Should we be killing (and eating) invasive species?

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • Wild hogs are destroying everything in Texas, and around the world many ecosystems face similar problems. Is killing invasive species and serving them for dinner the best solution?
    #planeta #invasiveanimals #hoghunting
    We're destroying our environment at an alarming rate. But it doesn't need to be this way. Our new channel Planet A explores the shift towards an eco-friendly world - and challenges our ideas about what dealing with climate change means. We look at the big and the small: What we can do and how the system needs to change. Every Friday we'll take a truly global look at how to get us out of this mess.
    Follow Planet A on TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@dw_planeta?la...
    Credits:
    Reporter: Amanda Coulson-Drasner
    Camera: Ryan Dowling
    Video Editor(s): Amanda Coulson-Drasner
    Supervising Editor: Michael Trobridge, Malte Rohwer-Kahlmann
    Many thanks to Dai Due restaurant in Austin, Texas, and to Kurt Wilkin, owner of Skol Ranch.
    Read more:
    Feral hogs in Texas:
    feralhogs.tamu.edu/
    Feral hogs in USA:
    www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/t...
    Invasive lionfish:
    www.fisheries.noaa.gov/southe...
    Invasive species around the world (IPBES Report):
    www.ipbes.net/IASmediarelease
    100 of the world’s worst invasive species: portals.iucn.org/library/site...
    Chapters:
    Intro: 00:00
    Hog history: 00:54
    Other invasive species: 02:56
    Hunting: 04:16
    Other methods: 06:25
    Cooking and eating: 07:01
    Conclusion: 10:13

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @DWPlanetA
    @DWPlanetA  Před 28 dny +367

    Should we eat invasive species?

  • @ger5956
    @ger5956 Před 27 dny +1831

    Personally I think encouraging people to eat invasive species is an excellent way of helping, I hope this idea continues to grow and spread.

    • @Juminten-bv1xw
      @Juminten-bv1xw Před 27 dny +48

      like indonesia and other developed country . many fish that considered invasive species in another country just food for other people

    • @greatveemon2
      @greatveemon2 Před 27 dny

      heart diseases here we come
      why don't we just give them to a zoo to feed them on carnivores or something?

    • @ab-td7gq
      @ab-td7gq Před 27 dny

      It's mainly animal agriculture that is causing a imbalance in ecosystems and eating invasive species will not even feed 0.01% of the global population.

    • @kanding3369
      @kanding3369 Před 26 dny +27

      Theres one invasive species, a big one occupying every single continent? Guess which one😂

    • @user-hz7hk4hm8f
      @user-hz7hk4hm8f Před 25 dny +15

      ​@@kanding3369 it's good idea then, to use those invasive species to deal with another invasive species

  • @someasiandude4797
    @someasiandude4797 Před 27 dny +1305

    Ironic that we accidentally make things nearly extinct by hunting and then cant purposefully kill the thing we want to die

    • @Zednor9
      @Zednor9 Před 26 dny +98

      Not really, those are two very different groups of people.
      The people that are hunting things to extinction have no problem also hunting invasive species.
      It's the people that distance themselves from that part of the food chain, either entirely by going vegan or by simply avoiding looking at how their meat is made that have trouble killing invasive species.

    • @mitchellcorona8
      @mitchellcorona8 Před 25 dny +35

      You are both clearly non hunters and haven't interacted with hunters much.

    • @matthew3136
      @matthew3136 Před 25 dny +62

      @@mitchellcorona8 Exactly. As a hunter, I know that "feral" hogs are intentionally allowed to continue purely as a sport hunting pleasure business.

    • @AndyViant
      @AndyViant Před 25 dny +31

      Usually it's regulations preventing people from hunting that do that.
      We have massive numbers of feral deer, feral pigs, feral horses and feral goats where I live and minimal opportunities to hunt them. Much of this is due to pressure put on by supermarket chains to prevent people harvesting their own food.

    • @phaedrussmith1949
      @phaedrussmith1949 Před 24 dny +4

      I would say that is less ironic, and more pathological.

  • @DoozyyTV
    @DoozyyTV Před 27 dny +872

    Here in the Netherlands crayfish are an invasive species but catching them is illegal, doesn't make sense.

    • @bbd121
      @bbd121 Před 26 dny +32

      Which species is the crayfish? There are many different types within the same family. Maybe it's one that doesn't outcompete the local wildlife? Or maybe it's one that replaces a local crayfish that's already extinct in the area?

    • @critterjon4061
      @critterjon4061 Před 25 dny +82

      @@bbd121 the red swamp crayfish

    • @blu0065
      @blu0065 Před 25 dny +11

      maybe the hunting does a lot of damage to the local ecosystem?
      I don't know. I'm not familiar with the subject matter.

    • @bbd121
      @bbd121 Před 25 dny +7

      @@critterjon4061 Thank you. I've found a couple of articles regarding that. It's really interesting.

    • @p.ipebomb
      @p.ipebomb Před 24 dny +54

      They're indigenous to USA and we make spicy Crawfish Boil 🌶️ even though y'all Europeans say we have no cuisine

  • @rdapigleo
    @rdapigleo Před 27 dny +402

    A couple of German doctors studying camel populations in Australia said, “The only way to decimate a natural population is to make a human industry of it.”

    • @silverbird425
      @silverbird425 Před 21 dnem +8

      tastes better than chicken!

    • @hcn6708
      @hcn6708 Před 20 dny +15

      Until hunters have a vested interest in maintaining camel numbers

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 18 dny

      If anything, there could at least be a market for camel hides

    • @ebrimajallow9631
      @ebrimajallow9631 Před 18 dny +1

      Camel in Australia? What?

    • @hcn6708
      @hcn6708 Před 18 dny +12

      @@ebrimajallow9631 The British brought camels to cross the deserts, but then cars made them obsolete.
      But, instead of culling them like a responsible person would do, they released them

  • @levismith7444
    @levismith7444 Před 27 dny +456

    Wild hogs are a problem in Florida too but on the bright side it’s given the struggling Florida panther a new food source

    • @p.ipebomb
      @p.ipebomb Před 24 dny +23

      Bro A Florida Panther is just a mountain Puma/Lion in California and the rest of North America 😂 We need to settle on one name

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +37

      I wonder if bob cats hunt feral hogs
      Edit, just looked it up. They only, rarely, hunt piglets. These hogs are so aggressive even bobcats don't want a part. That's saying something.

