The Real Story Of The Dodo Bird's (Current) Extinction

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 3. 04. 2023
  • Check out Women of the Earth! • Can This Shepherdess a...
    What’s the real story of the dodo? How did such a unique bird even evolve in the first place? And are we really responsible for its extinction?
    *****
    PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to to.pbs.org/DonateEons
    *****
    Produced by Complexly for PBS Digital Studios
    Super special thanks to the following Patreon patrons for helping make Eons possible:
    Syrupeclipse, Melanie Truscott, Michael Roy, John H. Austin, Jr., Kate Huhmann, Alex Hackman, Amanda Ward, Stephen Patterson, Karen Farrell, Trevor Long, daniel blankstein, Roberto Adrian Ramirez Flores, Jason Rostoker, Jonathan Rust, Mary Tevington, Bart & Elke van Iersel - De Jong, William Craig II, Irene Wood, Derek Helling, WilCatRhClPPh33, Mark Talbott-Williams, Nomi Alchin, Duane Westhoff, Hillary Ryde-Collins, Yu Mei, Jayme Coyle, Albert Folsom, Oscar Amoros Huguet, Patrick Wells, Dan Caffee, Stephanie Tan, Nick Ryhajlo, Sean Dennis.
    If you'd like to support the channel, head over to / eons and pledge for some cool rewards!
    Want to follow Eons elsewhere on the internet?
    Facebook - / eonsshow
    Twitter - / eonsshow
    Instagram - / eonsshow
    References:
    docs.google.com/document/d/1v...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @2000sborton
    @2000sborton Před rokem +4146

    Another little known fact about the Dodo was that an economically important tree on Mauritius was totally dependent upon the dodo. When it was realized that there was no new growth of this tree, for a few hundred years, a European scientist was dispatched to Mauritius to figure out how to get the trees fruit to germinate. He eventually had some turkeys brought to the island and fed them the fruit of the tree. Voila, after the seeds were excreted by the turkeys they started the germination process. It turns out that the trees relied upon the Dodos digesting the seeds to prepare its tough outer husk for germination. A classic example of how one species going extinct causes other species to also go extinct.

    • @charlesjmouse
      @charlesjmouse Před rokem +144

      Most interesting, thank you.

    • @talonflame_brawlstars.7208
      @talonflame_brawlstars.7208 Před rokem +145

      I remember reading a paper on this! I’m surprised no videos I am aware of have covered this interesting fact. Thank you for bringing it up.

    • @roaklarson9699
      @roaklarson9699 Před rokem +38

      Wow! That's so cool! Thank you for the fact

    • @rodchallis8031
      @rodchallis8031 Před rokem +63

      A very similar story here in North America with the near extinction of the Osage Orange Tree. It's an interesting story I'll leave you to discover yourself.

    • @zakunick1
      @zakunick1 Před rokem

      @@rodchallis8031Tease.

  • @johnnyli4702
    @johnnyli4702 Před rokem +1034

    Volkert Evertsz: "We drove them together into one place in such a manner that we could catch them with our hands, and when we held one of them by its leg, and that upon this it made a great noise, the others all on a sudden came running as fast as they could to its assistance, and by which they were caught and made prisoners also."
    Sounds like another (but harder to prove) trait of the Dodo not mentioned in the video is their social cohesion. This likely also helped them survive as long as they did. Unfortunately, all we can go with for behavioral traits is accounts like these.

    • @kyrab7914
      @kyrab7914 Před rokem +151

      Honestly, on an island with no big predators, that could've really made them well adapted to actually bully the other animals lol

    • @helenanilsson5666
      @helenanilsson5666 Před rokem +94

      It's amazing that someone could write that account and then not follow with "I wonder if we might be evil".

    • @seregiel9541
      @seregiel9541 Před rokem +83

      ​@@helenanilsson5666 If you're a sailor in that Era, you eat what you get and don't question it because you don't know when you're next fresh food is. If extinction wasn't a concept, then filling the pantry in whatever method possible over ruled fairness. Today? Yeah, evil. We have context and recognize animal pain/thinking is closer to ours.

    • @owenstevens7151
      @owenstevens7151 Před rokem +43

      @@helenanilsson5666 LMAO. I could describe modern cattle farming like this. "We drove the bovines across the plains so they might succor upon the fresh grass of the plateaus. We kept the herds prisoner and systematically bred them as they waited to be consumed. When our stores became low we brought a weapon to the herd and shot a great many of them with bullets through their heads. We systematically exterminated all the males, all of them save the hardiest and fullest of the bulls. He was left with the heifers to repopulate our prisoners."
      Sounds evil doesn't it. So why do we do it? its 2023 and we have the knowledge, awareness, and ability not to (unlike many people in the past) yet we do it. I wouldn't call it amazing. I think it's just human nature.

    • @incanusolorin2607
      @incanusolorin2607 Před rokem +2

      ​@@helenanilsson5666 don't you eat meat?

  • @popnostalgia9006
    @popnostalgia9006 Před rokem +91

    The dodo gets all the press, but there were also two nearby islands with similar birds that also went extinct: the Reunion solitaire and the Rodriguez solitaire. There were several other birds to disappear from these islands as well as from Mauritius. How sad they are not remembered.

    • @matthew1995king
      @matthew1995king Před měsícem +1

      Favoritism? Perhaps more studying went into the extinct dodos?

    • @neofils
      @neofils Před 11 dny

      their is no proof on a solitaire in Reunion Island. But it was probably an ibis

  • @yukeenakamura1398
    @yukeenakamura1398 Před rokem +1352

    As a bird lover it always breaks my heart to hear about the dodos. It would have been a truly unique and marvelous bird to see.

