The REAL reason The Dodo Went Extinct

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  • čas přidán 27. 03. 2022
  • The Dodo disappeared over about 100 years after being discovered by Europeans. The main reason they ended up extinct was because Dodo birds weren't equipped to defend against the animals brought to the island by the Europeans due to a little known trope of evolution!
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @theviewerofart
    @theviewerofart Před rokem +13223

    As a Dutch person I was taught in school that we were the reason the dodo went extinct. I thought they meant "we" in the broader sense of humanity, but no it was literally us, the Dutch, ruining yet another good thing overseas to take valuables back home.

    • @roetemeteor
      @roetemeteor Před rokem

      I'd also wager what's not openly discussed is probably disease. I wager hunting and predators were a factor as well as deforestation, but you know what really nukes a population? Viruses and bacterium.

    • @garryrichardson4572
      @garryrichardson4572 Před rokem

      And now your government want to punish y’all for your ancestors crimes by cutting your farmers crop yields to starve you as per instructions from the WEF and Klaus.

    • @darkespeon64
      @darkespeon64 Před rokem +1381

      Doesn't fix things but good on your country for teaching the truth and taking responsibility. That's something every country struggles with including mine America. Were getting better or maybe worst idm

    • @DS-ld8ns
      @DS-ld8ns Před rokem +212

      @@darkespeon64 o.o.o.O Eh there will be worse things happening in the future and great things happening.
      That is life.

    • @samurguy9906
      @samurguy9906 Před rokem +250

      Well, if it makes you feel any better, the wood harvested from that island probably helped build ships which helped fueled the trade that eventually made the world much safer and more comfortable for people. Industrializing nations tend to cause a lot of ecological damage, but the alternative to economic improvement is letting people die of disease and lack that could have been saved. If I was a poor Brazilian logger id probably chop down the rainforest to feed my family too.

  • @carocaro8981
    @carocaro8981 Před rokem +7362

    As a child I had a picture book about Dodos. I was crushed when I was told that extinct meant dead forever and I'd never meet one ... They seem cute and friendly. Imagine having a fat, fearless bird in the garden!

    • @sentienttapioca5409
      @sentienttapioca5409 Před rokem +341

      Goose.

    • @sentienttapioca5409
      @sentienttapioca5409 Před rokem +125

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ Repent for what? Wiping out the dodos?

    • @fulana_de_tal
      @fulana_de_tal Před rokem +551

      @@sentienttapioca5409 see, the issue with that is that dodos lacked the fight or flight instinct, meanwhile, a goose is a creature that is made up of pure fight instinct and would treathen even the devil if he approached it too much

    • @sentienttapioca5409
      @sentienttapioca5409 Před rokem +137

      @@fulana_de_tal This is true. I retract my statement lol

    • @LLcoolDel
      @LLcoolDel Před rokem +17

      Now you are grown and you understand how the world evolved over time. Learning is good.

  • @HaydenTheEeeeeeeeevilEukaryote

    Not only did a lack of all concerns *allow* dodos to grow relaxed, it likely *encouraged* it.
    In a place without danger, fleeing because a nearby bush rustled wastes energy. The more relaxed dodos had an inherent advantage (until they didnt).
    This is my hypothesis at least.

    • @colonelcorn9500
      @colonelcorn9500 Před 11 měsíci +19

      @@SunnanbanaThere was no “culture” here they are birds lmfao

    • @timothyclark9586
      @timothyclark9586 Před 10 měsíci +27

      Hmmm good hypothesis, perhaps more likely would be the reason of sexual selection, dodos that ran away from rustling bushes might of been interrupted during mating or seen as cowardly by female dodos.

    • @king_kai28
      @king_kai28 Před 9 měsíci +14

      @@colonelcorn9500animals can develop “culture” like behavior

    • @colonelcorn9500
      @colonelcorn9500 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@king_kai28 The original person had their channel deleted so I will never know what they said.

    • @NurmaBP
      @NurmaBP Před 8 měsíci +6

      At least for thousands years this animal lived in safe beautiful paradise island, ate tasty exotic fruits, nice beaches, slow and easy life. Maybe some little fights between hot head cute young Dodos here and there.
      Rest and peace, Dodos! At least your kind didn't end like your cousin, chicken.
      Ngl, I kinda curious how Dodo going to taste like in bbq sauce.

  • @bobi200samatar6
    @bobi200samatar6 Před rokem +461

    They sound like amazing potential pets given their lack of timidity. The ultimate cuddle birds.

  • @JackT13
    @JackT13 Před rokem +4422

    It makes me really happy to think that for thousands of years, these isolated islands existed with pretty much no killing or disease, just a glorious tropical paradise with cute little fluffballs walking around being generally lovely to one another and just having a good old time

    • @bobbobkinz9958
      @bobbobkinz9958 Před rokem +536

      Then humans happened and everything went downhill

    • @mrFunkyPickle
      @mrFunkyPickle Před rokem +276

      Then humans came and started clubbing them to death, or getting eaten alive into extinction. From heaven to pure pure hell

    • @ben-mu9ge
      @ben-mu9ge Před rokem +169

      Until the human nation attacked

    • @bunnywavyxx9524
      @bunnywavyxx9524 Před rokem +106

      I know right. Imagine all the beautiful plants species thousands of years before humans, there'd be more species new species we haven't seen than imaginable.

    • @anandsharma7430
      @anandsharma7430 Před rokem

      @@bobbobkinz9958 That is, in a nutshell, the sad story of this planet, the most tragic since the Chicxulub impact. You know how our stories have "dark forces of evil took over the world and reigned supreme for a long dark time as demons pillaged and destroyed everything they saw". That's animals telling their story of life under human occupation of the planet. We are the Orcs, the Demons, the HellSpawn, the SatanSeed, the Devil himself.

  • @trollanlord85
    @trollanlord85 Před rokem +2194

    im legit so pissed off with how they went extinct. they seemed so friendly

    • @peteri9973
      @peteri9973 Před rokem +132

      and delicious...

    • @HK-gm8pe
      @HK-gm8pe Před rokem

      its very hard for me to like humanity after all the shit we have done :D its almost impossible , I sometimes think that thiw world would do soooo much better without us :D humans are like a virus spreading around this planet and destroyng everything we come into contact with

    • @saramaher
      @saramaher Před rokem +26

      Totally unrelated to the video but nice pfp

    • @trollanlord85
      @trollanlord85 Před rokem +11

      @@saramaher thanks

    • @barbaradps828
      @barbaradps828 Před rokem +13

      YEAHHHH… 😭😭😭

  • @CzechsTeaNine
    @CzechsTeaNine Před 9 měsíci +59

    I totally blame Diego, Manny, Sid and that Kid for their extinction. They stole their Watermelon

  • @SmoshDella
    @SmoshDella Před rokem +93

    Being so kind is deadly.. lesson learned.

    • @ByproductRebelMind
      @ByproductRebelMind Před 6 měsíci +1

      "don't mistake my kindness for weakness" ok to be kind, just don't let abusers use you..

    • @Goofball109
      @Goofball109 Před 5 dny

      And I learnt that the hard way. (I mean igot bullied a lot cause i didn’t toughen up

  • @rhysgadbois9833
    @rhysgadbois9833 Před rokem +3407

    I don’t know about you guys, but I always thought the Dodo bird went extinct after coming into contact with an odd herd containing a mammoth, saber tooth tiger, small human, and a deformed sloth. If I remember correctly, the unique herd took the Dodo birds’ last melon and the remaining Dodo’s committed suicide out of pure shame. This video changes everything.

    • @sonalipradhan9188
      @sonalipradhan9188 Před rokem +172

      Why does this sound like 'Ice Age’?