    • @007kingifrit
      @007kingifrit Před 24 dny +1

      is this a sports ball reference? like your rival team is the panthers but they're still better than the hogs?

    • @lansken
      @lansken Před 23 dny +3

      ​@@azerial Introduce 🦁 and 🐅 😊

    • @levismith7444
      @levismith7444 Před 23 dny +18

      @@p.ipebomb it would be ridiculous to call the Florida panther a mountain lion since there’s no mountains in Florida 😂

  • @stephaniemcginness784
    @stephaniemcginness784 Před 27 dny +183

    This makes me wonder if another issue Texas has (and lots of the US) is that a lot of animals higher up the ecosystem food chain are gone or endangered like wolves. I’d be curious to see how wild hogs faired if these ecosystems were more well rounded.

    • @ThePizzaGoblin
      @ThePizzaGoblin Před 27 dny +17

      That's what i was thinking. I bet alligators would love these things

    • @viewer-of-content
      @viewer-of-content Před 27 dny +49

      Jaguars would have been the natural top of the Texas food chain. but like the rest of the southwest they were systematically eradicated to protect cattle ranchers herds. Arizona is their last remaining u.s. territory and only a couple still live there

    • @chubbstrevino1354
      @chubbstrevino1354 Před 26 dny +3

      A growth in large predators also increase predation on livestock. since a lot of pigs are on grazing ranch land, ranchers prefer to kill large predators with an abrasive fixation on the idea. So much so that I know ranchers that prefer to hunt the large cats that wander onto their property.

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +1

      ​@@ThePizzaGoblinbut then alligators would then, themselves, be invasive. You can't bring in another species to eradicate an invasive species. It just doesn't work.

    • @ThePizzaGoblin
      @ThePizzaGoblin Před 24 dny +11

      @@azerial who said anything about importing alligators? I know I didn't. They're native to huge swathes of the south. You know that, right?

  • @anameglass1607
    @anameglass1607 Před 28 dny +170

    I eat vegetarian. Hogs eat tubers, that's vegetarian enough for me. Now, where my barbeque sauce?

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +24

      I think there's something to be said for eating sustainable food vs factory farmed food. These hogs are a detriment to the environment, so by eating them, you are actually helping the environment.

    • @bluesteel8376
      @bluesteel8376 Před 23 dny +13

      Hogs will eat pretty much anything. That is the reason why they are doing so well. They are omnivores and will eat meat if they can get it.

    • @DarkMark-cf1ec
      @DarkMark-cf1ec Před 17 dny

      thank god your infection is at stage 1, please find a doctor immeadietly and start eating meat to hold off the "slay queen, crystal girl, lesbian thats also vegan with lots of tattoos and being into buddhism" sickness that sounds extremely sterotypical

  • @RScamble
    @RScamble Před 22 dny +48

    Yes...We used to have a problem with an apple snail invasion in a rice paddy. The government encourages people to eat it and now it's not a problem anymore.

    • @lewis8247
      @lewis8247 Před 17 dny +1

      which country is this?

    • @whitegold2960
      @whitegold2960 Před 8 dny

      From the con tree it of the video and the rice farms probably china

  • @zettaiengineer4202
    @zettaiengineer4202 Před 27 dny +98

    We don't have to eat every one killed, incorporate into pet food or farmed fish feed.

    • @robertmiller3529
      @robertmiller3529 Před 17 dny +7

      Or, like mentioned in the video, let scavengers have the ones you can't eat

    • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180
      @iandavidvillaloboswong5180 Před 17 dny +9

      ​@@robertmiller3529 Overfeeding scavengers is a horrible idea

    • @SilentBeaver
      @SilentBeaver Před 15 dny +4

      @@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 It depends how many we don't eat.

  • @emilyarchibald1900
    @emilyarchibald1900 Před 28 dny +243

    It would have been interesting to hear about edible invasive plant species as well.

    • @BloodAsp
      @BloodAsp Před 27 dny +23

      That made me look up some, and apparently kudzu, one of the mile a minute vines, is edible!
      One I know off the top of my head is: Dandelions are edible. They are not typically considered invasive as they do not out compete natives, but they are a foreign introduced species to North America.

    • @NotUwU-_-
      @NotUwU-_- Před 27 dny +1

      Grass?

    • @BloodAsp
      @BloodAsp Před 27 dny +1

      @@NotUwU-_- corn and other grains are edible, and their byproducts go to feeding livestock. I suggest planting something other than grass as a lawn if you are going for empty edibility.

    • @davidblair9877
      @davidblair9877 Před 27 dny +8

      Wild mustard is one of California's most destructive invasive species. It's also bloody delicious.

    • @tijsvanlaere3845
      @tijsvanlaere3845 Před 27 dny +1

      The Reynoutria japonica is an invasive species in my country (Belguim), the young tops have the least worst taste, and are the most important to take out the enegi out of it. I hope you are something with it.

  • @paytonturner1421
    @paytonturner1421 Před 28 dny +76

    I think it's important that we as humans are more cautious and careful when we introduce an animal to a new environment because the consequences can have both negatives and positives for the animal It comes in a tuning environment.

    • @lolidasterner414
      @lolidasterner414 Před 27 dny +15

      Problem is that many of those invasions were by mistake that were left unattended.

    • @paytonturner1421
      @paytonturner1421 Před 27 dny +1

      @@lolidasterner414 Yeah, I know but most of the time it's us humans being uncareful when it comes to the environment.

    • @olliesworder1146
      @olliesworder1146 Před 27 dny +9

      But many of these are unintentional too - ballast water from massive ships has led to certain sea urchins becoming global, and the lionfish spread due to global warming primarily, not an intentional human activity. unfortunately, we have to be careful about everything we do! More money into ecology and conservation, and more care around global travel etc

    • @paytonturner1421
      @paytonturner1421 Před 26 dny +2

      @@olliesworder1146 I guess seeing where you're getting at. It's important to know that animals have a specific role in their ecosystem and not to upset the balance that they have a role in.

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +1

      Right. Don't release your pets into the wilderness.

  • @hanklean9773
    @hanklean9773 Před 22 dny +32

    King Crabs seems like a pretty delicious invasive to have....

    • @remote3652
      @remote3652 Před 8 dny

      right!

