Muskox: Thunder On The Tundra
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- čas přidán 10. 03. 2022
- These ancient warriors once ruled the world, but are now only found on the Arctic tundras. This is the Muskox. | Support Animalogic by signing up for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/SHK830sceb3 Your brain will love it!
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CREDITS
Animalogic Created by Dylan Dubeau and Andrew Strapp
Executive Producer, Director, and Director of Photography: Dylan Dubeau
Host: Danielle Dufault
Editors: Jim Pitts and Cat Senior
Producer, Camera Operator: Andres Salazar
Writer: Lauren Greenwood
Music From Audio Network:
Break Point
I Know Things
Blues Walk Fast
Inspectors Moustache
Light Foot
Man In Black
Cupcake Revenge
Debatable
Siamese
Prowling
Hustle Bustle
Golden Harvest
Solving The Equation
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Examining the nature of the beast.
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Make a vídeo about zebras
I love how u said fluffy bois 😍
Love from Bangladesh ❤️ please make a video for the meaning of life from talk islam channel ❤️ you can see world newly ❤️ probably your life should be change ❤️ it's not a fan it's reality ❤️ I request you please go for few minutes please 🙂❤️🙂
Make a video of the monkey spider
Hehe
"Muskox" may well be misleading, but it does sound better than "stinksheep"...
Why don't we call them mini banthas?
Bless nerds
Bedwetting Ram
Sheepee
Coulda kept the name
I’m a yarn spinner, they are also raised domestically and combed in the late spring for their Qivuit.
They also will shed it on their own out in the wild, so sometimes brave fiber artists will collect it off the ground in the late spring. This is also called “blowing their coat” as their down sheds, the wind blows it off of them in chunks. Buffalo and Yak do that too.
Qivuit is one of the most expensive spinning fibers, that are legal anyway.
There is no need to kill this beautiful gentle creature.
I’m so glad they made a comeback!
34 to 170k is quite a genetic bottleneck, eeep!
I hope that doesn’t effect their genetics and health longer term.
Also info on their Qivuit:
Qivuit is 50x more insulating than wool, is water resistant, fire resistant and doesn’t felt, or get mats. It helps maintain body temperature rather than making the Musk Ox hot. It can cool them in the summer months and keep them warm in the winter.
Their guard hairs are quite rough, they protect the downy layer and help dirrect water to the ground rather than into the down.
They are wonderful creatures. I have a few friends that has a few of them as fiber pets in Alaska and Canada.
Thanks for sharing all this interesting information about them.
And random but I initially misread your comment as "yam spinner" and was momentarily very confused by the visual 😅
XSemperIdem5
No problem 💗💗
Giggless!!
Think spinning wheel not acrobatics with yarn 😂
"Fibre pets"? So, they aren't aggressive towards their handlers/keepers?
Lazurkri the people I know who have them say they are gentle
Love the info! Thank you so much!
The battlecry caught me off guard, I'll admit. 🤣 Surprised a laugh out of me.
Holy crap the sound the impact makes with their horns from a distance is huge! I almost bet you could feel it if you were close enough.
I'm surprised you didn't mention anything about the overwhelming cuteness of their calves lol. Great video, I love these hairy tanks
I love your wildlife sketches, the signature mini time-lapse at the end of each episode is always a treat! :)
However, it often makes me sad to think that one day, some of these animals will inevitably be reduced to just that, a sketch.
@Bruno Caruso nature has never had harmony, it’s all about survival of the fittest
@@eertikrux666 Yes and no. I think by harmony Bruno meant the balance that an ecosystem or nature in general upholds by itself. See, before us, nature has had the tendency to eventually restore balance when something got too far ahead. These cycles of balance are what kept any species of creatures from becoming absolutely dominant of everything around them.
Lions, for example, could become the top of their food chain but at the end of the day they were kept in check by the amount of food they had, by disease or disasters, by each other or by other animals.
