Misconceptions About 64 Different Animals

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  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2023
  • Cows DON'T have four stomachs, toads CAN'T give you warts, and pigs DON'T sweat a lot. Yeesh, that's a lot of negatives. But those are just three of dozens of misunderstood facts about animals we're going to be sharing today. From dogs to ostriches to lemmings, let's get into it.
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Komentáře • 736

  • @TRDPaul
    @TRDPaul Před rokem +844

    Elephants are notoriously afraid of bees, the sound of bees is often used as a deterrent to keep elephants away from areas they are not wanted

    • @regularly_priced
      @regularly_priced Před rokem +21

      Probably due to their acute hearing abilities

    • @Zen-Learns
      @Zen-Learns Před rokem +81

      @@regularly_priced The hearing helps them detect bees/wasps, but they are actually afraid because they have extremely thin and vulnerable skin around their face and swarms of bees are capable of taking down a grown buffalo with enough stinging

    • @regularly_priced
      @regularly_priced Před rokem +12

      @@Zen-Learns that makes more sense

    • @ChauncyCharm
      @ChauncyCharm Před rokem +2

      ​@@Zen-Learns buffalos arent Elephants tho?

    • @jsgv7935
      @jsgv7935 Před rokem +22

      @@ChauncyCharm if it can kill a buffalo it can definitely hurt an elephant.

  • @AnAlbinoGiraffe
    @AnAlbinoGiraffe Před rokem +494

    Disappointed you guys didn’t talk about how hamsters usually only eat their young when they’re stressed. Usually that stress comes from inadequate housing, like the way-too-small Crittertrail cages and other popular brands which are actually way too small for a happy hamster

    • @felixthelemon978
      @felixthelemon978 Před rokem +35

      Definitely. And hamster mills often starve the hamsters so much that they have to cannibalize to survive. In natural conditions, they would have no reason to go to such lengths

    • @wannabewyvern
      @wannabewyvern Před rokem +13

      a lot of mammals will kill and eat their young is they are super stressed, it’s sad really

    • @lillucifer393
      @lillucifer393 Před rokem +8

      Rabbits are worse. It dont take much for them to pack the whole family up and take a trip to the digestive system.

    • @DustyHoney
      @DustyHoney Před rokem +9

      They also eat their babies when they lack the nutrients to produce milk. Many pet hamsters are fed improperly.
      If you consider this on top of the fact pet hamsters are often kept in cages which are too small, put in hamster balls, sometimes kept with/within sight of other hamsters, the chances of eating their babies are much higher than a healthy and properly cared for hamster.

    • @daforkgaming3320
      @daforkgaming3320 Před rokem +1

      Rlly? I always thought it was just because they didn’t have enough milk to feed them all

  • @goldenappel
    @goldenappel Před rokem +419

    38:26 I had a relative who owned a small flock of sheep and I sometimes helped out with shearing and dipping. They are as obstinate and independent as any other intelligent animal when you're trying to coerce them into something they don't want to do..
    I always laugh when I see the word 'sheeple' being used because sheep are stubborn b*stards who will kick and bite against anything they don't like, even if it's in their best interests.

    • @invisibleninja86
      @invisibleninja86 Před rokem +26

      Yeah, the only farm animal Ive ever been attacked by was a sheep. Haha

    • @rickwrites2612
      @rickwrites2612 Před rokem +7

      I mean that last part of last sentence is exactly what sheeple do

    • @pokeypoker6208
      @pokeypoker6208 Před rokem +38

      ​@@rickwrites2612 From my experience, it's what people who tend to call others "sheeple" do.

    • @awlig
      @awlig Před rokem +18

      Stubborn bstrds who Kick and bite at something they dont like even if it's good for them?
      Sounds like a human to me lol

    • @pumkin610
      @pumkin610 Před rokem +16

      People who are afraid of being manipulated are really easy to manipulate, just tell them they are being manipulated and they will say "I knew it!", Just tell them that they are being lied to and they'll be much more willing to accept things that are clearly lies as truth. The most mundane and simple and obvious answer is usually correct and maybe the most commonly accepted thing is accepted for a good reason.

  • @johnjohnson8575
    @johnjohnson8575 Před rokem +170

    I've worked with sheep and I can tell you they do have different personalities. Most in my flock would be willing to follow my command but there were two sheep that just didn't care. I literally had to push them to move on. The other sheep were much more timid at different levels

  • @barbararowley6077
    @barbararowley6077 Před rokem +90

    My favourite misconception featuring an Australian animal is about a small, mouse-like marsupial called the antechinus. The males die immediately after their breeding season, and the widespread misconception (that you’ll even find in some textbooks) is that it’s from exhaustion. Whilst it is a rather frenetic breeding season, they’re actually dying of old age. The females live a month or so longer, dying shortly after the young are weaned. The main lecturer in Marsupial Biology, back in my Uni days, was one of the few people to manage to successfully keep them in captivity and made sure we were disabused of the myth.

  • @AmaraJordanMusic
    @AmaraJordanMusic Před rokem +80

    The horse thing makes me think of cats. Cats take “cat naps” where their heads are off the ground and lightly sleep, but to get deep sleep, they have to succumb to gravity and put that head down!

  • @dumbythiccdoor
    @dumbythiccdoor Před rokem +102

    to add on with the "alpha wolf" thing the original study that determined that wolf packs have a hierarchy in the way most people know them was done on wolves in captivity but later studies done on completely wild wolves showed exactly what you were saying where they're a big family where the mom and dad are the "alphas"

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +11

      They also threw together adult wolves of different packs, so without pack structure the most agressive and strong wolf was deemed the alpha because he won first rights to food, water and sleep places.
      It was a rather bad study

  • @indyduinmeijer6435
    @indyduinmeijer6435 Před rokem +61

    To add to the flamingo fact, they are actually born tiny very white fluffballs, they grow a bit, then they turn grey, when they have all their full adult feathers without ever having eaten carotene they would actually be more like white again and not grey. When parent flamingos feed their chicks they also feed them the carotene which often results in the parents losing a significant amount of their own pink color resulting in the parents starting to turn white :)

  • @sciverzero8197
    @sciverzero8197 Před rokem +68

    The toreador's cape isn't arbitrary, its actually functional so that the audience can see the toreador and what they're doing easier. Bright red is traditional, but any bright color that doesn't blend in with the surroundings would be valid. Red does come with other benefits like hiding blood.