    • @JJ-ki6sv
      @JJ-ki6sv Před 6 dny

      That's why the russians moved them. Now they're destroying the environment there. It'll be fixed pretty easily once the fishery gets big.

  • @homo-sapiens-dubium
    @homo-sapiens-dubium Před 27 dny +173

    Controversial opinion: Paying influencers to promote eating those species might be the most effective dollars spent to reduce numbers in the wild.

    • @zurielsss
      @zurielsss Před 24 dny +7

      Reduce influencers ? I am in support

    • @nefreston8503
      @nefreston8503 Před 23 dny +31

      Influencers are also kind of an invasive species

    • @Moribus_Artibus
      @Moribus_Artibus Před 23 dny

      @@zurielsssno no no, he means reducing the number of wild hogs by having popular celebrities promote them as a dinner option.

    • @prashanthb6521
      @prashanthb6521 Před 23 dny +2

      Totally agree

    • @homo-sapiens-dubium
      @homo-sapiens-dubium Před 22 dny

      @@nefreston8503 hot iron right there, theyre basic humans first and foremost, we all need attention, are greedy from time to time, how to deal with these things in a healthy way is the question imo, apart from that were quite similar. No need to dehumanize imo.

  • @theysisossenthime
    @theysisossenthime Před 27 dny +106

    My concern is that the people eating the invasive species will not let the populations die out completely. They will find reasons why the populations are "in control" or "very small" enough to justify letting them breed to larger numbers again. If these species are actually causing human harm, that would be quite the ethical gray line.

    • @thehoundGOT
      @thehoundGOT Před 27 dny +26

      This is the case for Deer in New Zealand. They decimate native forests and have no enemies and are pests but hunters will never get on board to eradicate them totally.

    • @redrockcrf4663
      @redrockcrf4663 Před 27 dny +9

      @@thehoundGOT Remember Rodney SPCIFICALLY suggested we eat threatened species, arguing that we would never let a cash resource run out! So clearly different people have different ideas. And now people don't even watn the Tar eliminated. What's next, sympathy for stoats?

    • @NewAge374
      @NewAge374 Před 27 dny +9

      That's a very concerning point. The restaurant in this video would like to receive feral hogs in steady supplies for the next few years or decades. So they wouldn't be too happy with the entire population being hunted in one season. Controlling populations up to a point doesn't mean that they stop being invasive and affect ecosystems, just that we humans consider the impact manageable.

    • @NewAge374
      @NewAge374 Před 26 dny +4

      ​@@SeeNickView Excellent point also that went by unmentioned in this video. No surprise that Texas prefers guns over wolves.
      If anyone reads this and feels Texan, what are you doing about it?

    • @cangevendi
      @cangevendi Před 26 dny

      @@redrockcrf4663 I don't think so, I would argue greed for short term gains will outweigh desire to conserve. That's why we have species already hunted to extinction.

  • @drpk6514
    @drpk6514 Před 23 dny +18

    In dumb Queensland Australia we are not allowed to fish and eat the invasive carp and tilapia because they think this would encourage people to transfer them to other places (they are everywhere).

    • @nicklibby3784
      @nicklibby3784 Před 20 dny

      So there solution is to do *_nothing_* and let the environment be damaged?

    • @Blackstar-yd3yf
      @Blackstar-yd3yf Před 18 dny +6

      Australia is a police state what do you expect? Rights ?

    • @drpk6514
      @drpk6514 Před 17 dny

      @@Blackstar-yd3yf Meanwhile the savage kids destroyed our unoccupied property and the police did nothing. The neybougrs called police and took over 15 min for the police to arrive.

  • @Kylelongwest
    @Kylelongwest Před 27 dny +24

    I used to eat it a couple of times. My mom cooked it in sour stew with water spinach. The meat and skin are tough, cooking it takes time

    • @NotoriousPyro
      @NotoriousPyro Před 27 dny +1

      Probably needs to be cured first... maybe a dry brine or failing that wet brine...

    • @viewer-of-content
      @viewer-of-content Před 27 dny +8

      cut into 1in cubes, use a pressure cooker, and put in a can of pineapple on top of the meat cubes so the bottom of the pressure pot doesn't scorch them. Id make pulled pork hog all the time if i had much. Add home made BBQ sauce after the pressure cooker. I make pulled pork shoulder and chili all the time, but I don't get as much wild hog pork as store pork. 55-65min in an 8qt instant pot

    • @beth8775
      @beth8775 Před 18 dny

      So perfect for bbq?

    • @Springwater475
      @Springwater475 Před 17 dny +1

      You clearly haven’t had the tenderloin

  • @YoJesusMorales
    @YoJesusMorales Před 27 dny +40

    Probably inefficient if they aren't killed/processed as close as possible to a population center, but if they are delicious why wouldn't you add them to the regional diet?

    • @thaddaeusareswolf
      @thaddaeusareswolf Před 26 dny

      That's the cool thing about Texas there are multiple population centers that can eat the pigs. They where an hour outside of Austin that's a million plus people city. These pigs are literally everywhere in the state.

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny

      They aren't close to population centers. I mean what is your concept of close? These hogs like the brush, not busy city landscapes. Research the facts.

    • @hcn6708
      @hcn6708 Před 20 dny +1

      Refrigeration is cool

    • @georgesakellaropoulos8162
      @georgesakellaropoulos8162 Před 18 dny +3

      Most people who hunt them will use them as a food source, but you can only eat so much. What the hunters and their families will eat won't make a dent in the population, so, if they're going to be eaten, there has to be some commercialization.

    • @mallardofmodernia8092
      @mallardofmodernia8092 Před 18 dny +1

      ​@@georgesakellaropoulos8162they're around farmland so could use it for bait against other pests, or fish bait or ground down as livestock feed.

  • @DeadeyeJedi85
    @DeadeyeJedi85 Před 27 dny +28

    All in all, great video, but I'm surprised, and a little disappointed, that the prevalence of Swine Brucellosis wasn't mentioned as one of the issues in eating wild hogs. My understanding is that cooking it well enough removes the risk, but given how widespread it is in wild hogs in the U.S., I would have loved to have heard more about it here.

    • @matteoorlandi856
      @matteoorlandi856 Před 24 dny

      In Italy there Is AN out break of swine pest and yup, it's a huge problem but the politicians are too cowards to admit that the hogs must go.