    • @justasamsquanch7202
      @justasamsquanch7202 Před rokem +280

      @@sonalipradhan9188 cuz that’s literally what it is haha my guy just recapped ice age for a CZcams comment. Legendary🤣🤣

    • @ItsNicolau
      @ItsNicolau Před rokem +22

      @@sonalipradhan9188 Because it is hahaha

    • @NotEvenSquidward
      @NotEvenSquidward Před rokem +65

      The laaaaast melon

    • @reality_101
      @reality_101 Před rokem +11

      @@NotEvenSquidward The laaaaaast male

  • @cynicalfalcon8889
    @cynicalfalcon8889 Před rokem +2783

    I've always thought their lack of fear would have made them great pets

    • @jadetryingtochill1259
      @jadetryingtochill1259 Před rokem +520

      I was just thinking that I wish I had a pet dodo bird they were already docile they were like 80% domesticated missed opportunity

    • @malodos2295
      @malodos2295 Před rokem +200

      They probably would've been good food too, too bad we'll never get to taste them...

    • @plasticelephant1969
      @plasticelephant1969 Před rokem +272

      Yea, they'd be like, completely chill fat chickens

    • @ollie9321
      @ollie9321 Před rokem

      @@jadetryingtochill1259 in about 10-15 years you probably will, they’re planning to be resurrected by 2027

    • @skinnybuggo
      @skinnybuggo Před rokem +156

      @@malodos2295i believe there are records of their taste being awful

  • @maxerton
    @maxerton Před 11 měsíci +39

    Hard times create strong birds
    Strong birds create easy times
    Easy times create weak birds
    Weak birds create hard times
    Weak bird times 😞

  • @simbat6576
    @simbat6576 Před 9 měsíci +16

    2:50 "Steve had the defence stats of a vegetable "😂

  • @punnup3452
    @punnup3452 Před rokem +3351

    I remember actually hearing that another big factor of dodo Extinction was actually the tortoises that also roamed the island
    If I remember correctly the tortoises were unbelievably amazing for sailing purposes as they held a large reservoir of clean fresh water as well as not needing that much to survive so they could literally grab some tortoises roll them onto the ship and store them as future food
    Where the dodo bird comes in is that the dodo bird did not actually taste that good so sailors did not eat them as much but it turns out you cook it with the fat of the tortoises and you have a very palatable dish and caused sailors to literally stop by the island and pick up a couple dodos and turtles for the long voyage
    This also means that if we had ketchup back then every animal would probably be extinct by now

    • @HickLif3
      @HickLif3 Před rokem +150

      They did have ketchup it was just different from what we know today but it was very widely used

    • @lpaz34
      @lpaz34 Před rokem +44

      @@HickLif3 ketchup was used as medicine

    • @Morris_Minor
      @Morris_Minor Před rokem +93

      @@lpaz34 as it should be

    • @bmxrichard21
      @bmxrichard21 Před rokem +111

      @@Morris_Minor as medicine for bad food

    • @mysticfidah1563
      @mysticfidah1563 Před rokem +3

      That's what I was told

  • @theonlyshinyumbreon
    @theonlyshinyumbreon Před rokem +2499

    Sounds pretty similar to pygmy sauropods, which were a result of island dwarfism. Eventually a land bridge connected their island to somewhere else. Being the bite sized version of an animal that relys heavily on size in order to become near untouchable, the limited edition happy meals were sold out very quickly.

    • @germanscience7246
      @germanscience7246 Před rokem +140

      Therapods: I'd like to buy 30 happy meals please

    • @bonniethebunny8882
      @bonniethebunny8882 Před rokem +79

      @@germanscience7246 yes, with a side of extinction please

    • @danielatchley277
      @danielatchley277 Před rokem +8

      Lol

    • @thereptile9467
      @thereptile9467 Před rokem +111

      Hilariously enough the nearly exact opposite happened to the Pygmy Sauropod's natural predator, Giant Azhdarchids. Basically, pterosaurs grew to massive monstrous sizes to prey specifically on the dwarf island dinosaurs. They retained the ability to fly so they can hop between islands and feast on the local inhabitants but overall didn't like to travel long distances.
      Then the land bridge happened.
      Containment of these giant nightmare storks finally broke, and they were unleashed onto the mainland. Becoming absolutely everywhere almost instantly.
      So one one hand, everyone got sauropod nuggets for a short time. On the other hand: THE TALL BOIS ARE LOOSE THE TALL BOIS ARE LOOSE-

    • @ArthropodJay
      @ArthropodJay Před rokem +31

      "limited edition happy meals" have u been watchin casual geographic/hood nature?

  • @pollypocketfan7837
    @pollypocketfan7837 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Another fun fact about the Dodo is that by the late 18th Century some scientist even doubted that it even existed at all because of a lot of paintings with Dodos where they put stuff like phoenixes and unicorns and some people were especially convinced at one time when the Dodo was put in to Louis Carroll's classic novel Alice In Wonderland, but ironically at that time two complete Dodo skeletons dug up proved it existed and we've been studying it since then. One particular Dodo was kept as an attraction in England and was popular and when it died it was taken to Oxford after it got stuffed but later there were many parts of the stuffed dodo that got thrown away but the shriveled head and leg were saved and with the DNA on the Oxford Dodo is how ornithologists confirmed that it was a pigeon.

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten Před 9 měsíci +6

    They also laid just one egg per year because there was no need to lay more... Very bad when some trouble shows up.

  • @Goat10Solos
    @Goat10Solos Před rokem +2574

    It's honestly sad how we'll never get to see what they really looked and sounded like.

    • @fazendojogos2824
      @fazendojogos2824 Před rokem +520

      or tasted like

    • @xlagusa991
      @xlagusa991 Před rokem +118

      @@fazendojogos2824bro😂

    • @NoblesTx
      @NoblesTx Před rokem +158

      -Colossal Biosciences,
      “Hold my beer”
      A de-extinction company, are working on bringing back the dodo along with the woolly mammoth. No I’m not kidding. Jurassic park style.

    • @standupstraight9691
      @standupstraight9691 Před rokem +90

      Its not that sad. You just saw a picture of one. Probably made a squawk / clucking sound.
      If they were common today, you probably wouldnt care.

    • @EriclovesToe
      @EriclovesToe Před rokem +67

      @@xlagusa991 He lied on the video, the real reason why the went extinct is me.
      I ate them all🥶

  • @lordprotector3367
    @lordprotector3367 Před rokem +781

    I have a (disbound) book I bought from a boot sale many years ago for £1, which is the natural history of the world. Under Dodo, it says 'The Dodo is an inhabitant of the Isles of France', meaning that it was probably published around 1720, and the author didn't know that Dodos were likely to have been extinct by then. It also says 'The Kangaru is an inhabitant of New Holland', and he casts doubt on the existence of mermaids, but doesn't rule them out!

    • @CrippleX89
      @CrippleX89 Před rokem +15

      Do you happen to know the title of the book? I'm intrigued 🙂

    • @lordprotector3367
      @lordprotector3367 Před rokem +57

      @@CrippleX89 I don't, sadly, as the title pages are missing (and the plates). All that is there is the main text (fortunately complete). You should see what he says about 'Man' and the different races. I'll try and post some quotes. I brought the book in to work a few years ago, and we used to joke it was the instruction manual of our software!

    • @Chillerll
      @Chillerll Před rokem +65

      Today, of course, we know mermaids went extinct during the 17th century.

    • @kailoid8779
      @kailoid8779 Před rokem +8

      Spelled kangaroo wrong and new holland was the first name of Australia (I think).

    • @ailuosi7241
      @ailuosi7241 Před rokem

      this is actually correct. they were eaten into extinction by the Europeans

  • @shashankjaiswal2266
    @shashankjaiswal2266 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Due to lack of fight or flight response, they might also have been the friendliest birds to exist, just like Capybaras are friendliest animal to exist.