    • @KristineLevineComedy
      @KristineLevineComedy Před rokem +42

      I hope I’m still alive to see one in real life. Stuff like this makes me way too happy.

    • @tsmspace
      @tsmspace Před rokem +49

      @@KristineLevineComedy It won't be the same. but, maybe it will be close enough to be worth it.

    • @Cypresssina
      @Cypresssina Před rokem +30

      I hope we get to make it up to the Great Auk if we're bringing back birds.

    • @DanteTorn
      @DanteTorn Před rokem +16

      I honestly could care less about flighted birds, but I've always had a love for ground birds. It bothers me that most ground birds have died off at some point in human history, whether recent or prehistoric.

    • @unclefista
      @unclefista Před rokem +16

      Every species is unique...

  • @jameslee1145
    @jameslee1145 Před rokem +874

    This is one of the few times I've seen de-extinction being reported in a positive way

    • @Ezullof
      @Ezullof Před rokem +187

      It's not the first time they talk about de-extinction in that way on this channel. And honestly it's one of the very few times where it could actually make sense. Dodos still have their ecological niche to fill.
      De-extinction is extremely counter-productive when long gone animals such as mammoths are mentioned. We're living in a different environment where they'd have to compete with living species.
      In many cases, de-extinction is the equivalent of geoengineering. It would likely cause more harm than anything, and it diverts ressources that could be used for preservation. And that's why it's still not a good idea to make dodo re-appear. But at least it's not a completely bad idea.

    • @elainebelzDetroit
      @elainebelzDetroit Před rokem +7

      I wish they'd said more about it. Like, how?

    • @theunholyadventurer2376
      @theunholyadventurer2376 Před rokem +110

      @@Ezullof De-extinction should be for animals that are more recent, such as the Thylaciene and Dodos.

    • @pharoahcaraboo9610
      @pharoahcaraboo9610 Před rokem +95

      de-extinction for recently extinct animals and not something like, say, a dinosaur or animals from the plioscene, is generally more positively regarded. the recently extinct still have an ecological niche

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 Před rokem +3

      @@Ezullof ​ De extinction of the passenger pigeon would have a devastating effect on our agricultural system.

  • @theblakeslees7065
    @theblakeslees7065 Před rokem +670

    If you guys haven’t yet, could you do a video about why pigs seem so well adapted for everywhere

    • @pablolongobardi7240
      @pablolongobardi7240 Před rokem +183

      Generalist species usually are. Same as rats and pigeons, if they are willing to eat anything and give birth by big bunches, they are good to go

    • @adrianfichter1372
      @adrianfichter1372 Před rokem +22

      Generalists are pretty good

    • @UnshavenStatue
      @UnshavenStatue Před rokem +6

      my default assumption is blabla mammal brain blabla mammal fur blabla

    • @astick5249
      @astick5249 Před rokem +49

      @@UnshavenStatue I think its more that they can simply just eat anything at all

    • @davidnotonstinnett
      @davidnotonstinnett Před rokem +40

      They can and will eat anything and have enough bulk and fight that most predators don’t want to mess with them.
      They are like dogs but better.

  • @VioletWhirlwind
    @VioletWhirlwind Před rokem +162

    In addition to rats and pigs, I read that humans introduced monkeys as well, which also ate the Dodo eggs. Also, I read that they weren't normally as fat as they're often portrayed, because the paintings were based off of a captive dodo that was massively overfed.

  • @AceSpadeThePikachu
    @AceSpadeThePikachu Před rokem +24

    **20 years from now**
    "Welcome...to Dodo Park!"
    *"They're moving in herds...they DO move in herds..."*

  • @wrenleader4409
    @wrenleader4409 Před rokem +419

    I would love to hear about the geological and ecological history of the Indian peninsula/sub-continent. Like what creatures lived on it when it was it's own sub-continent.

    • @adnannaemaz1989
      @adnannaemaz1989 Před rokem +51

      This. Especially when you consider india was a floating island for a very long time after splitting up with Africa.

    • @mezzmer5561
      @mezzmer5561 Před rokem +27

      AFAIK Indian subcontinent has amongst the worst fossil preservation record. There's really never been any significant discovery of from the subcontinent except for few cases here & there. This is especially sad considering that after modern day Africa, only India has the most diverse/complete megafauna alive.

    • @adnannaemaz1989
      @adnannaemaz1989 Před rokem

      @@mezzmer5561 wow didn’t realise this. You gotta source I would love to read up on this.
      Wonder what the reason is?

    • @mezzmer5561
      @mezzmer5561 Před rokem +7

      @@adnannaemaz1989 Something to do with extremely poor natural conditions to support fossilization. It is very amusing & sad all at the same time. Someone can correct me if I am wrong -- we have never discovered a single fossil specimen of ancient human or any of its relative from India. Imagine not one!

    • @charlesjmouse
      @charlesjmouse Před rokem +6

      Me too. Although I believe India regrettably has a very poor fossil record, much of it having been obliterated by the Deccan traps and other events.
      Still, I'd very much like to be wrong and learn more about what should be a fascinating 'Ark' of flora and fauna.

  • @kiarrasayshi
    @kiarrasayshi Před rokem +179

    All this time, I didn't know the dodo was only on one island. I don't remember when I first learned about them, but they seem pretty pervasive in popular knowledge. Strange when they were only around humans for about 60 years in one small place. Glad for the chance to learn more!

    • @jaybe9627
      @jaybe9627 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, it’s crazy cause so many islands have specific unique evolutions of animals simply because of how evolution works. I’d recommend Casual Geographic’s videos on island evolution.