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +4

      Interesting. I wonder how many hunters are using ppe. Obviously the food is being cooked, so that's not the issue. The issue is for the hunters and the butchers. I am interested in what percentage cdc has detected this bacteria.

  • @matt45540
    @matt45540 Před 27 dny +151

    Remember your outdoor cats are an invasive species too

    • @doctortomato9520
      @doctortomato9520 Před 27 dny +20

      But I bet they dont taste too good :(

    • @ericliu5491
      @ericliu5491 Před 26 dny +1

      Troll

    • @alexeitheswiss7378
      @alexeitheswiss7378 Před 25 dny +6

      @@doctortomato9520Here where I live cats and dogs used to be a food source for the poor up until the 1920ies.

    • @matt45540
      @matt45540 Před 25 dny +13

      @@SeeNickView it's not the domestication that's the issue, if you have a tiger in your living room it's not actually harming the environment outside of your house. But when you let it go it will.

    • @capriceranana5733
      @capriceranana5733 Před 24 dny +8

      ​@@doctortomato9520
      Cats where called fake hare or roof bunny after WW2 in Germany. You don't even have to be creative with the seasoning, at least this is what my grandma told me.

  • @Richard-gy1pq
    @Richard-gy1pq Před 26 dny +12

    100% Australia has ferral invasive pests. Its crazy to not be eating these things.

    • @mvm5439
      @mvm5439 Před 17 dny

      Agreed! Since when is eatting rabbits not a good idea?

    • @lieutenantkettch
      @lieutenantkettch Před 15 dny

      If only cane toads were delicious.

    • @Richard-gy1pq
      @Richard-gy1pq Před 14 dny

      Cane toad legs taste like chicken 👍

  • @sandraleung7218
    @sandraleung7218 Před 27 dny +10

    What about the elephant in the room: feral cats and dogs? They are the most destructive invasive vertebrates, especially cats, with the highest extinction kill counts.
    Cats and dogs are the most challenging invaders to deal with - because people love them.

    • @bluesteel8376
      @bluesteel8376 Před 23 dny +5

      Yep, you nailed it. Because they are so loved, people won't allow them to be controlled.

  • @SisterSunny
    @SisterSunny Před 27 dny +65

    I like the idea that it'll replace industrial meat, because that certainly is ONE way to keep the carnivores happy but sustainable

    • @synaestesia-bg3ew
      @synaestesia-bg3ew Před 20 dny +3

      However, the industrial meat makers will have a surplus of older pork and won't sell many.

    • @nohsekavich
      @nohsekavich Před 19 dny +5

      @@synaestesia-bg3ew isnt that kinda the point? not supporting the meat industry because of how harmful it is?

    • @dogguy8603
      @dogguy8603 Před 19 dny +3

      It will in no way replace the meat industry

    • @mallardofmodernia8092
      @mallardofmodernia8092 Před 18 dny

      ​@@synaestesia-bg3ewso then they downsize and then traditional grassfed farms will become popular again which is healthier for consumption and can support other local wildlife if done correctly. Industrial farms are not good for the consumer on the whole.

    • @ScheelAngel
      @ScheelAngel Před 16 dny

      Aren’t cats like the only significant pet humans have that are carnivores? I know they cause environmental trouble but I doubt it takes THAT much meat

  • @deebarnard5439
    @deebarnard5439 Před 28 dny +32

    Perfectly ethical.
    And makes economic and ecological sense.

  • @treefarm3288
    @treefarm3288 Před 22 dny +6

    Unfortunately wild pigs (domestic pigs gone wild) are terrible in Queensland , estimated at 10 million. Its not legal to sell them for food, though. You can eat them yourself only. As was shown, hunting alerts them. Only trapping works, and it can take months to entice them into the trap. We also have large national parks, where hunting of any kind is forbidden. So they are getting worse. Thanks for covering this topic. After reading another comment I can add that Australia doesn't have any large predators which could prey on wild pigs.

  • @Suspectnumber203
    @Suspectnumber203 Před 21 dnem +30

    The problem is that many invasive species, like the chickens in Hawaii, don’t taste very good so people don’t hunt them. This is why invasive species have spread so much, even though many of them were normally eaten.

    • @paolotorres8537
      @paolotorres8537 Před 6 dny +1

      Why wouldn’t chickens taste good? Don’t all chicken taste the same?

    • @Suspectnumber203
      @Suspectnumber203 Před 6 dny

      @@paolotorres8537 the thing is, they have adapted to get tougher meat to survive, also, their diet is different, so their not as big and fatty as a normal chicken

    • @paolotorres8537
      @paolotorres8537 Před 6 dny

      @@Suspectnumber203 then how are we able to eat ducks? I don’t think we raise them the same way chickens are raised

    • @Suspectnumber203
      @Suspectnumber203 Před 6 dny

      @@paolotorres8537 because ducks are different then chickens both biologically and care wise

  • @okwaleedpoetry
    @okwaleedpoetry Před 24 dny +9

    the pig, fish, even crab meat...it's all similar to what we consume now. I feel like invasive species on a insect level gets not attention

    • @nicklibby3784
      @nicklibby3784 Před 20 dny +1

      People don't want to eat insects

    • @NUNYABIDDY1
      @NUNYABIDDY1 Před 18 dny +1

      Invasive insects get loads of attention. They are one of the primary reasons for customs and import regulations around plant materials like fruit. Nowhere wants to import somewhere else's agricultural pest.

    • @NUNYABIDDY1
      @NUNYABIDDY1 Před 18 dny

      ​@@nicklibby3784 if they are big enough, I say why not? A big grasshopper is basically just a land prawnn. Also grasshoppers eat plants and not detritus like some of the other arthropods we eat (crabs). Folks eat crawfish that live in nasty mud, while grasshoppers just live on and around plants. So why not fry up some grasshoppers?

  • @nawarath
    @nawarath Před 13 dny +5

    When I was young we had locust problem from time to time in Thailand... As soon as people found out that it tastes good once deep fried, the price went up like crazy and we had no locust since...