  • @marknunya3107
    @marknunya3107 Před měsícem +1

    Brother, I just wanted you to know that I’ve watched one minute of your video and have subscribed. You’re definitely going places on this platform! Good luck to you!

  • @laiadominguezsanchis2770
    @laiadominguezsanchis2770 Před 2 lety +3395

    why am I so saddend by their death 😭😭

    • @kennethmartin1300
      @kennethmartin1300 Před rokem +407

      I know! If they could have been adopted or cared for by people, their fearlessness could have made them great pets. 🦤

    • @bo-dine7971
      @bo-dine7971 Před rokem +291

      @@kennethmartin1300 Exactly.. They were too good for this cruel world.

    • @carlosmorenoseguel7726
      @carlosmorenoseguel7726 Před rokem +146

      we could have taken selfies with them like with quokkas

    • @PlecsExotics3
      @PlecsExotics3 Před rokem +16

      Me too

    • @PokeIsCop
      @PokeIsCop Před rokem +12

      ​@@kennethmartin1300 Theres no proof that they arent Alive they technically could still be alive

  • @ruairim2283
    @ruairim2283 Před rokem +261

    Dodo's also have a low birth rate. They basically only laid one egg per year because there was no need to lay more (no predators were eating them) so when people started killing them, they couldn't replace their population fast enough

    • @TPDTND
      @TPDTND Před 4 měsíci +2

      flawed by design

  • @amitexo
    @amitexo Před 8 měsíci +12

    As someone who's from the Island of Mauritius, I reckon a Kentucky Fried Dodo would be an impossibility but I do think the French who landed in 1710 did have had some Dodo au Vin! Although most concentrate on the extinction of the Dodo, which is fair, we tend to ignore the extinction of the Giant tortoises and other reptiles, birds, amphibians, insects & plants from Mauritius. The Dodo is not an isolated incident or a single link that was broken, they dumped the whole chain in the fire, leaving the few surviving links to struggle till date to form a smaller but proper chain again.

  • @ashxsh
    @ashxsh Před 8 měsíci +1

    Loved your presentation style. Bits of humour and simple animation. You have earned a sub.❤

  • @staywithnoeasylife
    @staywithnoeasylife Před rokem +1229

    As a Mauritian myself, I confirm everything there is true.
    But just 1 more detail you may have forgot
    When the dodo was hunted it's "scream" made other dodos come, making the Dutch having a lot of dodos at the same while hunting only 1
    I hope I explained it well-

    • @mongstyt7230
      @mongstyt7230 Před rokem +52

      😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂

    • @maryjanerx
      @maryjanerx Před rokem +200

      Oh thats so heart breaking

    • @studygram_
      @studygram_ Před rokem +12

      i have a lil question. are geese related to dodos or something?

    • @peterbaron6818
      @peterbaron6818 Před rokem +11

      Wow, that's just typical Dodo.

    • @cosmotect
      @cosmotect Před rokem +80

      Those species might have to be the most unfortunate of all times

  • @acerniss
    @acerniss Před rokem +1717

    It’s honestly sad how what brought them comfort and safety also led to their inevitable extinction.

    • @ASAMB12
      @ASAMB12 Před rokem +140

      well... to be fair it's mainly to the anomaly of us ship-building humans that they got extinct. otherwise they'd still be thriving in paradise

    • @FirstNameLastName-hahaha
      @FirstNameLastName-hahaha Před rokem +12

      How sad ? We'd still be slithering in primordial slime if those evolutionary forces hadn't played out

    • @jarlfenrir
      @jarlfenrir Před rokem +103

      @@ASAMB12 At some point there would appear a predator trough evolution - if the food supplies would be no longer enough to support growing population of dodos, some dodos would have to evolve to eat other dodos.

    • @realonion93
      @realonion93 Před rokem +17

      it is, now cast your mind to humans....

    • @badideabearcub2747
      @badideabearcub2747 Před rokem +38

      @@jarlfenrir There is self regulation. If the supplies started to dwindle they would have naturally reduced their population growth until the next bonanza.

  • @raginromans
    @raginromans Před měsícem +2

    what app did you use for the picture draging

  • @mr.cyuree
    @mr.cyuree Před rokem +3

    Is no one gonna talk about the sound the turtle made?😂

  • @dracoberry
    @dracoberry Před rokem +1473

    As a fellow Mauritian student, I learned in Grade 5 to 6 that the Dutch were the reason why this big bird is extinct . It is said that one of the reasons why they left the island was because they overkilled what used to be endemic animals on the island .
    Edit : No offense towards the Dutch , that is just what I learned. This was before the 17's anyway , so the past is the past .

    • @zhongxina9832
      @zhongxina9832 Před rokem

      Bro humans did not exist in that time... YOU are the predator from that island bro

    • @MrAngenos
      @MrAngenos Před rokem

      Youre more correct than this stupid content creator… pushing his evolution religion..

    • @zhongxina9832
      @zhongxina9832 Před rokem

      @DracoBerry You are predator from island bro

    • @draken3793
      @draken3793 Před rokem +38

      and we'll dodoing do it again

    • @fullmetaltheorist
      @fullmetaltheorist Před rokem +36

      @@draken3793 Do it and they'll sink the Netherlands. Yes that is a threat. 😂🇳🇱

  • @InfamousX1000
    @InfamousX1000 Před rokem +181

    It’s really a shame because Dodo’s would have made great pets. Literally not defensive or predatory instincts, just a chill animal that would be happy to sit with you while you watch tv, eat a snack, smoke a blunt, drink a beer or do whatever the hell you do while you’re on your couch. We need Jurassic park or a time machine to bring these guys back

    • @Sedobreev
      @Sedobreev Před rokem +95

      How could you teach them that taking a dump on your bed is not allowed if they are not afraid of anything?

    • @jamesab-
      @jamesab- Před rokem +55

      @@Sedobreev that's the best reply I've ever read

    • @cooperton4949
      @cooperton4949 Před rokem +29

      I imagine it would be quite expensive to keep a large semi-tropical bird fed

    • @Al-ir6vb
      @Al-ir6vb Před rokem +30

      I get that it has decent traits behaviorally but... it's a 1m tall bird with a large beak and no fear... Also, it might be a herbivore but... just think about how much it would eat... Decent zoo animal, but hell no as a pet...

    • @Aisha_Luv
      @Aisha_Luv Před rokem +32

      @@Sedobreev reward based training.

  • @jeannemccarthy8722
    @jeannemccarthy8722 Před rokem +6

    1:10 bro said corner of earth

    • @Mangodacat
      @Mangodacat Před 2 měsíci

      i mean hes looking at a 3d model

  • @Kwontum
    @Kwontum Před 9 měsíci +3

    This is insane information. Took me decades to see this video. This is that moment in my life to say, poor Steve.

  • @kjs8719
    @kjs8719 Před rokem +111

    "they didn't die because they were slow, they died because a lack of predators resulted in them becomeing slow"

    • @karldavis7392
      @karldavis7392 Před rokem +4

      Yeah, I would say I correctly understood what happened to them.

  • @alou7782
    @alou7782 Před rokem +476

    As a Mauritian, I never knew other people were told he died because of his low intelligence and slowness, since we were littles we were always told the real reason of this death.

    • @idkimlikereallybored9533
      @idkimlikereallybored9533 Před rokem +6

      ... you?