    • @patricamariposa3756
      @patricamariposa3756 Před rokem

      I truly dislike when people say "humans"
      Only one group of people have a track record destroying people, places, animals and land.
      Stop bringing All humanity into the bull of one set of destructive hybrids.😔

    • @patricamariposa3756
      @patricamariposa3756 Před rokem

      @@teramalik7260 Check where these sick inventions come from.
      Only one group of people keep coming up.
      Check who owns these companies, only one group of people keep coming up.
      Check the ones lobbying for the corrupt companies, only one group of people keep coming up.
      ONE GROUP OF PEOPLE,
      Not humans, NOT HUMANITY,
      JUST ONE GROUP OF PEOPLE.
      Yall made yall mess by yall self, now accept responsibility by yall self.
      Stop bringing everyone else into yall Bull 💩

    • @IWantToStayAtYourHouse
      @IWantToStayAtYourHouse Před rokem +2

      All this time i thought dodo lived in new zealand im so stupid hha

    • @ohrats731
      @ohrats731 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yeah I had no idea either! People talked about them like they lived all over Europe 🤦 Well, now I know lol. Fascinating! I feel like they really did become well ingrained in our social conscious for such a sort-lived and niche human experience

  • @AskMia411
    @AskMia411 Před rokem +102

    The evolution of elephants is something I’d love to see covered! Like what on earth drove the evolution of their trunks??? And there are so many weird extinct elephants!!!

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před rokem +7

      And there is a mouse sized ancestor with a prehensile nose… (the Somali Sengi).

  • @FlushGorgon
    @FlushGorgon Před 10 měsíci +9

    Its cousin and neighbour form a nearby island, the Rodrigues solitaire, which suffered the same fate for the same reasons, does look closer to pigeons in its physical descriptions.

  • @GhazMazMSM
    @GhazMazMSM Před rokem +186

    I really hope they bring it back someday.

    • @stevenelbert8989
      @stevenelbert8989 Před rokem +27

      If and when the dodo 🦤 is brought back from extinction they will need to remove the invasive species on Mauritius 🇲🇺 such as rats 🐀 mongoses pigs 🐖 and crab eating macaques to prevent them from causing their second extinction

    • @worldofmonterra
      @worldofmonterra Před rokem +33

      As much I would like that, we should focus saving animals that are endangered. We can use genetic technology to help safe current living species that on the brink of extinction like rhinos, pangolins, and tigers

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Před rokem +6

      Yup,along with the mammoth & thylacine.

    • @Riftrender
      @Riftrender Před rokem +1

      @@shaider1982 Lets not tempt God.

    • @bazpearce9993
      @bazpearce9993 Před rokem

      @@Riftrender Shut up.

  • @Binarokaro
    @Binarokaro Před rokem +398

    I think that even if the dodos were brought back in today's world, they're going to be met with the same challenges they did back then: pigs and rats eating their eggs. So unless they're adapted to handle egg-eating mammals, either through new brooding or nesting behaviours or through aggressive adaptations, I think it's unlikely that they'll remain de-extinct for long

    • @coolbeanzbeef
      @coolbeanzbeef Před rokem +32

      Similar to what they're doing with the mammoth, the "Dodo" we bring back wouldn't be a true Dodo, but likely a hybrid with a pigeon or dove for a mother. That being said, the DNA could possibly be engineered with the trait of laying more eggs at a time, or laying eggs more often. All speculation on my part.

    • @AirLancer
      @AirLancer Před rokem +82

      Well it's not like they'd make a few and release them them into the wild hoping for the best. Doubtless that they'd be bred solely in captivity for quite a while.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Před rokem +24

      I doubt they'd even act like dodos because they'd have to be raised by ordinary pigeons.

    • @Zerzayar
      @Zerzayar Před rokem +38

      Just mix their genome with that of the cassowary and they'll be good. #revengeofthedodo 😉

    • @diceman199
      @diceman199 Před rokem +19

      @@jeffreygao3956 They would have to be raised by something closer in behaviour than pidgeons. Turkeys maybe?

  • @RoyNeeraye
    @RoyNeeraye Před rokem +46

    I'm from Mauritius and really glad that Eons decided to shed more light on this emblematic bird which, despite popular assumptions, is really a matter of pride to us 🇲🇺 🦤

  • @argenieuwenhuijzen2557
    @argenieuwenhuijzen2557 Před rokem +33

    One of the Dutch names for the Dodo was ‘Walgvogel’ (Disgusting Bird) because their meat seamed to have been tough and horrible.

    • @punishedwaluigi3518
      @punishedwaluigi3518 Před rokem +11

      “wow this bird tastes horrible, better keep eating it”

    • @RogerioPereiradaSilva77
      @RogerioPereiradaSilva77 Před rokem +14

      @@punishedwaluigi3518 Well, sometimes you got to work with what you have. If the choice is between starving to death or eating a horrible tasting but possibly nutritious meal, do you really have a choice to make at all?

    • @WolfanTerror
      @WolfanTerror Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@punishedwaluigi3518would you rather starve to death?

    • @MM-ry4hi
      @MM-ry4hi Před 2 měsíci +1

      typical colonizer mindset. It is horrible, disgusting, but they still want it. They dehumanize it so that they don't feel bad later.

  • @octipuscrime
    @octipuscrime Před rokem +789

    They seemed like the perfect birds to tame. But history had its own course and time line. 😢

    • @DBT1007
      @DBT1007 Před rokem +150

      another destruction by european in the mission of gold, glory, and gospel

    • @dundee6402
      @dundee6402 Před rokem +34

      Just have chickens brah

    • @whittenaw
      @whittenaw Před rokem +41

      Just like pigeons but we hate them for some reason 😢

    • @neshirst-ashuach1881
      @neshirst-ashuach1881 Před rokem +51

      The video literally says Europeans were not directly responsible for killing the Dodo.
      Unless you mean because we introduced pigs and rats to the island, but that wasn't really predictable to the sailors.