  • @Ant86744
    @Ant86744 Před 27 dny +11

    You can have a reverse effect by allowing people to eat and hunt them for sport. People keep allowing a small amount to keep breeding for the next hunt

    • @NewAge374
      @NewAge374 Před 27 dny +6

      Pheasant in the UK are invasive and are gobbling up resources for native fowl as well as being less picky eaters: populations of reptiles and amphibians are at risk because of them.
      Still, they are bred in captivity to be released in massive quantities for sport hunters. This form of ¨outdoor sports¨ is a business and the people profitting from it wouldn't want it to go away.,

    • @bluesteel8376
      @bluesteel8376 Před 23 dny +3

      Yes, that is a down side, but there is no motivation/money to control the species if you don't allow them to be hunted.

    • @NewAge374
      @NewAge374 Před 23 dny

      @@bluesteel8376 Nonono you don't get it: they are bred solely for the purpose of being hunted for sport.
      When you stop the breeding (and finish off the remaining population) you're done in a few years.

    • @FalconfromRF
      @FalconfromRF Před 21 dnem +1

      And same happens if species is banned to be kept as pet.

    • @rockhavenfarms7213
      @rockhavenfarms7213 Před 7 dny +2

      Same here in south Africa with bass species so the government made it illegal to release bass, there is no such thing as "catch and release" with bass here it's a hectic fine and ALL equipment will be take as evidence and destroyed after the trial. This includes any boat and or tow vehicle....
      If you go fishing I any public or natural waterway in south africa and catch any fish from the sunfish family you are legally required to remove the fish regardless of size.

  • @akuwiyadzeclifford5817
    @akuwiyadzeclifford5817 Před 21 dnem +4

    This is not a question where i come from.
    We eat EVERYTHING!

  • @bukenyaephraim771
    @bukenyaephraim771 Před 18 dny +2

    At exactly 3:19 I was shocked for a second that the expert was literally describing Humans. We are behaving like an Invesive species. In my local language we have a proverb that translates to something like "Worms are so stupid that they infect and kill their own host" meaning that If the worms were wise, they would at least preserve their host so that they can live for longer. But the moment the host dies, so do the worms. As humans, we are behaving like clueless worms. Taking more and more from the earth than it can actually give. Sort of like the Hogs.

  • @DrJohnnyJ
    @DrJohnnyJ Před 18 dny +2

    There are 9.000 tigers in captivity in Texas and Texans can't think of a way to get rid of hogs.

    • @vectra9_957
      @vectra9_957 Před 18 dny +1

      9000 tigers out of captivity would be wild for the civvies

    • @IndominusRex-wc1ey
      @IndominusRex-wc1ey Před 17 dny

      ​@@vectra9_9579000 Tigers that should also be back in Asia mind you

  • @Vizible21
    @Vizible21 Před 27 dny +24

    I'm a vegetarian and these animals eat my vegetable. So I'm ok with this.

  • @richarddr1234
    @richarddr1234 Před 19 dny +4

    I don't know why the title of the video even frames it as a debatable issue. It should be a no-brainer. You don't see commercially viable "invasives" become issues in 3rd world countries where people would just make use of what got imported.

    • @rockhavenfarms7213
      @rockhavenfarms7213 Před 7 dny +1

      Haha yeah here in south Africa the only invasive animals you will find are either really really hard to catch or they truly cannot be eaten.

  • @fl00fydragon
    @fl00fydragon Před 19 dny +2

    I mean lack of predation IS the problem here, so having the apex predator of the planet, us humans, predate it is a viable solution.

  • @kendelion
    @kendelion Před 18 dny +1

    Imagine something saying the same thing to Humans.
    We're invasive and destructive in any place we go, more than any other species.

  • @fishyerik
    @fishyerik Před 26 dny +3

    Some incentive besides control/eradication alone tends to help control/eradication efforts a lot. A potential problem with incentives is when the benefit becomes so great that people start to protect it. The fishing of red king crab is regulated in Norwegian waters where it's common, which according to some sources is done to preserve a population large enough to maintain fishers interest, and that would somehow prevent further spread.
    There are other examples with much more severe [known] negative consequences, where the invasive species are protected by the local government, worst example that comes to mind is the Nile perch in Lake Victoria.

  • @nevarran
    @nevarran Před 28 dny +11

    What? What kind of question is that? Of course you should eat the animals if you kill them.

  • @bernardweaver2416
    @bernardweaver2416 Před 16 dny +2

    Eating invasive plants and animals seems like a no brainer

  • @truthfulpenguin
    @truthfulpenguin Před 19 dny +1

    In my state, Autumn Olive and Wineberries are 2 invasive plants that take over huge swaths of land if given the chance. When I lead hikes about sustainable foraging, I always make sure to mention that you should NOT harvest invasive species sustainably. Eat as many as you want, + some.
    Last year, we we spent about 30 minutes pigging out on more autumn olive than 8 people should ever have any business eating, and we're doing the same early summer with wineberry.
    Find out about invasive edible plants in your area and go demon mode on them. Jams, jellies, pies, literally anything you can think of, the world is yours.

  • @fv6125
    @fv6125 Před 23 dny +10

    In the Philippines, we have cane toads from Central America. The species was introduced in the Philippines in the 1930s, as a pest control method in sugar cane plantations.

    • @beth8775
      @beth8775 Před 18 dny +3

      Google says cane toads are edible. Cane toad Adobo?

    • @crhoades555
      @crhoades555 Před 17 dny +1

      Aren’t they poisonous and hallucinogenic.

  • @papajohnsdeer
    @papajohnsdeer Před 26 dny +14

    is it just me or is the chef a total smoke show 🥵

    • @Painguine
      @Painguine Před 26 dny +4

      they usually are

    • @YourPiggestFan
      @YourPiggestFan Před 26 dny

      @@Painguine amen

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny +2

      In my experience, in kitchens, they are SUPER hot, but with that hotness comes with a shit ton of emotional damage and baggage. You ever watched the bear, that scene where he cooks in his sleep and almost burns down his apartment? Yu

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny

      To iterate on that point, things must always be perfect, but it's life and they won't be, so it's a refire. I watched my chef use a mandolin with a tiny object, no glove. Sharpen his knife daily. Massive respect, but i think I'd have a hard time dating one that was as dedicated to the Art as he was.

    • @mahbuddykeith1124
      @mahbuddykeith1124 Před 13 dny +1

      As one former professional cook, don’t. You’d go “I can fix him”, but chefs don’t want to get better; they want to get worse. The industry eats you alive.