    • @darkfox2401
      @darkfox2401 Před rokem +6

      Yeah that's what people meant when they said they when extincted cause they were stupid

    • @stagaries1696
      @stagaries1696 Před rokem +20

      i mean his brain was technically underdeveloped compared to its ancestors so technically it isnt wrong to call it stupid. not entirely accurate but also not entirely wrong

    • @murray821
      @murray821 Před rokem +25

      @@stagaries1696 their brain did what they needed. Spot the next fruit and preferably not too far away. Any living thing always seeks the path of least resistance. Given the opportunity, every creature grows lazy and fat. You can see it in pets that are fed too much. I’ve seen a documentary about a group of lions near a small village with lots of life stock. They ate themselves fat but they kept killing for sport as that was their instinct.

    • @jonajo261
      @jonajo261 Před rokem +2

      THE FUCKING DUCH ! PArti malin ti dir bour zot en dehors la coupe

  • @wafflebirb
    @wafflebirb Před 10 měsíci +2

    I love how this is informative as well as funny so you don’t fall asleep.

  • @MaxLovesNascarOfficial
    @MaxLovesNascarOfficial Před rokem +2

    I am literally so mad he said “Kentucky Fried Dodo”
    man you can’t do my favorite animal like that

  • @flaminghotclipclipcheetos2460

    The only educational informational video that didn't make me bored watching also how straight to the point and short this is

    • @Fred-mp1vf
      @Fred-mp1vf Před rokem +4

      Unfortunately, it's all false.

    • @NotThatUser
      @NotThatUser Před rokem +24

      @@Fred-mp1vf
      Hey Freddy boy, you got anything to back up your claims about how it’s all false?
      No, I didn’t think you did.

    • @MrDeathBunny
      @MrDeathBunny Před rokem +5

      I do enjoy longer videos tho, it's something nice to listen to while doing stuff

    • @curtisowen3233
      @curtisowen3233 Před rokem

      @@Fred-mp1vf right!? It was the Spanish inquisition. These dumb birds were protestant!

    • @theseangle
      @theseangle Před rokem +2

      @@MrDeathBunny yeah people's attention spans degraded to negative 10000000 hours due to certain lifestyles and "social networks"

  • @NUNU-cd6by
    @NUNU-cd6by Před rokem +219

    As a Mauritian, I was taught at school that the Dutch ate the dodos as it was really easy to catch and the rats ate the eggs. Mauritius Island had the dodo and Rodrigues Island had the solitary bird which is extinct as well.

    • @marcus14659
      @marcus14659 Před rokem +7

      As a kid, my favourite place to go in Mauritius was jardin pamplemousses. It's labelled as a botanical garden that has never been touched. But thinking about it now, the Dutch didn't leave any of the island untouched. The garden can't be older than 100 years old but it's marketed as being one of the oldest gardens in the world. Still it's cool to see what the island could have looked like

    • @leonardocontin937
      @leonardocontin937 Před rokem +4

      I remember that at school we were taught that Dodo's meat was quite tough and overall not a great food.

    • @Spg-93
      @Spg-93 Před rokem +1

      Yes I was taught the exact same thing.

    • @NUNU-cd6by
      @NUNU-cd6by Před rokem +2

      @Cor mac That garden was made in the French era so the dutch were not around in that period. That garden must be around 200 years old probably. Fun fact, my father's great grandfather came from India as a businessman and he bought a colonial house which used to be a police station in the French time, we still stay there and that house must be some 200 or 300 years old 😆

    • @jeanninerossouw5921
      @jeanninerossouw5921 Před rokem +1

      @@marcus14659 since half of the island is a nature park and untouched, you can go look at what it would have looked like anytime. The botanical gardens on the other hand are a collection of flora brought from all over the world,to find out what grows best in that environment

  • @leximay6065
    @leximay6065 Před rokem +3

    I hope there’s a way to bring them back they seem so nice

  • @stoneymcneal2458
    @stoneymcneal2458 Před 9 měsíci +5

    In describing the Dodo, I was struck by the similarities to so many of my fellow Americans.

    • @user-mr3cz5vt6n
      @user-mr3cz5vt6n Před 2 měsíci

      If by 'fellow Americans' you mean Native Americans, you are absolutely spot on.

    • @stoneymcneal2458
      @stoneymcneal2458 Před 2 měsíci

      @@user-mr3cz5vt6n I did not intend to make reference to Native Americans

  • @duddydude6783
    @duddydude6783 Před 2 lety +863

    this gonna blow up, trust

  • @Klaas_L
    @Klaas_L Před rokem +704

    As I Dutch person, I was taught that basically we ate them all, because A. they were really tasty and B. they were so easy to catch because they did not run or fly away. I guess the animals we brought along contributed more to the dodo's extinction than I was told, but that might just be the result of fast generalization over a long period of time. Also, I approve of the Dutch bringing cheese joke xD

    • @pohjanvanamo
      @pohjanvanamo Před rokem +91

      I heard they weren't even tasty, but giant tortoises were super tasty, and when cooked in tortoise fat, dodos (as well as anything else) would be delicious too. Easy to catch, and making the super good yummy food lasting longer... 😆

    • @guy_named_steven9912
      @guy_named_steven9912 Před rokem +72

      Your first point is wrong it was the opposite, the dodo was called "walgvogel" (disgusting bird) for a reason by us.

    • @osheridan
      @osheridan Před rokem +32

      @@guy_named_steven9912 To scare everyone else away and keep them for yourselves? /j

    • @LilnormieX
      @LilnormieX Před rokem +21

      So in theory if the Dutch didn’t bring their animals the dodos will be domesticated?

    • @hadesmyg1114
      @hadesmyg1114 Před rokem +11

      Strange, I heard they weren’t good at all. Like they were nasty and oily. So not particularly tasty.

  • @SoraRaida
    @SoraRaida Před rokem

    Man, the editing and narration made this video so hilarious. Great job!

  • @emmanuel.m.4987
    @emmanuel.m.4987 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Quick question, if the Dodo bird lost its wings due to lack of predators, why haven't chickens learnt to fly by now? Chickens today are at a higher predatory risk than Dodos ever were

    • @Breakaway-ic5gj
      @Breakaway-ic5gj Před 8 měsíci

      Dodo probably lost it over a way longer period of time

    • @ImUnkown482
      @ImUnkown482 Před 8 měsíci

      If you are talking about humans we have only been a threat for about 3000 years which is NOTHING in evolutionary time

  • @lunar9342
    @lunar9342 Před rokem +195

    I was always told we hunted them to extinction because they didn't know to run away as soon as they noticed us. They were easy prey on an island between continents, and a good way to stock up on food mid-trip.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem +1

      food fjust for is trup wouldn't be a=enough to make them go extinct just not enough people.

    • @lunar9342
      @lunar9342 Před rokem +19

      @@0011peace You're right to an extent. In just a few trips, a few ships wouldn't be able to make Dodos go extinct. However, we didn't do it all at once. It took us 70 years. According to what sources I could find, there were at least around 500 million people around the time of the first recorded sighting of Dodos in the 1500s. If even just 0.01% of those people sailed out there in the 70 years they existed with us, that's 10,000 people, going to an island about 2 times the size of New York City, introducing predators like dogs and cats, while also destroying their habitat, and hunting them ourselves.
      You have to remember that they were a relatively small population of birds, that couldn't fly, stuck on a small island along a very commonly travelled trade route. It wouldn't be just a few ships every year, and it wouldn't just be humans. It would be dozens of ships, full of hundreds of hungry sailors, pet cats, aspiring hunters, new diseases, salesmen and plain old travellers. All of whom, sentient or not would want to try this exotic bird that doesn't even run away when you approach. From the standpoint of a sailor that is travelling open ocean, they'd want as much food as they could carry in case something went wrong. Some people likely came exclusively for the chance to try this bird's meat, because of how unique it was. In the same way we wiped out mammoths, giant sloths, and more. We simply showed up, and killed all of them. Sometimes for food. Sometimes for trophy hunting. Sometimes just because we can. It's just how we are. So yes, we definitely couldn't have killed them ourselves, but we didn't do it by ourselves. We brought invasive species, and destroyed their native ecosystem. It wasn't just Dodos that went extinct either. According to the IUCN Red List (International Union for Conservation of Nature) there are 47 extinct species that were native to that island. Not all of them went extinct at the same time, but almost certainly, all of them are pretty much our fault.
      Sorry for the rant. Your statement made me curious, so I looked it all up myself.