    • @KOurboi
      @KOurboi Před rokem +13

      @@dundee6402 it’s not the same😭😢

  • @elliottcoleman8225
    @elliottcoleman8225 Před rokem +36

    Dodos look so bizzare and interesting that it's hard for me to believe they were once real animals. This is one of the few de-extinction candidates that I actually look forward to, if it ever happens. Especially because it's an island species, the dodo could be an interesting and contained study on de-extinction if we ever need to implement it

  • @arimarianne7528
    @arimarianne7528 Před 11 měsíci +11

    This is a similar story to what happened to the Goliath bird. The bird themselves were huge and formidable, so humans probably wouldn’t have wanted to mess with them due to the danger. But their huge eggs were a much easier target for people to steal.

  • @The_Predatorkiller
    @The_Predatorkiller Před rokem +11

    Finally your channel mentioned the Dodo bird! As a Mauritian, I proud of my national bird.

  • @wjenerou
    @wjenerou Před rokem +89

    my ancestor was named Willem bontekoe. he drew the dodo in his journal and it was later adapted into the famous stort of “the cabin boys of Willem Bontekoe” took place in the 1600s. this story inspired the east indian trading company which lead to more dutch travelers to the island.

    • @wjenerou
      @wjenerou Před rokem +4

      my name is william charles-bontekoe jenerou

    • @thomassutherland2647
      @thomassutherland2647 Před rokem +1

      @@wjenerou You should write an autobiography of Yourself, and Your family tree! Mine had Vikings, Noblemen, Slaves, Business Leaders, and Soldiers. Yours sound Awesome!! Explorers, and Writers. "Let not others hasten You towards a foolish path to follow in the footsteps of their own demise. Seek Your own True Path, for We All have a chance to govern Our own destinies!" I'm always writing random things like that.

    • @wjenerou
      @wjenerou Před rokem +22

      @@thomassutherland2647 more like a fun fact that was relevant to the topic. i’m not necessarily thrilled of the connection to colonialism in the east. not my bag ya know

    • @mezzmer5561
      @mezzmer5561 Před rokem +2

      @@wjenerou one should never judge history from the lens of 21st century morality, our ancestral past can be a fascinating tale as is, shouldn't let Wokeness spoil the fun. Anyway thanks for sharing.

    • @wjenerou
      @wjenerou Před rokem +10

      @@mezzmer5561 not wokeness just like “hey if anyone’s going to throw any curses on a name just make sure it’s not me” i’m like struggling enough with out it haha

  • @lmagoddess
    @lmagoddess Před rokem +35

    My first thought, when it was stated that more bones had been found, was that someone is going to try to bring it back.

  • @KSL042
    @KSL042 Před rokem +20

    It’s always a better day when eons posts !!!!!!!! Y’all make my day every time

  • @kennethrijsdijk880
    @kennethrijsdijk880 Před rokem +5

    Well done PBS, nice to our work staged here and presented in a didactic great and appealing way! The dodo and it’s ecosystem represents an amazing study system to understand insular species evolution. We are currently working on some more novel insights on the dodo, we will keep you posted ;-) Warm regards dr Kenneth Rijsdijk

  • @danilodesouza6461
    @danilodesouza6461 Před rokem +21

    I imagine the portuguese word you mentioned is probably “Doido”. Today it has much lighter conotation that it used to have

  • @SnowDeerling
    @SnowDeerling Před rokem +9

    So sad what happened to the dodo. There’s a great book about mermaids that rescue extinct animals- the first one being the dodo. It’s called The Creatures of Legacy Isle.

  • @Frank-oz8be
    @Frank-oz8be Před rokem +6

    Nothing breaks my heart more than extinction

  • @johnnyli4702
    @johnnyli4702 Před rokem +16

    In terms of de-extinction, I can understand how we could bring them back to their habitat after removing all the pigs. But how the Dodo are we going to extract all the rats?

    • @Ezullof
      @Ezullof Před rokem

      And that's the second major issue with de-extinction: either we keep such species in zoos and they become very expansive "meat toys" for our own hypocrite pleasure, or we have to spend so much ressources to re-introduce them in their environment that it feels very hypocritical to not devote such ressources to species that still live.
      If mad scientists manage to convince the public that we should de-extinct dead species, we might end up with deeply deranged and unstable ecosystems everywhere.

    • @highlyvurgultis3706
      @highlyvurgultis3706 Před rokem +6

      Rat eradication has been achieved on small islands before so it's possible on Mauritius
      I'm sure people would like rat removal too lol

  • @arnoldschpeiker7887
    @arnoldschpeiker7887 Před rokem +31

    A topic that would be interesting would be the repeated occurrence of saber-toothed predators within synapsids (mammalian and non-mammalian) along with how the saber-teeth are not all designed the same (especially with Thylacosmilus).

  • @arvindj1504
    @arvindj1504 Před rokem +5

    As a Mauritian, I remember learning most of the points in the video in Primary school, aged 10. I feel the video is trying to portray these as recent discoveries.
    The video is great though, accurate and concise.
    Just want to point out that the ideas seem to be known from at least the 80's.

    • @JubioHDX
      @JubioHDX Před rokem +5

      the ideas were known since the 80s, but many still argued against many of them until recently. This video uses the most recent studies and data because that is the most conclusive and INCLUSIVE of all the data gathered before. If you have a source from 1980 and a source from 2005 that confirms the 1980 hypothesis, you should share the 2005 one.