  • @omikamiz568
    @omikamiz568 Před 21 dnem +2

    Here in SEA, we can guarantee the effectiveness of this strategy. Now our big problem is that their number have been reduce so much that we have to make farm for them to raise their number up to meet the demand of market. And this ain't just one species but many of them too. Back then around 20-30 years ago we have trouble with Locust but now they are basically flying jumping gold mine.

  • @TheTrumpReaper
    @TheTrumpReaper Před 16 dny +1

    I live in California and there are feral pigs _everywhere._ Up north there are feral nutria as well. There's a company (I have forgotten in which state) that turns invasive species meat into dog and cat food, which is another practical use for them. Anyhow, weren't feral pigs imported into CA by deadbrains who wanted to eat them?

  • @Suburp212
    @Suburp212 Před 27 dny +18

    Are politicians considered invasive?

  • @roiblack8587
    @roiblack8587 Před 27 dny +16

    Hunting and eating is an option. But what about a contraceptive for those feral hogs? Could that be possible? To develop a drug which farmers and hunters could lay out, hogs would gobble them up and don´t have so many piglets any more? Because controlling them throgh hunting ain´t gonna work in the long run.

    • @richardhaselwood9478
      @richardhaselwood9478 Před 26 dny +5

      If you're going to go to that trouble, you'd be better off baiting. That's what we do in Australia to try and control invasive species (wild pigs, wild dogs, wild cats, etc.)

    • @roiblack8587
      @roiblack8587 Před 26 dny

      @@richardhaselwood9478 One could do both and maybe that would be a real chance to get rid off those animals that do not belong.

    • @elmexicanoforlive
      @elmexicanoforlive Před 24 dny

      Right, and lace the environment full of contraceptives and fuck up the ecosystem for other species. It’s so dumb, it’s like saying lets spray forest with roundup so we can kill invasive weed species!

    • @matteoorlandi856
      @matteoorlandi856 Před 24 dny +5

      Tell me you live in a city without telling me you live in a city.

    • @roiblack8587
      @roiblack8587 Před 24 dny +1

      @@matteoorlandi856 Yap. Big City dweller here, BUT i still something like this could be beneficial. It is NOT the silver bullet here. Hunting is obviously necessary.

  • @MrSeachaser175
    @MrSeachaser175 Před 25 dny +2

    Lion fish here in St.Lucia was such a problem that local fishermen were catching them by the hundreds, now lion fish Fillets are impossible to find. 💁🏻‍♂️ However the invasive African Snail was a serious problem a few years ago, and the population of them has seriously fallen so much that’s it’s now unusual to even see one anymore, population self balancing?🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @comitatocentrale2022
    @comitatocentrale2022 Před 23 dny +1

    Knowing there are 6ml in the whole US made me take into perspective the fact that in 2021 there were about 1,5 ml in Italy alone, a country 33 times smaller

  • @titanlurch
    @titanlurch Před 26 dny +4

    There are tournaments for Lion fish spearfishing in the Florida Keys

  • @SimeonRadivoev
    @SimeonRadivoev Před 27 dny +11

    The invasive species meat market is a strategic investment target, offering exponential growth and sustainable market leadership. This sector not only ensures scalable profitability but also supports ecological balance, providing a green investment with tangible environmental impact.

    • @NewAge374
      @NewAge374 Před 27 dny +4

      It's only sustainable when you don't extirpate these populations. Sustainable means worthwhile in the long-term. From an environmental point of view some of these animals are a threat to ecosystems today, so the logical answer would be to remove them entirely so that the damaged habitats can recuperate.
      I don't know how much I have to spell it out to you but that's inherently contradictive with your ¨business¨ model

  • @bullbae02
    @bullbae02 Před 23 dny +2

    Wild Hogs in my country are nasty since they get to garbage more than vegetation.

  • @mercce6750
    @mercce6750 Před 20 dny +1

    If we can eat invasive species, we should. Not every invasive species can be eaten and the methods to contain those have exorbitant cost already, so if we CAN consume invasive species, it would do so much more than just spending money on other, more expensive methods of containment.

  • @5uyog
    @5uyog Před 28 dny +5

    7:01
    Is that guy bert from Sitcom 'the big bang theory'?

    • @BloodAsp
      @BloodAsp Před 27 dny +1

      I thought he had a familiar air around him that I couldn't place, and that is exactly what my subconscious was saying!

    • @Yataro79
      @Yataro79 Před 27 dny

      totally

  • @Clone6385
    @Clone6385 Před 19 dny +4

    The ones we can eat yes, the ones we can’t. Fertilizer, animal feed,

  • @shivanandahalladamath5280

    Am I the only one thinking "Humans an invasive ecologically damaging species is worried about what? Pigs?"😂

  • @matchc0635
    @matchc0635 Před 16 dny +2

    Since invasive species lost their predator, then humans should take over that job sadly because someone thought it would be funny to release them in the wild

    • @cyarain
      @cyarain Před 16 dny

      Alot of the times it's just ignorance/negligence, rather than a thing people did on purpose

  • @xiao2634
    @xiao2634 Před 24 dny +5

    Homo sapiens: "Invasive species impact many different ecosystem all over the world. They're super destructive, and hard to control." Also Homo sapiens, has invaded every corner of the blue planet and tries to land on the Mars. 3T: not gonna be a problem any more.

    • @Blackstar-yd3yf
      @Blackstar-yd3yf Před 18 dny

      Well we took over the planet and I won't cry about beeing ontop of the foodchain

    • @brah1646
      @brah1646 Před 14 dny +1

      Wtf we gonna destroy on mars?, shits just dirt, there aint no life there.

    • @user-xb8tc3tc8t
      @user-xb8tc3tc8t Před 13 dny

      Yes, the root of the problems found. Honest and well thought answer.

  • @Squidsqad
    @Squidsqad Před 26 dny +6

    Any way we can keep eating them without killing them?

  • @rirkc
    @rirkc Před 22 dny +2

    Absolutely. Why waste a perfectly good food source?

  • @Will-kt5jk
    @Will-kt5jk Před 25 dny +2

    1:12 - I think his definition of “western hemisphere” is basically “the americas”
    The UK (where the Greenwich meridian sits, so technically straddles the hemispheres, but is usually counted as “western”) had wild boar until they were hunted to extinction & have now begun reintroduction.