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Před rokem +3

      they were never hunted for the simple fact that dodos were inedible.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem

      @@Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo at least by humans

    • @heavysleeperassclapper6054
      @heavysleeperassclapper6054 Před rokem +1

      @@Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo how?

  • @daniellclary
    @daniellclary Před rokem +447

    When I learned about the dodo's this was the only reason I heard why they went extinct. Never knew people where spreading a wrong reason.

    • @kunibertrandolf1886
      @kunibertrandolf1886 Před rokem +106

      Saying "the bird was stupid and didn't deserve to live" sounds way better than "humans arriving and not having a shred of respect or understanding of the wonders they just found destroyed the ecosystem of an entire island in as little as 50 years"

    • @deinsilverdrac8695
      @deinsilverdrac8695 Před rokem +83

      where did you get that kind of crappy info.
      even when i was like 7 i knew that it was invasive species and human hunting them that drove them extinct.
      it's like the first thing you learn about them anywhere, even in children books

    • @daniellclary
      @daniellclary Před rokem +7

      @@deinsilverdrac8695 Exactly

    • @daniellclary
      @daniellclary Před rokem +9

      @@kunibertrandolf1886 I suppose, but never heard of the too dumb thing till now.

    • @anosmibell6473
      @anosmibell6473 Před rokem

      @@daniellclary That's because basically nobody says it. This guy is creating a false narrative he can "destroy" to make it seem like the "truth has been concealed".

  • @itskaffedean7069
    @itskaffedean7069 Před 10 měsíci +31

    As a Dutch person, I feel incredibly sorry for the actions of our ancestors. It truly saddens me to learn that we, as Dutch people, are responsible for the extinction of the adorable and chubby dodos. I feel a deep sense of remorse and apologize for the role our predecessors played in their Extinction.

    • @talhadeeel
      @talhadeeel Před 10 měsíci +6

      It’s your fault 😢

    • @itskaffedean7069
      @itskaffedean7069 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@talhadeeel No, it is not. last time i remember i wasn't born before the 1700s 🤷

    • @Matisaha
      @Matisaha Před 9 měsíci +4

      If it wasn't you, it'd have been others later on I fear. And if it had remained until today, America, Russia or any asian country would hunt them to extinction anyway. They might've been saved by being put in zoos to some degree or being made pets though, if those types got their hands on them before they died out.

    • @dannyhernandez265
      @dannyhernandez265 Před 5 měsíci

      Humans are at fault

    • @randomperson-oe8ff
      @randomperson-oe8ff Před 4 měsíci

      It is not your fault, so there's no need for you to apologise, however, we greatly appreciate it. It means a lot that at least the descendants of those monstrous people have feelings and kindness in them. Thanks for being a great person!

  • @naamikas
    @naamikas Před 2 měsíci +1

    Don’t forget that the elephant bird also had a rough time you know

  • @Loki-hy6px
    @Loki-hy6px Před rokem +820

    i honestly think these birds probably would've made great pets, i would've absolutely loved to have one as a pet. it upsets me so much that these big fluffy borbs are just gone forever because of how horrible humans can be. they were like the perfect size for cuddling, related to pigeons and doves (who also make good pets), and had like no fight or flight instinct so they would've been so friendly and docile. i really wish those people had at least took some back and bred them in captivity so we'd at least have a domesticated version still around.

    • @funimonki4803
      @funimonki4803 Před rokem +21

      Yeah I was gonna comment that!

    • @postmillennial1177
      @postmillennial1177 Před rokem +81

      Breeding attempts for the dodo was nearly impossible during the 17th century. Dodos can lay only one egg at a time due to the limited resources of the island. Many specimens were taken overseas to Europe and Asia but barely a few less than 10 to be percise survived their journeys. Dodo gestation and breeding requirements were unknown at the time. So unlike the chicken that can reproduce many eggs within a short time period also the chicken is known for being a much more hardy and well known bird. Dodos were not seen to be valuable or worth it in societies of the 17th century but during the 19th century their popularity exploded and become today an extinction icon.

    • @Ryan-bm3ls
      @Ryan-bm3ls Před rokem +4

      nah bc no fight or flight means they cant be potty trained

    • @martinjugolin2087
      @martinjugolin2087 Před rokem +10

      They had no fight and flight instinct? So they were meat to be extinct then 😂

    • @warbossgegguz679
      @warbossgegguz679 Před rokem +18

      Cloning dodos has been an idea thrown around for several decades at this point. It's not even a matter of if we can, it's more a matter of the ethics of cloning.

  • @THECOOLSUCHOBR
    @THECOOLSUCHOBR Před 3 měsíci +1

    There is a close relative to the dodo, called Rodrigues solitaire that lived in the Rodrigues island. That’s where it gets its name from.

  • @c.rutherford
    @c.rutherford Před 9 měsíci +4

    4:51 "If only we hadn't killed the Dodo back then..... we could be killing them now...."

  • @clivepilusa7734
    @clivepilusa7734 Před rokem +130

    Forget the humourous way he narrates the video.... I'm super impressed with his editing skills. Instant sub.

  • @anditwasknownas
    @anditwasknownas Před rokem +463

    Life in mauritus -or any island- isn't easy in the slightest. There's no food (once you over populated so you become very competitive over territoty, mates, etc), water is scarce most of the year, climate is a nightmare, theres typhoons and tsunamis and shit, the're fires, diseases spread quicky and become epidemic (thats the reason why dodos had "featherless faces" for termoregulation and show their health)
    What happened to the dodo is what happened to all islands and specially birds. Not necessarily for been "friendly" coz most extinct birds in islands actually fly.
    Edit: it's called changes in the habitat and invasive species.
    Nice video btw really funny :D

    • @JezaJames
      @JezaJames Před rokem +9

      I dunno, life in Australia is pretty good. Lots of food. So I'd have to disagree. :) We don't even have island dwarfism.

    • @Rose333X
      @Rose333X Před rokem +15

      @@JezaJames cuz you ain't on an island, and you have fuck ton of animals, both predators and prey, and nowdays there's ton of food everywhere with slight technological advancment so.

    • @HowlingWolf518
      @HowlingWolf518 Před rokem +12

      @@Rose333X Technically Australia _is_ an island... but by that definition so is every other continent, so nevermind.

    • @itzaleaf405
      @itzaleaf405 Před rokem +13

      @@HowlingWolf518 Hard to really tell what is and isn't an island... cause like you said, just going by "surrounded by water" *everything* is... so then it's got to be size, but at *what point* do you just call it a continent and not and island and vise versa.

    • @zee9709
      @zee9709 Před rokem +4

      @@JezaJames if life is good in an island, which means you are the invasive one.

  • @xtremeblazer3468
    @xtremeblazer3468 Před měsícem +1

    "It's Europe" was personal lmao

  • @stormhawk3319
    @stormhawk3319 Před rokem +1

    Last confirmed sighting of a Dodo was in 1662. That’s a hell of a long time ago.

  • @yushiiii.r
    @yushiiii.r Před rokem +382

    As a mauritian and the fact that what he is saying is quite true and I remember learning about dodo's extinction in 5th grade history class (6 -7 years ago or more I am in highschool btw if you're getting confused ) and basically they were hunted for food and also rats or the animals that were brought in mauritius ate their eggs since they laid eggs on the ground and it's sad to learn that dodo's went extinct because of human cause as child. I really appreciate that you made a video on our national bird and told people the real cause of dodo's extinction.