    • @gothicgirlfriend7375
      @gothicgirlfriend7375 Před rokem +1

      Nice way to give people some credit while keeping your superiority in check. Lol

    • @gothicgirlfriend7375
      @gothicgirlfriend7375 Před rokem +3

      ​@Jub don't even bother with people like this. They are always looking for ways to sound smarter than everyone. You're really nice though

  • @thierryploum5923
    @thierryploum5923 Před rokem +50

    That was an interesting episode. Could you do a series on other very very recently extinct animals? We are so used to them just being gone that we don't even look at them, perhaps passing over unique features we are not even aware of in favour of of what we think we know, as you were also demonstrating with the dodo, so a visit might bring these out. The auroch comes to mind; the Australian Thylacine. Wasn't the passenger pigeon unusual or special, too?. Eons' take on this is bound to be interesting.

  • @roberthill3811
    @roberthill3811 Před rokem +34

    I've always wanted an Eons miniseries about the evolution of the different senses. How and when and how many times did eyes evolve? Etc.

    • @thomassutherland2647
      @thomassutherland2647 Před rokem +2

      Our eyes have changed 3 major times. Our ears One major time. Touch is a variable. Smell, and Taste are hard to pinpoint, as it is an even greater variable than Touch, but for Both in large groups of people, maybe 3-4 times. I can taste what others can't even smell, can drop my heartbeat to almost Zero to stay underwater, survived being stabbed, shot, impaled, etc. Then again so have many others. We tend to save others, since We don't die that easily.

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před rokem +1

      Eyes, at least complex eyes have evolved many times. I'm not so familiar with the origin of eye spots and the like.

    • @astick5249
      @astick5249 Před rokem +2

      @@thomassutherland2647 I can barely smell anything, yet my sense of taste seems to be fine.

    • @thomassutherland2647
      @thomassutherland2647 Před rokem +1

      @@astick5249 Hmm.. I'm no doctor, but maybe seeing one might help. Not sure what / if things can done. In Trek, one character had no sense of taste, but could notice the texture of the food He ate.

    • @astick5249
      @astick5249 Před rokem

      @@thomassutherland2647 Its not, like missing, for example if i put my nose next to an air freshener i can smell that, and i seem to be perfectly fine at smelling campfires in general

  • @hi5dude2
    @hi5dude2 Před rokem +19

    Excuse me, but I watched ALL of the Ice Age movies, so I think I am an expert on dodos thank you very much!

    • @pollytiks3885
      @pollytiks3885 Před rokem

      😂😂😂😂😂 Me too!!!

    • @yukeenakamura1398
      @yukeenakamura1398 Před rokem

      But they only appeared in the first one

    • @LeoDomitrix
      @LeoDomitrix Před rokem +1

      I went to the first movie's "Tae Kwon Do-Do" scene the minute I saw this video title...

  • @adpirtle
    @adpirtle Před rokem +15

    The Dodo shall live again!

  • @jonathanroberts-bj7yl
    @jonathanroberts-bj7yl Před 2 měsíci +3

    The Dodo looks more like a Dino than pigeons.

  • @AwsmChimera
    @AwsmChimera Před rokem +12

    I comment to boost the video's stats for the CZcams algorithm and to let y'all know I enjoy this channel and how it does me an educate, yes.

  • @monticore1626
    @monticore1626 Před rokem +4

    5:09 that is an emu, it lives in Australia, it evolved in an environment very full of predators and it is more than capable of holding its own

  • @falcoperegrinus82
    @falcoperegrinus82 Před rokem +9

    A spin off on this could be a video on the island biogeography of Pigeons. As a group, the Columbiforms have some amazing flight and navigation abilities and are thus able to island hop even over hundreds of miles of open ocean. Dozens of really cool pigeon species have evolved to do this. The Nicobar Pigeon at 4:40 is just one example.

  • @Theonetrueerenyeager
    @Theonetrueerenyeager Před rokem +12

    I hope you make an episode about the Takahe too.

  • @Teryn180
    @Teryn180 Před rokem +11

    I wonder if de-extinction of a bird (with external embryo development) is easier than a mammal (with internal development)

  • @AnimealPlanet
    @AnimealPlanet Před rokem +48

    I have seen this during my Elementary years. I remember the feeling when I read how humans basically wiped them out after a short time they visited the island. So sad and indignant I am.🙂

  • @abbycole7485
    @abbycole7485 Před rokem +6

    It makes me think of kiwi birds. Arguably they’re similar in a lot of ways: they lay one egg, and as ground dwelling birds adapted to an environment with no predators.
    Also, isn’t there a species of bird, I think it’s a sea shore bird that went extinct once, then the same ancestor that happened to still live, migrated there again and that extinct species re-evolved??

  • @ulba98
    @ulba98 Před rokem +34

    I would be interested in learning more about how Polar Bears diversified from brown bears in Alaska. Love the show!

  • @wrenleader4409
    @wrenleader4409 Před rokem +5

    Also, having updates on some of the early Eons episodes would be cool!

  • @jakobraahauge7299
    @jakobraahauge7299 Před rokem +30

    I'd love an update on Dunkleosteus - now that it has shrunk. But please wait until there's some cool artwork to make comparisons by 😅 I think it would be a nice topic to discuss scientific evaluations - and a really cool case! 😄

    • @agimasoschandir
      @agimasoschandir Před rokem

      Have not watched, quick google search: Dunkleosteus - Smaller and Rounder Than Expected? from Henry the PaleoGuy (youTube video)

  • @Nataru16
    @Nataru16 Před rokem +9

    Absolutely fascinating, thank you!