  • @otterspotter
    @otterspotter Před rokem +208

    Pigs most certainly don't sweat much to cool off. Worked on a small pig farm and there are few things more full of joy than when I busted out the hose on them during the summer. They were livid with happiness. Second only to that was when I would bring them apples from the orchard.
    And I recently explained to someone from a non-skunk part of the world, they almost never spray. They will spray dogs, but that's because dogs are stupid and chase them all up in their business. There is a skunk that currently lives under my back deck. I see him at times, though he's mostly nocturnal. They're very cute, very passive, mostly just like to be left alone. One of their lesser known defense mechanisms is that skunks are also extremely fluffy, which makes them appear larger to any potential predators. Their defense is fluff... how cute is that?

  • @AlbieStarr
    @AlbieStarr Před rokem +20

    65: hippo milk isn't pink. Their sweat turns a dark red when it's exposed to sunlight, and sometimes it gets mixed with their white milk - making it look pink

  • @ettinakitten5047
    @ettinakitten5047 Před rokem +68

    Given that cats have been known to win fights against large dogs and even bears, and solitary predators tend not to be risk-takers when hunting for food, it makes sense that foxes aren't a big threat to most cats.

    • @kira3835
      @kira3835 Před rokem +5

      Source for a domestic cat winning a fight with a bear/large dog? 'Cause coyotes kill cats all the time, and it certainly doesn't require a pack of them.

    • @serixskylark
      @serixskylark Před rokem +4

      @@kira3835 it probably depends on how skittish and/or meek the opponent is. A large animal trying to go after a generally smaller animal might be quite startled when it stoically stands it’s ground and even fights back, and may just give up or leave as a result. Some bears are wusses- acting more like large raccoons than a fearsome bear- and might just turn tail and run when something comes at it with it’s claws swinging, as well as making a lot of noise, with the most likely candidates being smaller bear species. I doubt a grizzly would be at all phased, unless it is somehow severely caught off guard.
      Large dogs being put off by cats is something I have actively witnessed, both on the streets and in my own home. They will generally choose to just walk away, after a good deal of looking confused by the cat’s posturing. Other times they just won’t appreciate being scratched in the face and will either run or fight back twice as hard. Again, depends on the animal, and even the individual dog. Not all cats are brave enough to actually stand their ground, either.

    • @kira3835
      @kira3835 Před rokem +1

      @@serixskylark @SerixSkylark I agree with all that, but what you're describing is not a fight, it's just an encounter. You said that cats have survived fights with bears.
      I read a study where a number of coyotes were tracked for a period of time. They found that 50% of the time a coyote encountered a cat, the cat did not survive. It seems to me that the other half where the cat did survive *probably* had everything to do with the coyote's disinterest, and very little to do with the cat's fighting ability.
      And back to your original comment, foxes are very close in size to a cat. So foxes not messing with cats makes perfect sense for that reason alone, they simply don't have a strong enough upper hand.

    • @serixskylark
      @serixskylark Před rokem +3

      @@kira3835 tbf I wasn’t the person who said they survived, I was just giving possible reasons they could’ve. It’s all just theory crafting besides those times I did witness a few events.

    • @SegelDK
      @SegelDK Před rokem

      What is this comment on

  • @JackieOwl94
    @JackieOwl94 Před rokem +23

    5:32 Elephants also HATE bees, and farmers in elephant habitat have set up real and artificial beehives around their crops as a pollinator system and deterrent for a lot of crop pest animals.

  • @ploopy8780
    @ploopy8780 Před rokem +13

    "just because the species is super old, doesnt mean horse shoe crabs arent livin it up. infact, they even engage... in group sex" lmfao that caught me off guard

  • @JamieDenAdel
    @JamieDenAdel Před rokem +50

    The one time I was at a goat farm, a large portion of the juveniles were crowded up against the barn wall, eating the paint.

    • @greggdilligaffshelly
      @greggdilligaffshelly Před rokem +5

      What's your paint? Sorry ..do you have a complaint??

    • @OneBentMonkey
      @OneBentMonkey Před rokem +18

      Lead paint has a sweet taste.

    • @brianargo4595
      @brianargo4595 Před rokem

      ​@@OneBentMonkey one of the reasons the Greeks and Romans served wine in lead vessels, it added sweetness and reduced their leaders to morons

    • @amberkat8147
      @amberkat8147 Před rokem +7

      I sure hope it wasn't lead paint.

    • @pussyslayer1484
      @pussyslayer1484 Před rokem

      maybe the walls were whitened with calcium. they dometimes eat it cuz it's nutritious.

  • @dollybentley4029
    @dollybentley4029 Před rokem +65

    The cows having 4 stomachs misconception proper annoys me! I have a zoology degree and I could literally tell people that a cow and a dog are the same and people would believe me! But I say a cow has 1 stomach with 4 chambers and no one listens! 😩😩😩

    • @PabloSanchez-qu6ib
      @PabloSanchez-qu6ib Před rokem +6

      Cows don't have 4 stomachs?. OK. But what about teenage boys?

    • @neoqwerty
      @neoqwerty Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@PabloSanchez-qu6ib It's a stomach of holding, that's all

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Před rokem +15

    Squirrels at the Sumter County (Alabama) courthouse in Livingston learned that the front ends of vehicles parked on the sides of the square were a fine source of chitinous critters to add to their diets. They were frequent visitors, raiding whatever auto grilles they could reach, and sometimes even climbing up onto taller vehicles to get better access to the pre-squashed insects they craved, or going inside the engine compartment for a finer dining experience from the front of the radiator.