However, when humans came along we developed the ability to work together and make massive, sweeping changes to the world around us to benefit us or developed technology to surpass the negative effects of nature. We were no longer had to worry about food and resourcs, we could make farms or travel to distant places in search of them. We no longer had to worry about disease or disaster, we can make medicine and take preventative measures other creatures can't. We no longer have to worry about other humans killing us, we have laws and protect one another. We no longer have to worry about other animals killing us, because if they try to, we have the numbers and technology that they don't stand a chance. We could wipe out their population, or destroy their habitats and drive them out, or build walls to keep the out.
Humans aren't the top of their food chain. They are the top of the whole world and rule over everything. The power we collectively hold over animals is incompareable. They are basically at our mercy, and if you think that is somehow balanced or about survival, you are wrong.
Nature is out of balance, it's lost harmony because of us.
@@ExploreImagineDefineCreate I do agree, yet I still think there should be some way to subdue human development. Right now, the only way I can think of is as if huge meteors hit major cities. Chances are slim, but it may reduce to zero if we remain long enough to come up with prevention or protection from meteors
@@eertikrux666 Also agree with you. The only way to save the planet at this point is by forcibly stopping and destroying human development and the infrastructure that is damaging our planet.
@@eertikrux666 "the only way to subdue human development is genocide" dw bro, i got u the translation u wanted.
With pelts like those, they're probably one of the easiest animals that you could pretend to be using the old "two men in an animal costume" trick.
But you'd feel awful for the one in front. They'll be brain damaged immediately.
@@salaltschul3604 I dunno the alternative is getting your head jammed up some guy's butt repeatedly as you together gallop toward another two-men-in-animal-costume and clash in a valiant battle.
They did
Not even lying if you use the pelt you can get close
Could you do a video on yaks? Like the ones in the Himalayas that carry loads for Sherpa and mountaineers? The fact that they tolerate high altitudes and such heavy loads is fascinating!
Danielle's job must be wonderful. Not only she got to be able to see this wonderful animals as well as their beautiful natural environment.
One of my bucket list items is to go north to Nunavut, NWT, and Yukon.. I live in NFLD and we have pretty cool wildlife here and subspecies such as NFLD Blackbear.. But Muskox are so cool, as well as Bison ! One day 🤞
Could you do a video on Japanese macaques that like to hang out in hot springs?
Animalogic: Not sponsored by Axe Body Spray
The brand is called Lynx here. More appropriate for the channel.
I've always loved musk oxen. Like the coelacanth and tuatara, they're remnants of Earth's distant past (in this case, the Ice Age). Hell, they LOOK like something leftover from the Ice Age! Truly incredible and magnificent creatures.
The coelacanth is probably one of the first hard to remember name that just stuck to me immediately when I was little, even the spelling and pronunciation cause of how ancient it looks to me then.
hi! what's a tuatara? :)
@@lalla4407 it’s that lizard looking thing but isn’t actually a lizard but a thing of its own, iirc. It’s a sole survivor of its kind.
@@lalla4407 Native to New Zealand
Quite opposite - the muskox is only 200000 years old, so it's younger than homo sapiens.
Sweet. Perfect way to describe the... ancient warriors is right on the nose!
Or, in this case, on the forehead!
love the effort, the educational value and the passion for animals and film 💛
YESS I've been requesting muskox from day one and its finally here!
That battle cry was awesome lol
Yay! You seemed to have taken my suggestions of going to the Arctic to create new episodes (something that I have been doing for over a year). Awesome.
You are Canadians, and you have this mysterious, exotic, overlooked, expansive Territories that have abundant animals & plants for really, solid great episodes ---- so thank you for hearing me out --- but it is very possible you would be making these episodes anyway even without my persistent commentary.
Looking forward to your going out to Nunavut to film a narwhal episode. That will be magical.
I really do hope you keep playing with the Arctic because there are so many episodes you can pull from with this wonderful playground from animals, birds, sea life, plants, and natural phenomena (aurora borealis).
Great job as usual, Danielle. I loved the presentation and your illustrations too. 🙂🙌🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Love your channel Animalogic . So refreshing . The more awareness there is about the earth, nature and animals the better. Thanks!
I lost it at "It's the ungulate equivalent of Axe body spray" 🤣🤣🤣
I would love to see a piece done on felis silvestris lybica. I'd like to see how our housecats' cousins are doing in the wild.
