign up for the pongo pilates class lol. i need that

  • @AidanBeddingfield
    @AidanBeddingfield Před rokem +1

    Can you make a video talking about different monkeys?

  • @TheNEPTY
    @TheNEPTY Před rokem +6

    No Sasquatch? Disappointed 😔

    • @yoyo777
      @yoyo777 Před rokem

      ​@@Me-yq1fl well they might be real but we can't take some footprint and a singal video for full proof

  • @padraigmaclochlainn8866
    @padraigmaclochlainn8866 Před rokem +5

    Orangugang represent 🦧

  • @blazingtrs6348
    @blazingtrs6348 Před rokem +2

    every time i see through an ape's eyes, i see thought and intelligence, a primal form of that but it is there nonetheless. that's why i can't imagine poaching them or even eating them (not onlybisbis hazardous, i consider it borderline cannibalism). we should protect these animals no matter what since they are our closest relatives and are thinking and feeling creatures like us.

    • @pezvonpez
      @pezvonpez Před rokem

      Most manmals are also thinking and feeling. Apes aren't special, only we are

  • @imagomonkei
    @imagomonkei Před rokem +1

    My understanding is that most mammals besides monkeys lack red color vision. Thus red fur would appear green to most animals, including predators like tigers. But other orangutans would be able to see each other more easily.

  • @thatghost
    @thatghost Před rokem +2

    Considering the most if not all great apes can't swim, I wonder why humans learned that ability 🤔

    • @shoechoe8956
      @shoechoe8956 Před rokem +6

      The other great apes cannot swim because they are too dense- they'd just sink straight to the bottom. Humans are a lot smaller and have less dense muscles which makes us lighter & weaker but gives us the ability to keep ourselves above water.

    • @octipuscrime
      @octipuscrime Před rokem +3

      Where many animals can naturally swim, its an ability we have to learn. Yet, interestingly, babies seem to learn to swim quite easily compared to adults.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Před rokem +2

      Humans shut off a myostatin gene which makes the other apes ripped as a weightlifter, that may have something to do with it. This gene sometimes reoccurs in humans causing an atavism (the return of a dormant ancestral trait in an individual) making them very muscular from childhood (this is also why some humans are born with tails, which most always gets surgically removed soon after birth. Google it)
      If I'm not mistaken other apes can swim, they just don't like to.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      Wtf are you talking about?
      Humans can't naturally swim - unlike most primates.
      If a human, who wasn't taught how to swim, falls into water, they're quite likely to drown. That wouldn't happen to most monkeys.

  • @huldu
    @huldu Před rokem +5

    Feels like life is a race to become the dominating species on a planet. Perhaps if we humans were to disappear one day for any reason, one of these other apes would pick up the slack eventually. As for poaching while it is very bad, it depends on what the circumstances are. If you're a poor family living in huts and that is your main food source(or income), you can't blame them. They're just living like everyone else. It's easy to sit behind your computer and judge others for not being as successful as you, mind you that "success" is completely random. You have no idea where you're going to be born and grow up, you're just making the best of what you have.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Před rokem

      Animals don't usually dominate the planet with the exception of Homo sapien sapiens specifically (because we're stupid).

    • @huldu
      @huldu Před rokem

      @@whatabouttheearth What I meant was that there is always something up on top of the food chain and that is us. Despite us not being very well built, without tools we'd struggle against many other predators(I'd imagine we did at some point). If we're talking about alien lifeforms it's very possible this is exclusive to intelligent life.
      The sad part is that we walked alongside other human like beings for a long time. They're no longer here today probably because there was a conflict and we were just more. We can't even get a long even if our hair or skin color is different. Maybe the other "human" races got absorbed into us through breeding(I can't remember the names beside Neanderthals, but there were more).

    • @guitarjunkie2065
      @guitarjunkie2065 Před rokem

      You're leaving out the fact that we have the intellectual capacity to understand the implications and consequences of our actions, and to plan accordingly and conscientiously.
      If it's going to be so difficult to support a family where you live, and moving elsewhere is beyond your means, then here's a novel idea: Don't reproduce. Another way of stating what we already have stated is that the habitat is already saturated with humans, and can't support any more without damaging some aspect of it, maybe irrevocably.
      We have free will. One of the attributes of truly ethical behavior is doing the right thing, even when our own individual lives will be negatively impacted. I realize that this is not very popular these days. But it IS an option.

    • @user-tzzglsstle585e38
      @user-tzzglsstle585e38 Před rokem

      A poor family is wasting their time hunting apes for food when there's other animals that are more common to hunt

  • @2peopleincar
    @2peopleincar Před rokem +1

    Okay now do it again it with fictional ape creatures from tv shows or movies. Like King Kong, king Louie, curious George, and spidermonkey from Ben 10.

  • @imreallybadatnamingthings

    My favorite three apes are (in order) gorillas, gibbons, and orangutans.

  • @dmitriyk.2890
    @dmitriyk.2890 Před rokem +8

    Who the hell eats apes?

    • @thanosal-titan
      @thanosal-titan Před rokem +1

      Chinese

    • @johnh.mcsaxx3637
      @johnh.mcsaxx3637 Před rokem +6

      @@thanosal-titan And some tribes in Africa. In one region a gorilla would be traditionally eaten upon the coronation of a chief. At other times gorilla flesh was banned.