    • @k-oticheart1573
      @k-oticheart1573 Před 11 měsíci +1

      So, it's a good place to get the bugs cleaned off your car then. Noted.....😂

    • @bradsports
      @bradsports Před 10 měsíci

      I wonder what larger animal will then learn to seek out these bug covered vehicles in hopes of finding a broiled squirrel or two caught in the engine. #the circle of life

  • @avanelletheclockfriend2515
    @avanelletheclockfriend2515 Před rokem +188

    *Misconception: Wasps are jerks*
    The truth is, wasps are not nearly as aggressive as many people seem to portray them. While they will defend their nests if you get too close, or sting if you try to swat at or grab them, they do not actively seek out people to hurt. Usually, when they’re buzzing around you when you’re outside, they just want to figure out what you are, or are interested in any food you might have. If you’re out having a picnic or something you can easily prevent run-ins by just giving them their own plate or napkin with a small amount of food away from the group; they will choose that over getting close to the giants and their feast. They are incredibly intelligent as far as insects go; studies have shown they can recognize and remember different people, and will communicate with their colonies whether or not someone is a friend or foe. If you establish yourself as someone who isn’t a threat, they will eventually stop becoming nervous around you, so long as you don’t threaten them or their nest. In fact it’s entirely possible to befriend a colony by giving them fruit or unprocessed honey or the like; they will remember and pretty much teach new workers “that giant is nice, it gave us yummy food, it is an ally”. Of course, that will change if you try to kill any of them or take down their nest, but that’s your own fault for befriending a bunch of little guys and then betraying them.
    *Misconception: Wasps don’t do anything useful*
    Wasps are actually very good to have around, especially for gardeners. They are not only important pollinators, but influence the populations of many different insects we consider to be pests. They can be both predators and parasitoids of caterpillars, beetles, cockroaches, etc. Because of that, they act as all-natural, free pest control, and without them all agriculture would suffer greatly.
    *Misconception: All bees live in colonies*
    This is far from the truth, as in reality most bees(and wasps) are solitary! Among them are mason bees, carpenter bees, sweat bees, and others, and they live in all kinds of environments. Did you know there’s a species that carves their homes in sandstone, and will even use water as a tool to make the work easier? They only live in one small area of the United States, and older individuals can be identified because their mandibles will be worn down by the work. Did you know there are multiple kinds of blue bees? You have the blue carpenter bees in Australia, for example, that look like plush toys made with the wrong color; there’s the tiny blue orchard bee here in the United States, too, which are shiny and quite docile. Did you know that there are bees with relationships to plants so specific, those plants would likely die out without them? There are flowers that get pollinated by tricking male bees into trying to mate with them; in fact, the reason vanilla has to be hand-pollinated is because the bee it relied on was driven to extinction.
    These are the bees that are in danger and need to be saved, NOT honeybees. The latter is actually quite invasive in many areas they’ve been introduced and have been slowly outcompeting native bees, often at the expense of the ecosystem. They introduce diseases and parasites, and take nectar and pollen in such large quantities that native bees don’t have enough for themselves. They may not produce honey, but solitary bees are still vital to the earth and human agriculture. Even if they weren’t, why must an animal be directly beneficial to us to be considered worth saving? Why do they need to justify their existence solely in terms of what they do for us; is being a beautiful and unique part of nature not enough reason to be worth preserving for the future?
    And finally
    *Misconception: rats are inherently filthy*
    Rats are only as dirty as their environment. They actually groom themselves more often than domestic cats, and prefer to be hygienic when possible. Basically, imagine if someone washed their hands or took a shower on the spot whenever they were nervous, bonded with their friends by bathing each other, and also just did their best to avoid getting dirty. That is how rats tend to live. They are intelligent animals and are fully capable of bonding with people, and one of the ways domestic rats will express affection to their owners is trying to groom them. They’ll groom themselves to calm down or each other to establish close bonds.
    Rats said “giving and taking showers is a love language”, and I’m inclined to agree after going to a crowded convention not too long ago. (Shoutout to the Arlington NARBC for teaching me that there are in fact people who seem to have a violent aversion to showers and deodorant and it wasn’t just a meme)

    • @rocketdino3206
      @rocketdino3206 Před rokem

      I will personally cause the extinction of every wasp I don’t care about the ecological ramifications of my actions

    • @greghaggerty9996
      @greghaggerty9996 Před rokem +70

      Woah I didn't realize wasps could type youtube comments

    • @elihyland4781
      @elihyland4781 Před rokem +28

      THIS is the propaganda I needed. Verrrrry cool stuff. Had zero idea. Kinda love how misunderstood they are

    • @BroYoutubeRuinedMyUsername
      @BroYoutubeRuinedMyUsername Před rokem +29

      As somebody who lives in the Northeastern United States, the wasps here, much like our people, are very aggressive.

    • @MiaTheSpinoQueen
      @MiaTheSpinoQueen Před rokem +8

      - 🐝

  • @missheadbanger
    @missheadbanger Před rokem +73

    The birds we call Penguins are named after the extinct great auk (Pinguinus impennis).
    Both are flightless, and they look similar, with black and white coloring.
    Their habitats are on opposite poles and are not closely related to each other.
    The razorbill or lesser auk is the closest living relative of the great auk, The bird can both fly and dive.

    • @phillipcooper1605
      @phillipcooper1605 Před rokem +2

      Impennis lol

    • @bradsports
      @bradsports Před 10 měsíci

      Was the great auk a common site in coastal Europe before extinction? I know they were quite plentiful here in Newfoundland. I’m just wondering when exactly the auk was discovered in relation to the penguins of the Southern Hemisphere

    • @beew.7904
      @beew.7904 Před 9 měsíci

      ⁠@@bradsports Yes they were!! They were actually dispersed throughout the North Atlantic area before going extinct. :)

  • @matthiaso57
    @matthiaso57 Před rokem +1110

    For half of these i thought "who believes this?" Ponies are baby horses? Really????