    • @BoMwarriorVlog
      @BoMwarriorVlog Před 9 měsíci +3

      🤷 I am actually surprised that people before the 2010s didn't learn all this, I have lived in Utah, USA almost all my life and was taught this in elementary school too. 🤔 I expect the worse modern education system, but the the combination of all those reasons are what I learned.

    • @Xorthis
      @Xorthis Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@BoMwarriorVlog Do they actually teach that the dodo went extinct because of environmental factors, not because people settled the island? I've always known it was invasive species and human factors such as deforestation... I can't even remember where I learned it from, though. (I'm British).

    • @BoMwarriorVlog
      @BoMwarriorVlog Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@Xorthis I don't remember learning about any environmental factors affecting them unless you're talking about settlers clearing some land to be able to have homes and farm.

    • @TinyDraws7
      @TinyDraws7 Před 9 měsíci

      Gimmie some coochie

    • @Xorthis
      @Xorthis Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@BoMwarriorVlog That's crazy. It's another of those 'old facts' that schools teach, along with the segmented taste buds and atoms with electrons that orbit like planets. So many times I remember being told 'this is what you need to know now, but later you'll find out what it really is. '
      Education fail...

  • @BurningLattice
    @BurningLattice Před rokem +36

    4:25 so we blame the Dutch...

    • @sade8590
      @sade8590 Před 7 měsíci

      Thanks alot you did a great job all of you guys (the people who got rid of dodos)

    • @taylorbroderick326
      @taylorbroderick326 Před měsícem

      Oh c’mon I’m not that old!

  • @ZekeWatson
    @ZekeWatson Před 4 měsíci +1

    Here in the UK we were taught humans hunted it to extinction.

  • @gravital5213
    @gravital5213 Před měsícem +1

    Ironically Capybaras are very similar to the Dodo bird

  • @raversfantasykb6304
    @raversfantasykb6304 Před rokem +112

    KFD sounds really good, but seriously though there is a batch of scientists looking to revive the Dodo, but I do not think they would survive anything. Honestly look at it this way, they don't run, they don't fly, they don't fear anything and don't fight back, this is literally a definition of perfect domestic farm birds that can be used alongside Chickens.
    KFD is not too far a stretch, but it sounds divine to have basically a smaller version of a turkey, bigger than a chicken meal.

    • @jase123111
      @jase123111 Před rokem +15

      They could survive back on the island if they got rid of the predators and reforested big areas to put the birds. It would make a lot of money from tourists going there too. Or they could just make huge areas a nature reserve and fence it off with electric fencing to keep predators out....then put the dodo's in there and let people walk about to look for them at take photos.

    • @scruffydog2
      @scruffydog2 Před rokem +12

      If they did clone the Dodo most likely end up in a zoo where they be safe.

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Před rokem +2

      What do they taste like? Imagine being the first Dodo brought back. You'd have zero bearings. No parents. No siblings. You don't even know what you like to eat.

    • @raversfantasykb6304
      @raversfantasykb6304 Před rokem +1

      @@noahway13 "Dodo Feed" just train them to eat the foods the island they lived on had, but in man made form like chicken feed, modified to fatten up the oversized chicken turkeys

    • @raversfantasykb6304
      @raversfantasykb6304 Před rokem

      @@jase123111 You are talking about the absolute destruction of an ecosystem, and even if it was done on an island, you are still destroying the habitat of hundreds of animals and species alike. Money or not, KFD is a money maker, Dodo in a zoo is just a waste and doesn't offer anything concrete for people to even interact with the animal. There is still scientific risks as well to remember, like what if they give it DNA of an aggressive animal, look at Jurassic World for that drama in the sake of money

  • @deknees8969
    @deknees8969 Před rokem +239

    Your editing and just the content in this video are so impressive that I thought you had more subscribers. Really underrated.

    • @StateYourBaitJZ002
      @StateYourBaitJZ002 Před rokem +1

      yhhhh man

    • @user00370
      @user00370 Před rokem

      The accent plays a role

    • @ShamrockParticle
      @ShamrockParticle Před rokem +1

      Seriously? The number of flashing visuals in the first three seconds alone could induce discomfort and maybe even epileptic response. Modern day video apparently has to be this rabid. I'm amazed there aren't more camer angle and stance jumps to elicit even more distraction.

    • @gavindavis179
      @gavindavis179 Před rokem +4

      “The history of the entire world I guess” vibes

    • @maitaimik
      @maitaimik Před rokem

      Its maybe a music video, just not a scientific one. A piece of scientifiic garbage in fact.

  • @little_p3ngu1n
    @little_p3ngu1n Před 10 měsíci

    "steve had the defense stats of a vegetable" same

  • @ns2304
    @ns2304 Před měsícem

    How to tell me you were inspired by Bill Wurtz without telling me youre inspired by Bill Wurtz

  • @seyshgoburdhone7841
    @seyshgoburdhone7841 Před rokem +141

    As a Mauritian, I can confirm that this is what we’re taught at school too. Excluding the KFD part…but I wouldn’t be surprised if it would’ve been a thing today 😂

    • @val_thezesty
      @val_thezesty Před rokem +6

      help i read that as martian and I thought your comment was sarcastic

    • @akmallukita
      @akmallukita Před rokem +1

      so you have seen the dinosaur

    • @firemonkey1015
      @firemonkey1015 Před rokem

      Not sure the history of the place, but I guess even if the Dutch didn’t arrive, they’d be doomed regardless because other settlers like you would’ve arrived

    • @khoutakeshi7952
      @khoutakeshi7952 Před rokem

      I remember some kids were crying at a park once
      apparently they had found the "last dodo"
      it probably was only just a pigeon but the swollen head and beaks and small wing seems .eh
      ....

    • @majoritypatella2503
      @majoritypatella2503 Před rokem

      It is a thing, it's called Kentucky Fried Dog.
      I think Elwoods sells them.

  • @tvviewer4500
    @tvviewer4500 Před rokem +400

    It's amazing how close modern humans are to dodos

    • @edwardjohansson2909
      @edwardjohansson2909 Před rokem +44

      We do have machine guns and even though we lost our ability to fly a couple of generations ago, at least we have fighter jets that somewhat make up for it.

    • @minavane5533
      @minavane5533 Před rokem +6

      Unfortunetly.

    • @demon_spawn1535
      @demon_spawn1535 Před rokem +92

      @@edwardjohansson2909wait you lost your ability to fly? I still have it, though everyday those damn scientists try to say i’m “breaking the laws of gravity”

    • @kamelhaj6850
      @kamelhaj6850 Před rokem

      Extinction is looming!

    • @kira_queen
      @kira_queen Před rokem +8

      @@demon_spawn1535 💀

  • @katieneedy
    @katieneedy Před 10 měsíci +1

    The mating sound of a turtle💀

  • @luluequestrian2010
    @luluequestrian2010 Před měsícem

    I was literally OBSESSED with dodos growing up and i just loved how they were built and they looked so friendly… but then when i realised they were extinct i started crying. Imagine just having a dodo roaming around in your backyard

  • @jonathanfisher6644
    @jonathanfisher6644 Před rokem +173

    The only thing that I'm confused by is how the dodo lived for 4 million years predator free without over populating the island and running out of food.
    Since things like the deer in Yellowstone without wolves kinda destroyed the ecosystem

    • @alexanderchen1049
      @alexanderchen1049 Před rokem +27

      Perhaps they evolved the ability to regulate their population?