  • @yetufekci1
    @yetufekci1 Před 26 dny +10

    By this logic, polar bear should start looking for human meat recipes 😂

    • @michasosnowski5918
      @michasosnowski5918 Před 24 dny

      Yeah, I already pointed that out in another comment. We are the most invasive species on this planet. The damage we do is unprecedented and second place to us is far far more friendly to the environment. At least in our current numbers and the way we live unsustainably. We can be part of biodiversity, but in millions, few billions maybe as scientists say(around 2 billion), but not in 8+.

    • @azerial
      @azerial Před 24 dny

      I'm sure they already have them.

    • @CyrilJose22
      @CyrilJose22 Před 24 dny

      Not just the polar bears!

  • @lolidasterner414
    @lolidasterner414 Před 27 dny +4

    Absolutely yes. Then after many years a new balance will be reached. But in order to reach balance you need small populations.

    • @communistpoultry
      @communistpoultry Před 27 dny +1

      human is also an invasive species.

    • @lolidasterner414
      @lolidasterner414 Před 27 dny +1

      @@communistpoultry That's why we still havent reached a balance with the environment. But we are gradually adapting.

    • @lolidasterner414
      @lolidasterner414 Před 26 dny

      @@SeeNickView Invasive species can't be expelled from an ecosystem. Either they will destroy it as a whole or a new predator will be created / found in order to balance the scales. In the hogs case the predator are the humans who start including in their diet the wild hog meat. In our villages in greece the population of wolves and hunters both increased as the number of hogs grew. But this adaptation takes time and in one day it will be mainstream.

  • @jaysonparkhurst7422
    @jaysonparkhurst7422 Před 21 dnem +2

    Pork meat is the best quality protein as far as amino acid balance and your body's ability to digest them

  • @cembora4849
    @cembora4849 Před 22 dny +1

    I love how people think raising a cow in small places and killing is good but good old hunting is bad.

  • @jamesnickelsen8563
    @jamesnickelsen8563 Před 27 dny +4

    I stand with PETA! People Eating Tasty Animals. If an animal has to die, let it not be for nothing. You can keep your bugs.

  • @thomashaapalainen4108
    @thomashaapalainen4108 Před 26 dny +3

    With the massive sucess of reintroducing wolfes in yellow stone there should be an effort to reintroduce wolfes were wild hogs are an issue. Obviously only in areas where wolfs have traditionally lived. Wolfs can take on prey like deer, elk, and young bison they could help greatly with the wild hogs. European wolfs would hunt the wild ansectors of these animals the North American grey wolf would easily adapt to pork chops . It would be a win win.

    • @GnomesRox
      @GnomesRox Před 26 dny +1

      Though wolves can kill hogs, they roam in packs and are much more formidable than those other animals with their tusks and the speed at which they breed. It just makes more sense for them to hunt what they were naturally evolved to. There's a reason why hogs are an invasive species. Relying on wolves would be extremely inefficient.

    • @HaNsWiDjAjA
      @HaNsWiDjAjA Před 24 dny

      ​@@GnomesRoxActually wolves are the wild boar's main predator across Eurasia. A single wolf will kill 50-80 young boars in one year, so they are highly effective at keeping pig numbers in check. Wolf actually show a higher preference for pigs than other prey like deer, because of the swine's abundance, poor eyesight and slower running speed.
      And while adult boars are obviously dangerous and typically avoided, the wolves are perfectly happy to concentrate on piglets and subadults, which are highly vulnerable. The pack hunting behavior of wolves greatly aid then in this regard, as one wolf can easily distract the sow while the others grab the babies. Indeed the reason that pigs have evolved to have such large litters compared to other prey animals, was because their piglets were so darn vulnerable, and thus a high replacement rate was needed!
      Now it is true that North American wolves have never adapted to hunting pigs. But given how smart they are I am sure they can figure out how to exploit an abundant food source pretty quickly.

    • @Cobra_AA
      @Cobra_AA Před 22 dny +1

      Trust me, if we introduce them they would be killed by humans over night because they would be scared of their cat getting eaten by a wolf

    • @tavish4699
      @tavish4699 Před 19 dny +1

      you have obviously never seen a pig in real life
      pigs are vicioous animals,especially the males
      no wolf is going to attach a boar

  • @user-yq8bz5ex8f
    @user-yq8bz5ex8f Před 27 dny +1

    Wow, such a nice production!!! I always looooove your videos!

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 25 dny

      Hey there! Glad you liked this video ✨ If you want to see more from us, subscribe to our channel, we post new videos every Friday 😊

  • @1fishmob
    @1fishmob Před 14 dny

    To correct a few things, we do have native pigs; peccaries. And we do have animals big enough to hunt pigs; wolves, bears and jaguars. The problem, is we extirpated many of these animals out of their natural habitat.

  • @MastaTabs
    @MastaTabs Před 27 dny +5

    At some point, every species was invasive when it appeared in an ecosystem. We are, too, and we don't just let ourselves be chased away.
    Wild boars in particular compete with us for food and change the ecosystems on which we also depend and which we have often changed in our favor, in a way that also favors these animals.
    In nature, even without our intervention, better-adapted species displace less well-adapted species. If dependencies arise on both sides, an equilibrium may be established. Otherwise, only the supply of food will slow down the spread of the invasive species.
    If we want to assert ourselves and place value on these foods, then we must take appropriate measures. All the better if we also use the resources created in this way or leave them for other species to use. However, care must be taken to ensure that diseases do not spread as a result of the transfer.

  • @peterweller8583
    @peterweller8583 Před 28 dny +3

    My two cents is YES!! and there should be prises for the best recipe.
    There should also be prizes for the first the biggest and the most.

  • @hogglinebulldoggs361
    @hogglinebulldoggs361 Před 22 dny +2

    So most people would eat stuff grown in a lab but not a pig that lives off the land 🥴

  • @Kar988x-zm1ug
    @Kar988x-zm1ug Před 22 dny +2

    No PETA harmed in this video

  • @sandarutharuneth
    @sandarutharuneth Před 28 dny +4

    I can feel the vegans

  • @communistpoultry
    @communistpoultry Před 27 dny +14

    human is also an invasive species.

    • @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857
      @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857 Před 27 dny +4

      @Maverick_42 really!!
      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂
      Nonsense comment..💩💩💩💩

    • @lharsay
      @lharsay Před 25 dny

      Only outside Africa

  • @aminebrahimi3948
    @aminebrahimi3948 Před 12 dny +1

    It has the single most important factor: It is double sustainable. so the answer is 100% yes for me.