  • @nothanks800
    @nothanks800 Před rokem

    This is an interesting channel. I'm happy you all are around.

  • @jonjonsson4270
    @jonjonsson4270 Před rokem +1

    Fascinating! Thank you PBS Eons

  • @priztucker
    @priztucker Před rokem +4

    It’s amazing how of all the extinct species this one is so unforgettable and is the one we would all vote to bring back.

    • @merannicuill6435
      @merannicuill6435 Před rokem

      Everything I read as a kid, said "they were too tasty!" Lol (prob true tho!)😊

    • @WolfanTerror
      @WolfanTerror Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@merannicuill6435actually, apparently according to sailors they tasted quite bad

  • @mushroomlena
    @mushroomlena Před rokem +3

    Wow this was incredibly interesting! Thanks for this updated information on the dodo.

  • @MrMountainFace
    @MrMountainFace Před rokem +1

    Can we get Blake’s workout routine? Looking good man! Hit that PR

  • @dlanska
    @dlanska Před rokem

    Excellent presentation. Thank you.

  • @CGM_68
    @CGM_68 Před rokem +15

    I would like to know more about Maritime Archaeology sites around the Globe. Specifically those with finds of human settlements flooded by rising sea levels around 6500-6200 BCE. So, the coastal cities just off our shores, which were once home to our most recent ancestors. Doggerland is the one which keeps getting cited, but surely the global picture is far more varied than that prehistoric landscape which holds the secrets of almost a million years of human habitation.

  • @GenesisJames
    @GenesisJames Před rokem +19

    Wow, I had no idea that the dodo was so complex! Kinda shows the hubris of our ancestors when it came to asserting things with little to no evidence, haha. The dodo's one of the few animals that I'd totally be on board with in terms of de-extinction since we kinda were the ones that did them in, even if indirectly. Like, that was our bad lmao

    • @wolfbyte2468
      @wolfbyte2468 Před rokem +5

      And once we remove rats and pigs (which has been achieved on other islands, and is something we should do anyway to protect any species still there), they would fully have a niche to go back to! And since so many bones have been found, I'm hoping there's enough individuals to get DNA from in order to make a viable population. You'd need a minimum of 10 individuals, but more is definitely better.

    • @TheBestAround131
      @TheBestAround131 Před rokem

      The dodo doesn't breed at an uncontrollable rate, so if bringing it back turns out to be a bad idea, it'll be an easy mistake to fix... Hopefully...

    • @schrodingerscat3741
      @schrodingerscat3741 Před rokem

      @@TheBestAround131 Just bring the rats and pigs back

  • @SocioJoe
    @SocioJoe Před rokem +1

    congrats on the pb on the leg press Blake!

  • @aaronstanley6914
    @aaronstanley6914 Před rokem +2

    Wow he's really build up those muscles.

  • @andreasstavrinou6219
    @andreasstavrinou6219 Před rokem +3

    This is such a sad extinction.

  • @HeliumQueen
    @HeliumQueen Před rokem +8

    The Dodo has always seemed a little bit spooky to me. Because of its status as a symbol of extinction, the story of the Dodo was used to explain what extinction was and how it happens when I was a child in school. We would often see artistic depictions of animals in books and things, and the Dodo was commonly included in these, usually in the background or off to one side. And it always gave me a creepy feeling, like here was this strange animal, where it should not be, reminding us of just how fragile life can be.

  • @MistSoalar
    @MistSoalar Před rokem +1

    that outtakes are so good.

  • @LinardBraslin
    @LinardBraslin Před rokem +2

    Very nice clarification! Would love to see the Dodo or a hybrid of it coming back! Honestly, it is fair, because we're reversing the damage we've done.

  • @garethdean6382
    @garethdean6382 Před rokem +31

    I dunno if you've done this before, but I'm very curious how gills evolved into the structures they have as the first jawed fishes came into being.

  • @merlapittman5034
    @merlapittman5034 Před rokem +20

    I've been fascinated by the dodo ever since I first heard about it as a child and wished that there would turn out to be a hidden pocket or two of survivors. This is one creature I'd really like to see returned to the land of the living!

    • @mikep3226
      @mikep3226 Před rokem +2

      There was an interesting science fiction story about a scientist who hears of a pair that had been brought back on a ship and one of the hands had taken a pair and bred them on his farm in the south. The story follows the scientists search to learn that it was true, and try and track them down.

  • @Nico-ch9ul
    @Nico-ch9ul Před 5 měsíci

    The wildest thing is that my Professor co-wrote that paper! What a flex for your work to end up in a PBS Eons vid!

  • @user-ze3lk1ov5b
    @user-ze3lk1ov5b Před rokem +9

    One of the most iconic creatures we ever brought to extinction ❤

  • @rl9217
    @rl9217 Před rokem +10

    “Dodos have become a prime candidate for the concept of de-extinction. The possibility of bringing it back is seriously being explored.”
    Ark players: WOOOO, YEAH BABY! THATS WHAT I’VE BEEN WAITING FOR! THATS WHAT ITS ALL ABOUT WOOO!

  • @SavannahBurris
    @SavannahBurris Před 11 měsíci +4

    The rat thing actually doesn’t surprise me because that’s the same reason the Tuatara is now critically endangered!
    Ecosystems are so delicate and complex in ways that we are only now beginning to understand. It’s impossible to take one species out without having a domino effect throughout.

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 Před rokem

    Always interesting, thank you.