    • @fawziekefli2273
      @fawziekefli2273 Před rokem +118

      Because deer, for want of a better phrase, evolved _with_ their predators to keep them in check, in a land of scarce resources. A form of symbiosis, if you will. Remove one part of the equation, and it falls apart.
      Mauritius apparently was Mana Island, and the dodos couldn't consume enough resources to make a dent in the ecology; presumably because they evolved _with_ that ecology. My two cents, for what it's worth.

    • @futureanimator522
      @futureanimator522 Před rokem

      @@alexanderchen1049 it could be it wasn't bc of 4m years of evolution. It could be possible it was just the last type of birds their species mated with. In 4 mil year u really think that no others slowly added to their gene pool. Thru time I bet they kept adding different types of birds in their genes an then mutated to this point by the last gene of birds they mated with.

    • @jercasgav
      @jercasgav Před rokem +70

      If I recall correctly the dodos did not have a prolific amount of offspring. They replaced themselves more slowly so I think this made up for not having predators...basically they didn't breed like rabbits. This also was part of their downfall. Kind of like pandas, they suck at breeding too.

    • @tayyabnaveed2266
      @tayyabnaveed2266 Před rokem +39

      one of the reason could be that Dodo's main source of food came from high up in the tree and being flightless birds all they could do was wait for the fruit to fall. In a sense their population was regulated by trees and season.
      Which in contrast with the deer, their food source grew very close to where they could easily overgraze .... you get the idea

  • @GreatDudeF694
    @GreatDudeF694 Před rokem +36

    2:04 *ŤËÁH*

  • @YBRebel
    @YBRebel Před 8 měsíci +1

    i love the passive-aggression in this video

  • @M1XART
    @M1XART Před měsícem

    I remember reading that Dodo meat was not really tasty, but peoples eated it anyway all the time and didn't realise that this bird was only available on Mauritius and on small island next to it.

  • @MartinVlkMrnous
    @MartinVlkMrnous Před rokem +232

    Man, this is some brilliant stuff! ❤I didn't initially plan to watch the whole video, because I essentially know the story, but I stayed till the end and had a lot of fun. :D You've got a great sense of humor and I love the editing style. Keep it coming! :)

    • @JezaJames
      @JezaJames Před rokem +6

      Lol - you stayed to the end? Heroic effort considering it was 5 mins long. :)

    • @MartinVlkMrnous
      @MartinVlkMrnous Před rokem +8

      @@JezaJames Haha, yeah, I know. :D

    • @jamiehoward5538
      @jamiehoward5538 Před rokem +2

      I was thinking the same it was awesome proper funny

    • @Fred-mp1vf
      @Fred-mp1vf Před rokem

      Too bad none of it is true.

  • @Ram-Jo
    @Ram-Jo Před rokem +117

    This guy should do more videos of possible. The way he puts the info out is funny and easy to remember

    • @sayhowling
      @sayhowling Před rokem +6

      very true, i loled so hard when he said the rats spawnkilled the eggs lmao

    • @3to4characters
      @3to4characters Před rokem

      @@sayhowling right as I read that he said it

    • @Ram-Jo
      @Ram-Jo Před rokem

      @@3to4characters it's crazy how often I do that, read a comment as it's playing. DOES THAT MEAN WE'RE PSYCHIC!!! 🫠🫠

    • @3to4characters
      @3to4characters Před rokem

      @@Ram-Jo Nah, probably fate

  • @Baconia559
    @Baconia559 Před měsícem

    4:39 that picture killed me worse than riddle transfer 2 ending

  • @kentuckyfriedfarfetchd7317
    @kentuckyfriedfarfetchd7317 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Dude says that they didn't go extinct because they were dumb and slow, then continues to say that that's the exact reason why they went extinct.

  • @cleverbread
    @cleverbread Před rokem +230

    as a dodo myself, i can confirm that this is how we went extinct

  • @cormacmirshak2988
    @cormacmirshak2988 Před 10 měsíci

    “Steve had the defense stats of a fruit” bro took “you are what you eat” to another level.

  • @boudd5764
    @boudd5764 Před 11 měsíci

    Today I had to choose a topic for me and my group to talk about in a few days, but I completely forgot about this topic, man if I happened to remember this I would definitely choose it 😢

  • @Tonixman
    @Tonixman Před rokem +18

    "Uh oh! It's Europe!"
    Basically, world history in a nutshell. lol

  • @abinnohr6497
    @abinnohr6497 Před rokem +184

    I'm surprised at the other things people say they were told. I learned about Dodos on my own when I was in early grade school (early 2000's) through a biography on tv. I've always remembered something along the lines of "They became so comfortable and fearless because they didn't have any predators for so long, that they grew fat and were no longer able to flee once predators were introduced."
    I've always heard Dodos were dumb, but I know that's not why they died. They were gluttons who "had no worries" for too long, thus being too easy to kill. I don't really remember much else on the documentary. I do know that humans killed most nice things out there and continue to do so.

    • @nokia5359
      @nokia5359 Před rokem +3

      sounds like whats happening is US. kids have it so easy they have lost their ways.

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius Před rokem +5

      Once a species achieves pure peace, it's like an evil entity destroys them out of spite, like it wants to punish every living thing.

    • @anunknownperson4018
      @anunknownperson4018 Před rokem +1

      @@nokia5359right😂 humans lost their sense of survival for a long time

    • @astalavista_84
      @astalavista_84 Před rokem +3

      @@Tasorius yeah, it’s called nature

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius Před rokem +5

      @@astalavista_84 It seems to be an entity beyond nature, like a demon of pure malice that intentionally causes shit to happen...

  • @leahgames1585
    @leahgames1585 Před rokem +1

    I am Mauritian and this is the story of how the island was before and who came here 1st the Arabs but did not stay 2nd was the French there was francois leguat and his 7 companions (his friends im not sure about their name) they said that they came to mauritius to relax and escape from france so they can practise their daily prayer which i think was not really legal in france after that the british came more info at 50 likes

  • @OriginalUnknown-bt8wb
    @OriginalUnknown-bt8wb Před 7 dny +1

    The Dodo acts like me..I don't do flight or fight 😭

  • @mr_lander31
    @mr_lander31 Před rokem +180

    I appreciate the scientist for traveling back in time to record all of this

    • @HypnosisBear
      @HypnosisBear Před rokem +26

      As a scientist who traveled back in time to record this I'm very grateful that atleast someone shows appreciation.

    • @mr_lander31
      @mr_lander31 Před rokem +8

      @@HypnosisBear no problem 🙏🔥

    • @futile-evenings
      @futile-evenings Před rokem +4

      fairy tales for adults

    • @blahthebiste7924
      @blahthebiste7924 Před rokem +4

      @@futile-evenings Huh? You mean religion and spirituality?

    • @jacobrayhubbard4207
      @jacobrayhubbard4207 Před rokem +1

      This is great. The previous two replies are effing stupid. Original comment is gold 👌

  • @xxxd3adsh0t31
    @xxxd3adsh0t31 Před rokem +42

    As a Mauritian am Glad that, Mauritius’s symbol animal is getting more recognition

  • @sandramichaels9916
    @sandramichaels9916 Před 2 dny

    bro said that the swimming guy was hot😂

  • @Moipeach
    @Moipeach Před 9 měsíci

    How is this channel not famous I’m confused get this guy to 1Mill

  • @moonlitegram
    @moonlitegram Před rokem +803

    As a kid the story of the dodo was always framed within the context of human interference and the dangers of not being environmentally conscious. But I think your conclusion here is a far better takeaway from this story. If you stop challenging yourself and get complacent, you make yourself vulnerable. There are no guarantees in life and over the expanse of time the odds of an individual (or in this case, a species) facing a major challenge or threat will eventually hit 100%. Don't let the easy life lure you into being unprepared.