Glad to hear of an animal so successfully re-introduced into region in which they previously died out. Gives me hope that other animals can be restored if humans ever get their act together.
“They’re neither musky or Oxin”
Ah yes, the Holy Roman Empire of the animal world
😂😂
Or Socialist Worker Party (which tends to be none of the three)
@@thursoberwick1948 is that a reference to the Spanish PSOE?
@@elpito9326 The British one. They don't stand in elections, they infiltrate other parties, and are mostly made up of students rather than actual workers. So neither socialist nor workers nor a party.
I think we need to talk about your illustrations, how you learned, why you have such a passion and how you became so amazing at illustrations...def worth an episode!
-Tim Rotter.
i would totally love a video on the civet!! the sub species are all really interesting and the asian palm civet is subject to a lot of abuse in the coffee industry :( theyre really cool animals and deserve more attention!
When I heard the Muskox battlecry... I felt overwhelmed. Such beauty.
She’s such a talented presenter, I love her commentary and specifically the battle cry! Dedicated viewer!
Yes, I do hope they continue to thrive for generations to come. But I hope I'll never again hear that cracking sound of their head-butting contests.. literally made my body shudder with each thwack!
Watching you (Danielle Default) after a long time..
Always get information about some unknown creature ( that I don't know) exsist on earth 🌍..
Lovely..
Fealing Nostalgic...
They look so cartoonishly cool
My comfort channel! So much to learn here! Love the animal kingdom, and Animalogic! 🌱❤️
That thumbnail gave me nightmares omg
They run so cute, and the fact that they are on the small side makes them even cuter.
Just noticed you guys have a huge following of over 1.5 million. Awesome! Good for your, and great for what you do! I hope you can get 30 million or more.
That battlecry is super effective.
This is one of my favourite episodes you have done!
Can you talk about the Yakutian Horse? It’s a domestic animal but can be used as an ecological proxy of extinct Pleistocene horses!
Why are all the most informative channels be so underrated and have only Till a million subs dude litrally I didn't have to study for my finals just by watching the plant related videos from this great channel
Apparently they taste more like lamb (or possibly mutton) than beef like you'd expect because they're more closely related to sheep than cows.
I haven't eaten them personally, it was on a short series done by Prof Richard Fortey, one of Sir David Attenborough's pals (a paleontologist and world expert on trilobites. The two together are like an old comedy duo lol). I remember the weirdest facts 🤣. He's done a few series about animals of different origins/times, talking about their history and evolution, and then eats some of the animals that are available as food. The musk ox he ate was in Norway, IIRC, from a managed group. He wasn't impressed by sea cucumbers (found in coastal China or Hong Kong I believe), and as he's a guy who'll eat pretty much anything, I think that's a good recommendation to avoid them 😄.
Absolutely great, I love this channel. Thank you.
The muskox is one of my favorite animals!
Damn, Danielle just dunked hard on Axe.
Amazing creatures, thank you for providing your usual high quality content.🖤🇨🇦
Something thought some might find interesting. As a entomologist in south florida I used a chemical derived from musk ox breath as a concentrate to attract mosquitoes to traps, it was called Octenol. I don't remember it being a horrible odor? but it has been years.
Your artwork is amazing!
Now I think I have small idea how a woolly mammoth's fur looks like.
U are by far my favorite host on this channel. I guess it's cause I got used to seeing u here. Love ur channel!❤️
Danielle, your drawings are amazing! The is a CZcams channel Drawfee. They do a drawing challenge card the bone game where they draw creatures based on their skulls. That might be a fun time if you guest host and bring some unique skulls for inspiration.
Incredible ice age animal.
Loved the episode!
"90s heartthrob" She got jokes 🤣🤣🤣
Your commentary on this video made me smile. Thanks for sharing! ❤
Love your presentation!
Great video! Love the mighty muskoxen!
leeetzz gooo. More of these videos, I absolutely love the muskox
Informative!!! Thanks Danielle
"Musk-ox-you a question" XD
Love you, Danielle!
Wow!! Great footage!!
What about the bearded vulture? Or the grasshopper mouse! I've really enjoyed your content!