  • @juliagoolia5604
    @juliagoolia5604 Před rokem +9

    Omigosh! That lemming story is unbelievable! Poor lil guys

    • @markpimlott2879
      @markpimlott2879 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Yes, the cinematographers dumped voles and southern Canadian species similar to the three Arctic Lemming species, from containers into the Bow River just upstream of Calgary Alberta!
      That was during the mid-50s; however, unfortunately, there's still fraudulent nature footage being created since 'the real thing' is often so difficult and time-consuming to capture!
      😮😢🇨🇦 🍁 🇨🇦 🍁 🇨🇦 🍁 🇨🇦 🍁 🇨🇦 😢😮

  • @nerdwisdomyo9563
    @nerdwisdomyo9563 Před rokem +13

    I once saw a Fox scaring off a cat on a walk, the cat was like “ok ok geez quit bugging me” and walked away

  • @fluxster1022
    @fluxster1022 Před rokem +68

    I had a dog and a rabbit in the house at one point. I always gave the dog a piece of meat while I was cooking breakfast. One morning a threw a piece of bacon down for him and the damn rabbit came in, took it, and ATE it. The dog and I looked at each other with basically the same "wtf" expression 🤣Miss you both!

    • @lithunoisan
      @lithunoisan Před rokem +4

      Thus the Killer Rabbit was born.

    • @julzhunt7790
      @julzhunt7790 Před rokem +4

      😳Rabid Rabbit😆

    • @SteamHyenaz
      @SteamHyenaz Před rokem +5

      Having a dog and rabbit in the same house is an incredibly bad idea

    • @amarketing8749
      @amarketing8749 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@SteamHyenaz Animals that are raised together as a family often defy expectations.

  • @jimgsewell
    @jimgsewell Před rokem +9

    It is a misconception that turkeys are so dumb that when it rains, they look up, open their mouths and drown.

    • @rexology_bg
      @rexology_bg Před rokem

      Turkeys are dumb, just not quite that dumb.

    • @kyleellis1825
      @kyleellis1825 Před 8 měsíci

      It's a specific disease/parasite that can make turkeys do it as far as I remember.

  • @paulmiddleton8699
    @paulmiddleton8699 Před rokem +7

    I know another owl fact, they don't mate when its raining because it is too wet to woo. Lol.

  • @Sarappreciates
    @Sarappreciates Před rokem +11

    *Top 10 Reasons Marine Animals Jump:*
    1. escape a predator
    2. catch prey
    3. scratch an itch
    4. sheer curiosity: what does this do?
    5. change of scenery
    6. doin' it for the gram
    7. autoerotic asphyxiation
    8. reset a dislocated fin
    9. school shooting
    10. dislodge parasites

  • @MikeP2055
    @MikeP2055 Před rokem +6

    Comedian Nate Bargatze's lengthy bit about a "dead horse" is one of my favorite stand-up premises.

  • @arunb2282
    @arunb2282 Před rokem +12

    i always thought that the salmon jumping was because they needed to swim up rivers and waterfalls to get to their breeding spots. Isn't that the general consensus?

  • @Dicyroller
    @Dicyroller Před rokem +22

    It is crazy how many of these things I was taught in school.

  • @flowertrue
    @flowertrue Před rokem +17

    This channel continues to put out consistently excellent content.
    -- a seal watching this channel

  • @tenzhitihsien888
    @tenzhitihsien888 Před rokem +12

    Generally speaking, "bug" can refer to any arthropod. It doesn't have to be an insect.

  • @MichelleEvans_CatLady
    @MichelleEvans_CatLady Před rokem +12

    Animal science graduate here, I don't love to correct the cows have four stomachs myth 🙂. and my cat does greet me at the door with a meow

  • @tecumsehcristero
    @tecumsehcristero Před rokem +45

    Fun Fact- sloths can swim faster than most people

    • @nyeeeessss7674
      @nyeeeessss7674 Před rokem +4

      + it's due to their stomach gas that keeps them buoyant

    • @tecumsehcristero
      @tecumsehcristero Před rokem +2

      @@nyeeeessss7674 That's pretty cool. thanks for the neat science fact

  • @SillyGnome
    @SillyGnome Před rokem +17

    I wonder if the foxes hunting cats one started with people simply confusing foxes with coyotes

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Also, some people like to blame foxes when the greater danger is dogs, cars, rat poison and humans themselves. If the cat does not come back from a stroll, it is easier to blame a fox than your neigbours dog, or the car...or the neighbour.
      I won't let my cats roam free anymore because there are too many bad people our there harming cats

    • @kyleellis1825
      @kyleellis1825 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@gabrielbernard5440 Outdoor cats are a menace to the wildlife anyway. They shouldn't be outside.

    • @amarketing8749
      @amarketing8749 Před 6 měsíci

      ​​@@kyleellis1825This is a misconception based on faulty science. The original scientist has been trying to correct the mistake, but it is hard to convince people, especially when they have been gifted the prey their cats have killed.
      Cats are amazing hunters, but are not the environmental menace they have been made out to be.
      The exceptions are Island nations that had no native predator. In that case large amounts of cats were brought in to counteract the original invasive rabbit. The rabbit had also been released in quantities and without a natural predator quickly got out of control.
      Really the terrible species in all this is man. Without human interference those specific problems wouldn't exist.

  • @HoboThatIsHigh
    @HoboThatIsHigh Před rokem +6

    Fun fact: My cat loves laying on my lap every day when I get home from work

  • @nikkicat254
    @nikkicat254 Před rokem +8

    I know one fact, that Pigeons and Doves part of the same bird family, but most people think Pigeons are nasty and annoying, but love Doves, when both makes the same cooing sounds, there is just more Pigeons apparently! Of course Doves are on average are smaller then Pigeons! I for one love both, years ago there were these Doves that made a nest on my mothers Carport, in this planter she had set on the air-conditioner, every year for at least a decade! They would come and lay their eggs there like clock work!

    • @jeremywanner4526
      @jeremywanner4526 Před rokem

      Pigeons generally carry more parasites than dove like fleas and lice because of living in close proximity with livestock.