  • @christosvoskresye
    @christosvoskresye Před rokem +1

    Well, that was a nothingburger.
    It used to be thought that they were pigeons that adapted for life in an island, which made their demise inevitable once predators from the mainland arrived, and we should feel guilty about that.
    Now, however, we realize that they were pigeons that adapted for life in an island, which made their demise inevitable once predators from the mainland arrived, and we should feel guilty about that.
    Thanks for keeping us abreast of the important changes, PBS.

    • @scottryan5634
      @scottryan5634 Před rokem

      Full skeletons now exist and they tell of a tough life on an island with a harsh environment.
      Most Eons episodes can only surmise as much. The dodo is an unusual topic because there are written accounts about its behavior.

  • @SuperMrMaximo
    @SuperMrMaximo Před rokem +4

    Dodo's look like they could bite off a finger

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat Před rokem +7

    Interesting video, thank you!
    Poor dodo.... I really hope they can bring it back. I'd like a video on why it's now thought t-rex had lips that covered their teeth! 🦖

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před rokem +2

      You’re lucky. The channel E.D.G.E. has posted a video explaining the t-rex lips debate just yesterday. I’ll post a link in a separate comment because CZcams tends to delete posts with links.

    • @IntrepidFraidyCat
      @IntrepidFraidyCat Před rokem

      @@pansepot1490 Oooo! Thanks for the heads-up! It's weird trying to imagine T-rexes with lips. LOL 😆🦖

    • @IntrepidFraidyCat
      @IntrepidFraidyCat Před rokem +1

      @@pansepot1490 I watched the video you mentioned. It was really interesting. It's a cool channel, so I subscribed to it. Thanks again!

  • @crazycatlady39
    @crazycatlady39 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Well, if you suddenly change the rules of the game, things are going to start to struggle when they were seemingly star players before hand.

  • @bigjay875
    @bigjay875 Před rokem +2

    Personally, i suspected a situation years back. Rats have a terrible track record. I would love to see this specific creature brought back much more than bring back the mammoth

  • @jeremyortiz2927
    @jeremyortiz2927 Před rokem +5

    If they bring them back, I hope they don't get commercialized into a chicken alternative. 😕

  • @hosni4064
    @hosni4064 Před rokem +5

    I'd love to know how giraffes and their relatives evolved!

    • @lurji
      @lurji Před rokem

      the channel "animal origins" did one 2 years ago if you're interested 😊

  • @christophermeister3706
    @christophermeister3706 Před rokem +1

    Need to find this mans workout plan, he is getting jacked!

  • @MrPimpVick
    @MrPimpVick Před rokem

    Wow that was just beautiful information. Thanks for your hard work ✌️

  • @colly_cnoc
    @colly_cnoc Před rokem +5

    Please bring them back... pigeons who are Even More Round 😭💖

  • @franciscoamorim2077
    @franciscoamorim2077 Před rokem +3

    I want to know about the story of the eye. How important is our eye in our evolution as a species. How does this work and determine the genetics and biology of other species? We can say that we have this eye because of our anatomy or our anatomy derived from the eye that we have?
    Regards from Brazil!!!

  • @ambergris5705
    @ambergris5705 Před rokem +1

    Where did you find that map at 1:02, and more importantly, where can I find it? It's so great, it really makes you see the world differently, and understand it better. I want one...

  • @AthenaSchroedinger
    @AthenaSchroedinger Před rokem

    Now I can say I learned something new today! Just about all the information that was presented here was new to me. Thank you!

  • @TheAzulon
    @TheAzulon Před rokem +3

    Wait...wait...people didn't think about extiction on the 17th century? They didn't realize that if you kill all of a certain animal, then there would be no more of said animal?
    Where did they think animals came from? That they would just respawn somewhere? The server would just reset and they would be back?

    • @MikeWinters16
      @MikeWinters16 Před rokem +4

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spontaneous_generation

    • @hodor3024
      @hodor3024 Před rokem +4

      The world just seemed so huge that there would be things left no matter how many were hunted.

    • @VillainousHanacha
      @VillainousHanacha Před rokem +3

      The idea that you couldn't kill an animal population in its entirety is a concept based in religion.
      All of the creatures on the earth were placed here by God, for human beings to use and exploit was how the thinking went. To suggest extinction was to suggest that human beings could exhaust God's grace. It was considered the height of arrogance to suggest since if we could exhaust something God gave us, it would put us above God in a way. It was thought impossible to ever be able to exhaust God's bounty.
      It seems alien to us today (and it was entirely incorrect), but one has to remember that genuine belief in a creator was much more commonplace than today, even amongst the scientists of the time.

    • @scottryan5634
      @scottryan5634 Před rokem

      Humans do not have senses of an environment on a grand scale. That requires years of research by teams of people, map making, statistics, and all kinds of information hungry sailors on a temporary stop over would not be capable of realizing.
      Also, an island population has much less resilience than a continental population, which is not obvious until after the fact. This was early in the Age of Exploration so human impact on uninhabited islands would have been an unpondered concept.
      The Endangered Species Act in the U.S. wasn't passed until 1973, and, to this day, people regularly kill rare creatures on their property rather than have to deal with its regulations. In the moment, extinction is often not people's priority.

  • @Seadalgo
    @Seadalgo Před rokem +7

    I was very excited when I heard that most of what we were taught about Dodos was wrong and that it was overhauled in 2005... then you restated everything I'd been taught about Dodos since the 80s so I'll just caulk it up to hallucinations of the future again

  • @robyost6079
    @robyost6079 Před rokem +2

    On the Galapagos a similar story only with humans introducing goats and rats.