  • @firtsnamefirstnama9797
    @firtsnamefirstnama9797 Před 15 dny +2

    Short answer: yes
    Long answer: this entire video

  • @SimeonRadivoev
    @SimeonRadivoev Před 27 dny +3

    To be fair, humans are also technically an invasive species.

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq Před 26 dny

      The worst of all!

    • @eklectiktoni
      @eklectiktoni Před 25 dny

      An invasive species is a *non-indigenous* species that becomes overpopulated and harms its new environment. (per wikipedia) Humans are indigenous to every continent on plant Earth.

    • @michasosnowski5918
      @michasosnowski5918 Před 24 dny +1

      @@eklectiktoni Now they are. But they werent. How long does it take for a species to become indigenous? In terms of world history we are just a blink of an eye. We came from Africa and spread over the last several tens of thousand of years. And we boomed over the last few centuries, which fits wikipedia description(overpopulated and harms the environment).
      Right now we and livestock we keep to feed ourselves constitute over 95 % of all mammals on earth(by weight). How can you not call that invasive species?

    • @eklectiktoni
      @eklectiktoni Před 24 dny

      @@michasosnowski5918 So we should all go back to Africa is what you're saying?

  • @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857
    @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857 Před 27 dny +4

    Who brings these invasive species???
    Ans:- Most of invasive species are brought by human.
    So, human are the main reason for this most of time. Stop blaming animals always....🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽

    • @CD-kg9by
      @CD-kg9by Před 27 dny +2

      Nobody does. It's also stated in the video.

    • @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857
      @deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857 Před 27 dny +1

      @@katarinarosell4422 nice joke.😂😂😂

    • @VS-hz8fm
      @VS-hz8fm Před 19 dny

      @@deWiAnNaEnEcBi3857Nope it’s very clearly stated

  • @adolfforlaje349
    @adolfforlaje349 Před 22 dny +1

    Free food! They should be advertised as organic since they're not farm fed

  • @user-fh3cv4li4v
    @user-fh3cv4li4v Před 27 dny +1

    In my country Georgia we ate all hogs, and we miss the time when people hunting on them

  • @shripperquats5872
    @shripperquats5872 Před 14 dny

    our ancestors cast shame upon us for turning our noses up at bounties of ecosystem-destroying food, like carp.

  • @natep6729
    @natep6729 Před 20 dny +1

    i don't eat meat a lot, completely avoid beef and i support this idea. If they're invasive and are putting the ecosystem in danger, they need to be gone. A huge reason why many people go vegan is the environmental effects of animal farming and if eating these animals helps the environment, they sure can eat it.

  • @dudmic
    @dudmic Před 21 dnem +1

    Hogs back legs are really good at making Jamon, being in the wild they will have a very diverse diet, so their meat is a lot less "toxic" i guess, to us than meat that comes from farmed animals with that have been feed all kinds of cheap fodder, not counting the veterinary drug treatment they get.

  • @shubashuba9209
    @shubashuba9209 Před 20 dny

    Invasive species hunting sounds like it could be an entire industry.

  • @LunarStarFox
    @LunarStarFox Před 20 dny +1

    Now I want to find a way to get wild boar meat in Colorado. I 100% agree with the points that Jesse G.made. It will help farmers keep growing plants for us to eat and if we can use invasive species as our source of protein it can help combat the environment impacts commercial meat industry.

  • @Crimsonfangg
    @Crimsonfangg Před 15 dny

    What also didnt help is that we drove out mountain lions, wolves and jaguars. Im not saying they would've fully kept their numbers in check, but they certainly would've helped.

  • @rockyhalloween1233
    @rockyhalloween1233 Před 27 dny +1

    It's the best way because it takes pressure of other species and gives them the opportunity to rebound

  • @dragon6irl
    @dragon6irl Před 13 dny

    Every "hog hunt" ranch I've looked at (south Texas) charges on average at least $300 per person per day for a hunt. Many have bag limits, or also charge you per head. This profit drives property owners to continue to allow the hogs to breed so they can keep their business going, which is only worsening the issue. The only ones that care are people you know personally who have had hog damage already done, they'll say "please, come get rid of as many as you can."

  • @george2pak
    @george2pak Před 19 dny

    Hunting or fishing invasive species can definitely work, especially if there's no restrictions. In Texas, you have to pay in order to hunt wild boar. If it had been free, probably by now there would be a problem anymore. In Lake Pleasant, AZ used to be an invasion of striper bass. Once people find out that there's no limit, in about 5 years, you can't find stripper bass in the lake anymore.

  • @beth8775
    @beth8775 Před 18 dny

    Midwestern rivers are plagued by invasive carp species. They are commonly eaten in Asian countries, but trying to convince the locals here is incredibly difficult.

  • @ryankieth1675
    @ryankieth1675 Před 3 dny

    How is this even presented as a question? It’s been going on for centuries.

  • @arvind8302
    @arvind8302 Před 17 dny

    The thumbnail, is exactly what the mountain lions were discussing when humans plundered their land.

  • @Zantides
    @Zantides Před 17 dny

    In Norway king crab is blacklisted, but if you fish it and sell it without approval you're fined like there is no tomorrow. It's a problem, but a lucerative one. Money comes first and environment secound.

  • @onlinealiasuk
    @onlinealiasuk Před 17 dny

    The more food can be taken from hunting the less farmland we need the wilderness can be left

  • @Suburp212
    @Suburp212 Před 27 dny +2

    Every state has pig problems.

  • @mitchkman
    @mitchkman Před 25 dny +2

    Great, fact-based reporting by DW.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Před 25 dny

      Hey there! Glad you liked our video 😀 If you want to see more, subscribe to our channel, we post new videos every Friday ✨

  • @Kelvin_Foo
    @Kelvin_Foo Před 16 dny

    I recognized that logo on John Tomecek's shirt, it's from a game where the main character can catch and eat any wild animals from tree frogs to alligators.

  • @Mark-ci6ln
    @Mark-ci6ln Před 12 dny

    >Humanity eradicating a endangered species
    >Humanity not killing/protecting an incredibly destructive invasive species

  • @victor17m
    @victor17m Před 20 dny +1

    One big wild hog killed a old lady close to where I live here in texas

  • @joesmith201212
    @joesmith201212 Před 16 dny +1

    Damn that lady got the lego haircut