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Dove and pigeon is truly an even more puzzling thing than horse and pony. Because fruit doves are some of the biggest pigeons ever. And even the Dodo was a pigeon. Even our domestic pigeon came from...the rock dove.
      And the white doves released at weddings are also simply white breed pigeons. Unfortunally often not homing breeds, and therefor totally helpless, like if you throw a persian cat out into the forest.
      Especially those show pigeons, like fan tails and wedding ones, are breed to be handled by humans, seek out humans and have no real sense of danger, so they either get eaten, or starve to death because they are often very bad at foraging.
      Some more ethical providers breed white homing pigeons for these events, which are not as docile, know their way home, know dangers and can find food without human help, and those fly back to their breeder. I had one once, who had a single black tail feather and was therefor either to be eaten, or given anway. I took her, she was the most agressive, dominant pigeon I had, good for survival in the wild, especially if you are as easily visible as a white bird.
      And like 90% of feral pigeons are homing pigeons, or their offspring, very few ornamental breeds make it without human help. But if you see a very colourfull pigeon, one with fluff on the head or feet or otherwise different to what you see as a *normal* feral pigeon, it has some show breed ancestors.
      Just like 70 years ago pigeons were part of many households, also for meat and because you just let them out during the day and clean the place you keep them it, and get fertilizer for the garden.
      There were laws that punished pigeon thieves rather hard, and during the war where they were used not only as mail carriers, but also used to find soldiers lost on sea(because their eyesight is so much better than humans and yes you can train pigeons to alert to humans while sitting in a plane, or to warn about medical emergencies like low blood sugar/seizure), at worst you could be shoot if you killed a pigeon.
      Some pigeons also became war heroes, because despite losing an eye and a leg, Cher Ami made it back through enemy fire and saved a few hundred soldiers.
      You can train pigeons like parrots, they will listen to commands and are much less destructive than big parrots.
      Also, feral pigeons do not really get humans sick, you would have to roll around in their droppings or eat the pigeon raw for getting a disease from them.
      Chicken and their eggs are a much more greater risk to your health. Not one case of salmonella per year from pigeons, but sure many from chickens.
      But if you are sensitive to dust, pigeons might not be for you, same as other birds, because they produce dust-dunes to powder their feathers and make them water resistant.
      It is the same with feral cats and dogs, if you release a pet and do not care for it and it has to survive on garbage, do not be surprised for them being sick and thin, or them pooping everywhere. That is something people have to realise when they harp on about pigeon poop.
      Justz like other bird poop, healthy pigeons produce firm balls that can be easily wiped away while sick birds produce diarhea that can stain wood, plastic and even metal.

  • @billyr2904
    @billyr2904 Před rokem +62

    The difference between a cougar and big cat, is that big cats can roar while cougars cannot.

    • @BigOlSmellyFlashlight
      @BigOlSmellyFlashlight Před rokem +5

      yeah this comes from the shape of a panthers skull vs other types of cats

    • @ericvandenavond8748
      @ericvandenavond8748 Před 11 měsíci

      Doesn't this also apply with the ability to purr?

    • @billyr2904
      @billyr2904 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ericvandenavond8748 yes

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +1

      this is why cheetas are not big cats, because they meow and purr

  • @matchi457
    @matchi457 Před rokem +5

    "average person eats 3 spiders a year" factoid actualy just statistical error. average person eats 0 spiders per year. Spiders Georg, who lives in cave & eats over 10,000 each day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted

  • @Bennep214
    @Bennep214 Před rokem +3

    Lemmings are real?! I thought they were green headed little guys from 90’s computers

  • @bicivelo
    @bicivelo Před rokem +2

    "Yes, customer service? Yes. Please cancel my porcupine order."

  • @jphilb
    @jphilb Před rokem +22

    Disney - Let’s throw cute critters off a cliff.
    Okay!

  • @ZENegade
    @ZENegade Před rokem +8

    Dunno if anyone's mentioned this:
    Mythbusters did an Elephant vs Mouse experiment. The Elephant legit jump-scares when it sees a Mouse.

    • @anthonykent00
      @anthonykent00 Před rokem +1

      Yes!

    • @pumkin610
      @pumkin610 Před rokem +1

      Elephant mouse syndrome a human condition uhhhh

    • @ettinakitten5047
      @ettinakitten5047 Před rokem

      Mythbusters also "debunked" the martial arts saying "he who strikes first loses" while ignoring that blocking to set up a counter-attack is a big part of basically every martial art, so I wouldn't trust their scholarship.

    • @ZENegade
      @ZENegade Před rokem +1

      @Ettina Kitten czcams.com/video/WpTSA_25wGE/video.html
      SOLID scientific method at play, here. I cannot vouch for martial arts, but I can absolutely say (type?), with conviction, that they did their due diligence with this specific myth.

    • @PBadasie
      @PBadasie Před rokem +1

      Bro someone needs to myth bust if mythbusters are real

  • @ToastedTater420
    @ToastedTater420 Před rokem +24

    I actually went on a Caribbean cruise In march and got to see some flamingos in person. I actually knew the fact of where their color comes from being from what they eat and the tour guide said “the babies are grey and the males will grow up to be pink but the females will go white” I explained the real reason why they are pink to my family and we had a little chuckle. It’s crazy how common some of these misconceptions are. Very entertaining and educational video you earned a sub ❤

    • @indyduinmeijer6435
      @indyduinmeijer6435 Před rokem +3

      To add to the flamingo fact, they are actually born tiny very white fluffballs, they grow a bit, then they turn grey, when they have all their full adult feathers without ever having eaten carotene they would actually be more like white again. When parent flamingos feed their chicks they also feed them the carotene which often results in the parents losing a significant amount of their own pink color resulting in the parents starting to turn white :) they are also born with straight beaks and over time it grows into the famous curved beak!

  • @aeyelashbug6311
    @aeyelashbug6311 Před rokem +4

    Well idk about _picky_ eaters. Goats may not eat tin cans but they're certainly much more indiscriminant than cows and horses

  • @SilverionX
    @SilverionX Před rokem +13

    It occurred to me that the whole sheep thing was from Christianity and their use of sheep metaphors. Calling a congregation the flock and the priest the shepherd and Jesus the lamb of god and so on. Since the church was really keen on keeping common people docile and compliant for the most part, it seems like a logical connection because that's what you're implying when you call someone a sheep. Maybe that's overthinking it.