Thanks for making a video of these beauties^^
I was playing a game of Rimworld recently and tamed a pair of musk ok. Then summer came and they started dying of heatstroke. I had to air condition the barn.
Classic. Heatwave in summer and next thing you know your poor tribals and their livestock are melty puddles
The most reliable food source in RimWorld is nutrient paste made out of raiders.
It all goes the Soylent Green way after a while.
I wasn’t even tribal and there wasn’t a heat wave. I just didn’t expect any animal to not be fine in an environment that never got above 30 C. They were at 79% heatstroke when I randomly looked at the animal tab and saw the red lines.
Our local zoo has some (part of a conservation breeding program) and they stay outside most of the time. They do shed quite a bit during the spring. I wonder what extra measures they take to keep them cool. Summers here average high 70s-80s F (20s C) and very rarely reach 100F (30+C).
I've never heard of one dying of heat stroke there, though I imagine it's possible same as any other animal.
Edit: Found a social media post indicating the zoo uses a combination of pools, sprinklers and access to the indoors when it gets hot.
*RESPECT for using a proper scientific measurement system.*
You and the team are amazing 👍
Another great video. Great job Animalogic
Fantastic shots!🏵
This is my favorite CZcams channel
Enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up as a support
I don't have many irrational fears but one is finding myself in the middle of the arctic tundra and seeing an angry muskox charging at me at 35mph... 😖
remember, they are actually very small
@@user-ur2po3vp2u but still very fast and strong with blunt force and stabby weapons
@@user-ur2po3vp2u
Having seen one in person, very small is relative. They're give or take about the size of a minivan.
@@user-ur2po3vp2u
360 max
Say a male maybe 300 approx
But still
I don’t know why, but I just love Muskoxen, they’re such a beautiful animal
Very neat. Thank you.
Do more animals on the tundra
Agreed muskoxes have very nice fur, i like other ice age animals like wild horses and mammoths too.
6:39 love the voiceover
That battle cry is hilarious 😅😅 @Animalogic awesome video
Danielle , I love your drawings !!!
That shade at musk was perfect
Here's a complete list of my requests of animals for Animalogic to cover: Warthogs, Meerkats, Ostriches, Naked Mole Rats, Hummingbirds, Toucans, Proboscis Monkeys, Pelicans and Ligers.
But even more than any of them, I think there would be a huge demand among your million-and-a-half-plus subcribers to see a book compiling Danielle Dufault's illustrations from the episodes. She is a great personality and a great artist and I think her work should be out there in print. Barring that, how about an episode just devoted to her sketches so far on the show?
YAY!!! Danielle, mittens!!! Gloves are terribel for that kind of weather. Muskox are a fantastic mammal. THANKS mS dANIELLE
Back this summer I had the pleasure of visiting the largest musk ox farm in the world located in Palmer Alaska. Interesting little place
Pikas next please?
Please do an episode of the euopean bison, the visent
What a cool creature
I was like "hey this is a pretty damn good video, I didnt know this animal" and then dylan called elon musk a little *beep* and it instantly became the best animalogic video LOL
*Two 750 lb animals clashing at full speed*
The sound: tap
Dani is the best. Love your commentary.
These videos are like sitting in a kindergarten class under a teacher that spends too much time at poetry slams.
What a strange looking animal. I’m glad their populations are rebounding. White Wolves are also fascinating. The landscape looks like mars, and these animals thrive off it and each other.
I really like this concept
I looooved the blooper ending.
I was today years old when I discovered that musk ox are not, in fact, fancily named yaks, and are, in fact, *goaties*. Lord.
Danielle dragging Axe body spray make me chuckle. 🤣
Musk ox wool is so nice, my hat was like warm where wind hits me :-)
The ending was priceless 🤣
I love Danielle so much
You’re living my dream up there
I was looking, and you haven't done any monkeys yet! None at all! I'd love to see my personal favorites spider monkeys, gibbons (though I know those aren't actually monkeys), or lesser known ones like tamarins and marmosets.
Dope video about musox
@2:46 Single handed casually destroying AXE's a million dollar marketing campaign
Muskox deserves to be in the Avatar series or a Pokémon in the game.