    • @amazingpi
      @amazingpi Před rokem

      Also Indonesian groups of people eat orangutans

    • @maverick2560
      @maverick2560 Před rokem

      Other apes.

    • @amazingpi
      @amazingpi Před rokem

      @@maverick2560 only chimps

  • @sarahburke5839
    @sarahburke5839 Před rokem +4

    Do Gibbons really not reach sexual maturity until they're about middle age? 🤯😲

  • @sewatweaty5549
    @sewatweaty5549 Před rokem +1

    I wonder how extinct human species' groupings worked and also how did modern human groupings work before agriculture was invented.

  • @carolynchurch4642
    @carolynchurch4642 Před 25 dny

    Lets see. Gibbons, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans... I feel like we are forgetting something.

  • @UTINNI_36
    @UTINNI_36 Před rokem +4

    Hey I don’t see bigfoot on here come on everyone knows there’s 3 diff types of Bfoot

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Před rokem +3

    The title makes me annoyed because, there are 5 groups of apes, not just 4. It is well understood that humans are indeed apes, but you are ignoring them. It's sort of like saying birds are not dinosaurs, or a greater extent reptiles.

    • @legakattack4771
      @legakattack4771 Před rokem +10

      I guess. But we already know the behaviors of humans lol

    • @billyr2904
      @billyr2904 Před rokem +5

      I just realized this comment is unnecessary.

    • @Textbooktravel
      @Textbooktravel  Před rokem +6

      That's a great point, thank you! I've updated the title :)

  • @rodrigoneves6621
    @rodrigoneves6621 Před rokem

    Great video bro, could you make a video about american primates?

  • @Derek_Wyld
    @Derek_Wyld Před rokem

    0:56 that baby made me think of Albert Einstein lmfao 😅

  • @brindlebriar
    @brindlebriar Před rokem +3

    Why are the African apes black, and the Asian apes yellow? Evolution seems kind of racist.

    • @maverick2560
      @maverick2560 Před rokem +2

      None of them are yellow, the hell are you on?

    • @brindlebriar
      @brindlebriar Před rokem

      @@maverick2560 Yellowish. Even in the thumbnail, African side is black, Asian side is Orange and yellowish.

    • @Iamnotracistlmao
      @Iamnotracistlmao Před rokem

      Cuz black is cool

    • @nojorooney
      @nojorooney Před rokem +1

      It’s for camouflage, The water in peat swamp forests, where orangutans live tends to be a muddy orange. Sunlight reflected off this water can give the forest an orange cast, making orangutans hard to see in dappled light.

    • @brindlebriar
      @brindlebriar Před rokem

      @@nojorooney It makes sense, that it should be something in the environment. But both Africa and Asia are huge stretches of continent, each with various environments. The orangutan is orange, but that little monkey behind it is yellow, presumably from a different location. But in all of Africa's vast and varied landscapes, it looks like all the apes are black.
      And then... the same goes for the people, who are also apes. Black in Africa, yellowish in Asia. How does this happen? Just coincidence? It can't all be from light reflecting off of peat bogs. Surely not all of Asia is covered in peat bogs, and surely there are a few peat bogs in Africa..

  • @stormrodgers2613
    @stormrodgers2613 Před rokem

    I don't know if it exists or not, but there should be like a family tree styled website, but for the animal kingdom going back all the way before the dinosaurs and stuff.

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Před rokem +2

    delightful

  • @jamalmcdaniel3339
    @jamalmcdaniel3339 Před rokem

    Thank u

  • @user-pv9bm3pj9i
    @user-pv9bm3pj9i Před rokem

    4:52 I think you messed up in differenciating east and west.

  • @ragdolltrucking
    @ragdolltrucking Před rokem

    We always see baby chimps on the mother's back just walking around, what's funny though is that when they are running the baby chimp looks like a jockey riding a horse

  • @TheReZisTLust
    @TheReZisTLust Před rokem

    This makes me wanna play Ancestors again lol

  • @golwenraw
    @golwenraw Před rokem

    Nice and informative vid, but please also use metric.

  • @splatninja9447
    @splatninja9447 Před 18 dny

    I love chimps. Theyre one of my favorite animals. But being a baby chimp would thoroughly suck.

  • @Thejosiphas
    @Thejosiphas Před rokem

    i saw the orangutan eating a slow loris too

  • @djteq9
    @djteq9 Před 6 měsíci

    Not to be that way but notice how the orangutan head is shaped the way it is and where it’s located at.

  • @SuryakantSingh5
    @SuryakantSingh5 Před rokem

    Slow claps for the squarespace seqway

  • @odajimenez2600
    @odajimenez2600 Před rokem +1

    In captivity, gibbons can live up to 40+ years! ❤️

  • @ozmanoshe
    @ozmanoshe Před rokem

    Can we do a comparison of the human apes now?

  • @AfifRayz
    @AfifRayz Před rokem +1

    0:19 Dababy LESSS GOOO

  • @rhodrage
    @rhodrage Před rokem +1

    They may be our closest cousins, but I'm still not inviting them to dinner.
    Not after last time.

  • @raihanabari7896
    @raihanabari7896 Před rokem +1

    All of our four closest relatives are critically endangered which is very sad for human race. If almost nine billion population of human, six billion do little conservation work in their lifetime by planting trees, buying wisely, using product moderately and show compassion for animals world , this situation can improve also we can save the world from climate change.