  • @AdamLewer
    @AdamLewer Před 10 měsíci +1

    I like your quick and Informative Content! Much I knew, much I learned. Thank you!

  • @devinsmith5926
    @devinsmith5926 Před rokem +5

    Excellent video good sir! Much appreciated! I knew of quite a few of these, but not all! I love actual informative videos, this legitimately NEEDS to be shown in EVERY AMERICAN SCHOOL starting in the 3rd grade

  • @mandiemoore3272
    @mandiemoore3272 Před rokem +8

    I've actually noticed it every fact or pseudo fact about spiders having to have the number eight in it which leads me to believe that absolutely zero of them are true

    • @daforkgaming3320
      @daforkgaming3320 Před rokem +1

      The number of eyes and legs are probably the only thing about a spider which has 8 as the correct answer

  • @jinxmaude
    @jinxmaude Před rokem +10

    Goats will eat anything they can get their curious mouths on 😭 my dad once had to write a note to my teacher to confirm that my goat, did in fact, eat my homework. 😂

  • @WorldWeaver
    @WorldWeaver Před rokem +3

    To add onto what you said abt coral: The algae is what gives it those bright colors and makes its food, but it leaves if the conditions in the area get too harsh. That exit is known as Coral Bleaching, and is the bane of many reefs.
    Sharks are older than trees.
    Leaf sheep are one of few photosynthetic animals.
    Whale sharks identify each other based on the unique patterns on their backs.
    Have a wonderful day/night :)

  • @daforkgaming3320
    @daforkgaming3320 Před rokem +6

    Also for the bird myth, I thought it was worth mentioning that while it doesn’t apply to birds, it applies to rabbits. If a rabbit notices its den has been tampered with, it will assume a predator ate its children and will abandon the den.

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +1

      or rather, the predator knows where the nest is, they will come back and eat them if they haven't done already so.
      Same goes for example for baby deers, buffalo cows..like basically any mammal that has to fear predators.
      Baby deers for example have basically no smell for the time they hide in the bushes for the first few days, if you scent them by touching, the mother will stay away because it now smells of danger.
      But also, birds will not care for babies out of the nest if they are not ready to move/fly yet. Because any predator can get to them, and they can not keep the baby warm out of the nest, It relies on parents and siblings for that, so any bird out of the nest that can not evade danger on its own, is forgotten by the parents, which makes sense from a nature standpoint.
      Birds can smell very well, they just do not care if their babies smell like humans as long as they are healthy together in the nest.
      So if you find a baby that obviously can not fly, or like owl babies, climb a tree and escape you, it will die out of the nest, so either put it back, or put it in a box with a warm water bottle wrapped in a towel and bring it to a wildlife rescue (source, me, having worked for wildlife rescue for a few years)

  • @matthewdrummond1340
    @matthewdrummond1340 Před rokem +10

    I live in the Canadian Prairies. We have a research station funded by the federal government. I'm not sure if they still do but they used to have a very alive cow set up so you could see the inside of its stomach. Can't remember if visitors could but researchers could glove up and reach inside.

    • @Sarappreciates
      @Sarappreciates Před rokem +2

      I saw a thing like that at a state fair, I think. I remember glass windows that looked like small ship portholes in a live cow's side. I don't recall anyone reaching in, but I can see how they could do that if the glass was removed. The cow was just standing there, eating grass, not caring that she had HOLES in her side!!

    • @matthewdrummond1340
      @matthewdrummond1340 Před rokem

      @@Sarappreciates might not be reaching inside here either tbh

    • @someguynamedrob
      @someguynamedrob Před rokem

      I’m from Saskatoon. They have this at agrabition in Regina

    • @ettinakitten5047
      @ettinakitten5047 Před rokem

      @@someguynamedrob They also do this at Vetavision every four years at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan, so you don't need to leave Saskatoon to put your hand in a cow's stomach.

    • @nonsensicalramblings9167
      @nonsensicalramblings9167 Před rokem +1

      That's so so horrifying

  • @stephaniemcgivern2508
    @stephaniemcgivern2508 Před rokem +3

    I knew we didn't swallow spiders in our sleep but why not mention spiders georg? it's the best evidence against the myth

  • @emedezcerrezero710
    @emedezcerrezero710 Před rokem +24

    The wolf one about killing for sport I think comes from European Wolves, which were, if I well remember, more aggressive than their american or asian cousins. I think that is one of the reasons wolves in european fairy tales are Big Bads, while, for example, in some Amerindian Tales, they were not counted as that. Now the European Wolf has been driven away or outright extinct since the urbanisation of Europe. If I well remember, of course. Appreciation from Portugal.

    • @DustyHoney
      @DustyHoney Před rokem +8

      I’d like to add that even European wolves did not hunt for sport. People projected our emotions onto wolves because that’s what we do.

  • @bikilee3896
    @bikilee3896 Před rokem +3

    My dad keeps sheep and oh god, whenever I hear someone saying sheeps are kind and polite I can’t help but get war flashbacks of trying to tackle sheeps to give them medicine or sheer them, hose heartless mfs will bite and kick and ram into you at any chance they get.

  • @kellidinit3725
    @kellidinit3725 Před 9 měsíci +1

    We believe owls are wise because they know how many licks it takes to get to the center of a tootsie pop. 😂😂

  • @Guy_H3re_tv9917
    @Guy_H3re_tv9917 Před rokem +3

    Elephants also dont like bee's, for essentially the same reason they dont like ants.

  • @toniedemare
    @toniedemare Před rokem +2

    I was not prepared to learn about what they did to the lemmings 3:08

  • @theunspoke815
    @theunspoke815 Před rokem +3

    YEP!!! Born in '75 & when I was 2, I REALLY didn't want that bath & ran past my mom, out the back door & all the way to the back fence wearing my "birthday suit" & looked down and said "OOOOO a PRETTY KITTY & tried to pet it!! YEAH!!! Right in the face!!! And let me tell you, that's something you DO NOT FORGET!!! You also don't forget that mom believed the tomato juice hack so I got THREE baths of tomato juice everyday for MORE than a week!!! I'm almost 48 and that really feels like yesterday!! AAAHHH!!! THE 70'S!!! ✌

  • @hypotheticaltapeworm
    @hypotheticaltapeworm Před rokem +1

    Imagine your 3 year-old kid being less capable of recognizing themselves than a pigeon. At that point I'd give up.