    • @wolfsongrising
      @wolfsongrising Před rokem +31

      very accurate for our current social climate

    • @Parents_of_Twins
      @Parents_of_Twins Před rokem

      Yeah it was human interference that led to the extinction of the Dodo. Kind of like how we're causing the extinction of the Polar bear and countless other species on this planet. The Dodo survived for millions of years longer than homo sapiens have been on this planet and maybe instead of blaming them for their extinction we should learn from the past before we cause our extinction.

    • @hoppinggnomethe4154
      @hoppinggnomethe4154 Před rokem +10

      Si vis pacem para bellum
      If you want peace, prepare for war
      This saying is still true to this day
      Every citizen around the world need to be able to defend themselves and know how to use weapons to keep peace

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Před rokem +79

      Your literally talking like evolution is a conscious choice.....

    • @JackhammerJesus
      @JackhammerJesus Před rokem +20

      What you are doing here is called "social darwinism".

  • @Dovecar388
    @Dovecar388 Před rokem +33

    Imagine not having the flight or fight reflex. Probably feels like heaven

  • @Titan-zc1kt
    @Titan-zc1kt Před 21 dnem

    When I clicked on this, I got a Chick-fil-A ad
    I thought this was the reason.

  • @user-ez2tq4vi8f
    @user-ez2tq4vi8f Před 7 dny

    I can't believe this video is 2 years old! I remember when it came out and blew up and made so many of us laugh while we learned. Cheers Reece and look forward to all you put out there :)

  • @lounirs
    @lounirs Před rokem +245

    I remember hearing different stories throughout the years. When I was really small, i was told that it was because the Dodo didn't reproduce enough because they were lazy. Then it was because they couldn't fly and we're totally eaten by other animals, and then, they were killed by humans

    • @ShadiaMohamed-nv7xe
      @ShadiaMohamed-nv7xe Před rokem +5

      Kuntucky fried dodo!!! lol

    • @Newport20
      @Newport20 Před rokem +1

      I was just told they were stupid, then I learned humans ate em from an episode of Wildkrats

    • @VideoDeadGaming
      @VideoDeadGaming Před rokem +1

      @@Newport20 Humans didn't eat them. Apparently their meat was horrible no matter how you cooked it.

    • @Newport20
      @Newport20 Před rokem

      @VideoDeadGaming oh my b. I just remember one of the villan dudes cooking them

    • @maitaimik
      @maitaimik Před rokem +1

      @@Newport20 They were eaten as a source of protein in the very early days of colonistion, just not a particularly tasty or flavoursome bird. After the introduction of the Madagascan Tenrec people preferred that to the Dodo.

  • @Galaxyszz
    @Galaxyszz Před rokem +32

    I love the “history of the entire world I guess” style, it makes it so good

  • @onevastanus
    @onevastanus Před 6 měsíci

    I think one hindrance the pigeons had was the mouse cursor on their wings.

  • @ignachiusss
    @ignachiusss Před 5 měsíci

    I'm getting an unsettling amount of history of japan in 8 minutes references in the way this video is edited

  • @BigBoyEvan247
    @BigBoyEvan247 Před rokem +33

    Sailors actually noted that the Dodos were fast and they'd often hurt the men trying to hunt them

    • @LeoTheYuty
      @LeoTheYuty Před rokem +2

      *bite, really doubt they'd actually cause harm besides the painful bite

    • @BigBoyEvan247
      @BigBoyEvan247 Před rokem +17

      @@LeoTheYuty Biting, clawing. I phrased it weirdly, but I meant to write that dodo's would hurt men hunting them

    • @LeoTheYuty
      @LeoTheYuty Před rokem

      @@invalleria perhaps

    • @priya8855
      @priya8855 Před rokem

      @Leo the Yuty perhaps?Bruh people literally died due to dog bites at that time

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Před rokem

      @@LeoTheYuty theyhve very large beaks an that could do some damage. Ever been killed in the balls.

  • @Dark-28200
    @Dark-28200 Před rokem +58

    I wish they still existed because they seem amazing

    • @blinking_dodo
      @blinking_dodo Před rokem +4

      Yeah, i have a small dodo puppet sitting next to me.
      But i heard some genetic science lab wanted to restore the dodo's...
      *Soon the dodo's will be back, and you shall fear them*

    • @unapersona8352
      @unapersona8352 Před rokem +1

      @@blinking_dodo ready to yeet them just like in Ark

    • @thewisehermit9256
      @thewisehermit9256 Před rokem

      Or delicious honestly the Dutch were the dumbest people ever not to think that a bird that is big and fat that does not run away from you would not be a good farm animal.

    • @beholddaempathyangel
      @beholddaempathyangel Před rokem

      Yeah, I wonder how they tasted...single one would've been great

    • @Yeah--mn9qk
      @Yeah--mn9qk Před rokem

      They'd probably get treated like chickens & turkeys

  • @jaymemengoni1130
    @jaymemengoni1130 Před 9 dny

    Saying the rats "were literally spawnkilling their eggs" was awesome.

  • @superhunterplayz
    @superhunterplayz Před rokem

    Velociraptor: Finally someone my size so I don’t get 1 shotted😅

  • @ShadowOfMachines
    @ShadowOfMachines Před rokem +44

    There probably would be dodo farms if they hadn't gone extinct when they did. You'd have to breed some fear back into them to help them survive off the island, but people have been pretty good at that kind of thing with most critters.

    • @lolkhars3525
      @lolkhars3525 Před rokem +14

      According to some accounts. They didn't taste nice

    • @personal9372
      @personal9372 Před rokem +8

      @@lolkhars3525 well there goes that KFD

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 Před rokem +2

      @@lolkhars3525 Main issue was the greasiness according to accounts. Just thoroughly drain the grease when cooking. Also, the eggs were probably fine.

    • @taleladar
      @taleladar Před rokem +13

      I think the fact that they didn't run or fly away, and you could just walk up to them and do pretty much whatever you wanted means they would have been the easiest animal in the world to keep as livestock. Like.. the most domesticated animal in existence, from birth with no training necessary at all. Too bad they weren't captured, protected, and raised as such.

    • @aaronlaughter6471
      @aaronlaughter6471 Před rokem +5

      @@lolkhars3525 I mean just add some herbs and spices you cowards.

  • @Born_Again_On_The_Mountain
    @Born_Again_On_The_Mountain Před rokem +285

    I am so sad about Steve and his friends. Good news they are bringing the Dodo back from extinction!

    • @LeoTheYuty
      @LeoTheYuty Před rokem +51

      We haven't brought back anything from extinction successful, should probably wait until they bring back the mammoth before assuming the thylacine, dodo, and cave lion have a chance.

    • @arandomguyontheinternet132
      @arandomguyontheinternet132 Před rokem +26

      @engineer gaming Correction: probably great great great great great great grandchildren

    • @JezaJames
      @JezaJames Před rokem +11

      @@LeoTheYuty YOu haven't seen the news. They're planning to do it. Underway.

    • @Top10WizardReviews
      @Top10WizardReviews Před rokem +31

      Geneticists have been talking about bringing back extinct animals using biogenetic manipulation for quite some time and it's been "underway" for years. My guess is that the major issue would be the changing of the RNA in Earth's virome. Any newly revived species would probably be poorly equipped to handle modern viruses, but this is just my theory as to the complications involved. I also assume it would be a painstakingly complicated task to genetically modify their immune systems to cope, but that is just an assumption. Of course there are many other implications that would lead one to believe an extinct species wouldn't last long if it were brought back - considering it went extinct in the first place. However this differs when dealing with animals that were recently hunted to extinction as I imagine their immune systems could potentially be ok.

    • @LeoTheYuty
      @LeoTheYuty Před rokem +22

      @@JezaJames I have seen the news. It's pretty clear they're just trying to go viral before they have any idea how they're going to do it.