  • @jkmegenio9598
    @jkmegenio9598 Před rokem +1

    Human embrasing the quote " DISCOVER THEN DESTROY "

  • @nonbeliever5027
    @nonbeliever5027 Před rokem +2

    Maybe the Dodo bird didn't went under Extention at all. There could be a small percentage of them surviving on some remote islands unstepped by human

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před rokem

      Accordingly a large number of poor resolution photos and videos, this is indeed the case!

  • @aaronwolfe7147
    @aaronwolfe7147 Před rokem +11

    I've always wondered about the origin an evolution of spiders. I would like to see a video about that.

  • @chriswoolard7962
    @chriswoolard7962 Před rokem +1

    Imagine being that last dodo. Knowing your entire species as you know it ends with you. Crazy.

  • @DodoTacticsGaming
    @DodoTacticsGaming Před rokem +1

    Dodo comeback story and shoeing what actually went down? Sweet!

  • @martintanjung5540
    @martintanjung5540 Před rokem +3

    Humans...

  • @Miruer
    @Miruer Před rokem +4

    Poor friend shape birds

  • @JoseMartinez-df2db
    @JoseMartinez-df2db Před rokem

    This is one if not thee best video I've seen on the Dodo. 😢🙏🏽

  • @marpintado
    @marpintado Před rokem +1

    "Islands, here species come to die." Someone said that but I can´t remember who said it.

  • @SimonBellaMondo
    @SimonBellaMondo Před rokem +5

    The fact that the dodo only laid one egg and species introduced to the island caused their extinction has been known for a very long time. The 2005 discovery only showed that dodos were well adapted to their environment.

    • @JubioHDX
      @JubioHDX Před rokem

      showing that they were well adapted to their environment is a extremely important part of CONFIRMING that it was indirectly the affect of humans and not "inevitable" like people still argued. In hindsight now yes thats all it added but at the time it settled many ongoing debates

    • @gothicgirlfriend7375
      @gothicgirlfriend7375 Před rokem

      Geez. WOW I guess that changes everything in the video. 🎉 congratulations. You're so much better than other people

    • @SimonBellaMondo
      @SimonBellaMondo Před rokem

      I agree, it’s an important discovery. My point is that the story we were all told about the Dodo Bird’s extinction is pretty much spot on. The reasons for it haven’t changed.

    • @SimonBellaMondo
      @SimonBellaMondo Před rokem

      @Gothic Girlfriend You must be fun at parties 😂

  • @germanomagnone
    @germanomagnone Před rokem +8

    would it be possible to have a "neo-dodo" in a possible "ice age park🥶" (with characters from the movie 🦣"ice age" as mascots)

  • @arcie3716
    @arcie3716 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Dodos are so cute. I hope they come back one day 🦤🩷

  • @theBlankScroll
    @theBlankScroll Před rokem +1

    "Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O"
    Did i catch a fan of the book?

  • @OpEditorial
    @OpEditorial Před rokem +3

    Bringing back dodos, along with the mammoth, wooly rhino, Tasmanian tiger etc never seems to get much past the "hey, wouldn't it be cool if" stage, but here's hoping.

    • @Ezullof
      @Ezullof Před rokem

      It would be a terrible idea to bring back mammoths and wooly rhinos. They'd replace living species in ecological niches that may not even exist anymore.
      There's an argument for species that disappeared not that long ago, but still: why spend ressources in bringing back species when we don't even protect effectively those that are sill alive?

  • @Minty1337
    @Minty1337 Před rokem +8

    i mean depending on how you look at it, they did go extinct because they were slow and dumb, but that wasn't a real concern until we changed their environment. with a lack of egg-eating predators and need for speed, they were well adapted to their environment, but at the cost of becoming very badly adapted to basically anything else.

    • @keriezy
      @keriezy Před rokem

      How were they dumb? That's like saying all native people are stupid because Europeans keep going in and stealing their lands and destroying their culture. But sure the birds are dumb.

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Před rokem

      Badly adapted to anything else?
      Is that a fair statement?
      Adaptation requires a population large enough to have alternative genes available that will pass on.
      Rats and pigs in large numbers eating the eggs of a small population. How could being smarter or faster prevent their eggs from being eaten by hoards of new predators?

    • @NLance
      @NLance Před rokem

      Every animal is intelligent. Calling something dumb just because they dont have the smarts of dogs or cats is quite narrow-minded.
      They did not go extinct because they were slow either. They were perfectly adapted for their environment.
      Imagine saying that humans go extinct because we are slow and dumb because an alien race decided to put a huge/fast carnivore on our planet, that then hunted us to extinction.

    • @proctologistbarbie
      @proctologistbarbie Před rokem

      uh NO because that’s still an antiquated way to look at it. Nature does not create pointless or dumb creatures, evolution molds species to better survive in this world and ecosystems form from complex networks of these species existing together. Usually a species exits an ecosystem through the natural means of not being able to compete for resources, but time and time again humans massively hasten that process by upsetting the natural balance and introducing foreign elements that are corrosive to an delicate environment. Dodos (and other animals we’ve driven to extinction) aren’t dumb for performing their established role within an ecosystem; that credit goes to humans for our negligence and selfishness over resources.

    • @proctologistbarbie
      @proctologistbarbie Před rokem +1

      But your response is very much in line with the human reflex to center ourselves in the greater narrative of life. Yes from a certain perspective the dodo is dumb, but that’s a perspective which discerns an animal’s value through a very human lens. That kind of narrow minded view of the world is what held naturalists back for literally centuries.

  • @bluelfsuma
    @bluelfsuma Před rokem +1

    5:19 I have listened to this 3 times, and I have yet to hear the word "dodo".

  • @yueshijoorya601
    @yueshijoorya601 Před rokem +1

    If you think about it, extinction is such a frightening concept.