  • @altairuwu893
    @altairuwu893 Před rokem +13

    10:08 There are actually 4 species of hyena.
    1. Spotted hyena
    2. Brown hyena
    3. Striped hyena
    4. Aardwolf

    • @doktorhyena
      @doktorhyena Před rokem +8

      The thing is, aardwolves are in a different subfamily from the bonecrushers. Bonecrushers are hyaeninae, aardwolves are protelinae.

    • @aquawarper7328
      @aquawarper7328 Před rokem +3

      Aardwolves aren’t hyenas. They look like hyenas, but they’re not

    • @SteamHyenaz
      @SteamHyenaz Před rokem

      ​@@aquawarper7328 wrong. "Aardwolves are one of four hyena species in the subfamily Hyaenidae, along with spotted hyenas, striped hyenas, and brown hyenas. Like all hyenas, aardwolves' front legs are longer than their back legs, allowing for a loping, low-energy gait that they can sustain for long distances."

    • @SteamHyenaz
      @SteamHyenaz Před rokem

      ​@@doktorhyenathey are still one of the 4 hyena species

    • @senny-
      @senny- Před 11 měsíci

      @@aquawarper7328 They are. All are from the gamilt Hyaenidae

  • @TheSkinnyZ
    @TheSkinnyZ Před 7 měsíci +1

    8:15 can confirm that although goats might not eat tin cans, they do eat paper bags. At least we had one that did that when I was a kid.

  • @a.l.pittman1762
    @a.l.pittman1762 Před rokem +2

    It's a small percentage but narwhals can have two tusk.

  • @jacksonrocks4259
    @jacksonrocks4259 Před rokem +3

    “average person eats 8 spiders in their sleep a year" factoid actualy just statistical error. average person eats 0 spiders in their sleep per year. Spiders Georg, who lives in cave & eats over 10,000 each day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted”

  • @miskyx5447
    @miskyx5447 Před rokem +6

    14:58 sadly this one is true... At least in Chile. 2 of my barn cats were killed by foxes and they returned every other night to look for the other ones, thankfully nothing ever happend to my male cats but I believe its cause they're too big to kill anyways (like you said), my female cats weren't as lucky though, falling victim to the fox's around the area. (I know this is MY story but I promise there is so many more)

    • @bikerfirefarter7280
      @bikerfirefarter7280 Před rokem +4

      Our local domestic cats definitely group together and act as look outs when foxes are about. I've seen them team up to intimidate and discourage foxes. A few times two foxes have worked together to corner and kill solitary cats. But mostly they are just wary of each other. Sometimes we've seen a fox and a badger going about the housing-estate together, clearly friendly and at ease with each other. Netheredge, Sheffield, UK.

    • @SteamHyenaz
      @SteamHyenaz Před rokem

      My old farm cat used to attack foxes

  • @mydreamwindow1721
    @mydreamwindow1721 Před 11 měsíci

    I love your map and I stand with you.

  • @froztyzz1409
    @froztyzz1409 Před 10 měsíci

    These are my favourite types of videos

  • @tynebaker
    @tynebaker Před rokem +3

    Wow. That’s some brave research… swabbing dragon mouths?!

  • @p4our587
    @p4our587 Před rokem +1

    Our cats look at the fox around here like acquaintances.
    Fox - "Lo Dot."
    Cat - "Sammy."

  • @robertmatch6550
    @robertmatch6550 Před rokem +2

    The real myth is that most of these myths are really believed. They are COMMONLY known to be myths even though they are constantly referred to.

    • @kyleellis1825
      @kyleellis1825 Před 8 měsíci +1

      They are commonly beleived among the people who don't look into animal facts. Anyone who does will know most of these.

  • @NickRoman
    @NickRoman Před rokem +3

    One of these days, they need to come out with a channel, or at least an episode, of misconception video misconceptions where they talk about explanations about misconceptions that are wrong.

  • @robynw6307
    @robynw6307 Před rokem +1

    Pill Bugs - we've always called them Slaters where I live in Australia.

  • @nvdawahyaify
    @nvdawahyaify Před rokem +1

    Goats don't eat tin cans. They do however chew on them because they like the glue used to stick the labels on.

  • @jaschabull2365
    @jaschabull2365 Před rokem +1

    I remember my Vertebrate Zoology professor explaining that the term "sweating like a pig" referred to lead bricks that manufacturers nicknamed "pigs", which drip water at some point in the manufacturing process. Though that same professor also said primates are the only mammals that are trichromats and able to distinguish red as well as blue and green, mentioning that "a tiger doesn't know it's orange". Though by the sounds of this, maybe there are ungulates which are dichromats that don't have either the green or blue detecting type of cone?
    As for goats, I've heard the reason a goat will seemingly try to eat a can is that it enjoys the taste of the glue attaching the can's label, but it doesn't have much interest in swallowing the can itself.

  • @FIZZGIG-RARF
    @FIZZGIG-RARF Před 10 měsíci +2

    I had some gerbils i saved from testing. Woke up one day to some screaming. When I went to the cage, one of them had babies... and had eaten all of their limbs off. One of the most HORRIFYING sights i have ever seen!😱🤢

  • @christinmari
    @christinmari Před rokem +2

    Who else knew Matadors were bull killers and Toreadors only tease the bulls. Because i was today years old when i even ever learned there's even such a thing as a toreador. Anyone else?

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Před rokem

      I knew about them from the tune from Carmen. Also, I remembered hearing that matadors had a bunch of other bullfighters in with him to torment the bulls from Ferdinand, the story which is the earliest reference to bullfighting I can recall in my childhood memory.

    • @christinmari
      @christinmari Před rokem

      @Jascha Bull I had no clue what "bull fighting" really was I guess. I might have heard there used to be matadors that killed bulls but now didn't but had some similar ceremony. It's disturbing is what it is.

  • @DarlexGardenWarden
    @DarlexGardenWarden Před rokem +3

    Istg if Snakes can't actually dislocate their jaws isn't here I'll be sad
    Edit: God dammit

  • @macaylacayton2915
    @macaylacayton2915 Před rokem +9

    fun fact:Horseshoe crabs are even used in biotechnology scenes! They're blood has a clotting mechanism that clots around basically any form of contamination, making it easy to spot and thus deal with. Plus blue blood really helps.

    • @gaminawulfsdottir3253
      @gaminawulfsdottir3253 Před rokem +1

      Fun fact: "They're" is a contraction of "they are."

    • @macaylacayton2915
      @macaylacayton2915 Před rokem +5

      @@gaminawulfsdottir3253 not everyone is perfect you know

    • @GenericDan
      @GenericDan Před rokem +2

      @@macaylacayton2915 They were simply correcting you. The "fun fact" was unnecessary though.

    • @macaylacayton2915
      @macaylacayton2915 Před rokem +1

      @@GenericDan I didn’t think I sounded defensive I was just stating a fact in return

    • @GenericDan
      @GenericDan Před rokem

      @@macaylacayton2915 Oh. Sorry.

  • @missoula2213
    @missoula2213 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I found a cat through an ad in the paper as a present to my wife when we were first married, but for these last 18 years, the cat has claimed me as his human. He loves her too, but he clings to me and always has. I am convinced that he genuinely loves me.

  • @laureeeee
    @laureeeee Před rokem +4

    Why would anyone think cats dont love us my cat literally wont let me use my phone because he get jealous

    • @hobbyhopper3143
      @hobbyhopper3143 Před rokem +1

      I love my cat but am under no illusion that she loves me. She does what she does for her own reasons and comforts. That’s what I like about cats; they’re not “needy” but they’ll bug the hell out of you if there’s something they want.

  • @C0RR0DEGAM1NG
    @C0RR0DEGAM1NG Před rokem +1

    18:21 there are also (sometime) small traces of sulfur in human FARTS too, giving them the pungent smell we all know and hate.

  • @obambagaming1467
    @obambagaming1467 Před 10 měsíci +2

    The panda problem is actually quite a big problem.
    Not only is it insanely difficult to breed them or release them to the wild (if they lived only in captivity), but they arent even that important to the ecosystem, if at all.
    Many keystone species are in danger of going extinct.
    Even if we prevent this, their low numbers still hurt the ecosystems.
    But pandas literally get too much spotlight.
    Tons of wildlife organisations, zoos around a world, and even a whole country, the Peoples Republic of China, have dedicated themselves to saving just this one animal (in which they actually succeed).
    Pandas are now so important in the PRC, that they are even used for diplomacy.
    And fortunately, the panda being cute but also endangered, has helped to gain a lot of attention and support for eco-friendly policies and conservation efforts in china.
    But i still think that too many people and organisations focus too much on the panda.
    There are many keystone species and whole ecosystems that really need our attention.

  • @gardevoirmaster5743
    @gardevoirmaster5743 Před rokem +2

    Fun fact red Pandas are not related to pandas and are in fact their own species and are the ORIGINAL panda. The giant panda was discovered after the red panda

  • @lalaineefarmer2945
    @lalaineefarmer2945 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I think salmon jump for the same reason we take a dip in a lake. They can't live up here but it's nice and warm and sunny so it's fun and feels good

  • @rinpaisys
    @rinpaisys Před 11 měsíci +1

    I would not have made it through the spider one without making a spiders georg reference. I applaud your professionalism.

  • @rosehipowl
    @rosehipowl Před rokem +2

    from personal experience, I can tell you I will never forget that hamster mothers can eat their babies

  • @lepreking
    @lepreking Před rokem +4

    Ah yes, a video of facts I learned as kid because I was a know-it-all

  • @rianne_private
    @rianne_private Před rokem +5

    My adult cat actually chases foxes 😂

  • @docjoe86
    @docjoe86 Před rokem +2

    13:56 That’s a hawk!

  • @zeuszo_o1593
    @zeuszo_o1593 Před rokem +2

    Living in Michigan, we call the spider Daddy Long Legs. I don’t know what people call it in the cities though since I grew up out in the country

  • @user-dg1hu8uu1o
    @user-dg1hu8uu1o Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love watching birds in the spring. Especially starlings building their nests. 🐦 s are great house builders.

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat Před 6 měsíci +1

    I have never heard of possums in Australia being eaten by giant spiders. The largest spiders in Australia have body sizes that grow to up to 6cms (which is a little over 2.5 inches). They have been known to eat small frogs and lizards. I would be surprised if any were big enough to eat a possum.

  • @planchetflaw
    @planchetflaw Před rokem +3

    This is a weird N64 Mini announcement.

  • @pengen_gantinama
    @pengen_gantinama Před rokem +1

    1:00 how about the myth that frogs have super long tongue like chameleons?

  • @molly1949
    @molly1949 Před rokem +2

    My goats ate the paper on cans ( labels)due to the kind if glue used..but it did promote the whole can eating goat myth.

  • @nathanvleugels1
    @nathanvleugels1 Před rokem +1

    Interresting video,
    but half of these 'misconceptions' I had never even heard of.

  • @monicamares9198
    @monicamares9198 Před rokem +1

    Rabbits do not need pellets unless they aren't eating their hay but they do need veggies and a huge variety and kept indoors and in a large area and with a buddy

  • @yaboku1686
    @yaboku1686 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The thing about the bees seems weird to me. That statement about the flight doesnt mean that the other 80% dont do anything. Its just that tasks are divided between workers and some require more flying than others.

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Před 10 měsíci +1

      The drones are not only used as an air conditioner in the hive, moving their wings to cause better air flow during hot weather, or warm the hive in cold weater by vibrating, they also feed the larvaes.
      The food the bees bring in also needs to get pre-digested, concentrated and filled with enzymes, same as the pollen. Guess who does that? The bees who do not fly out of the hive.
      Also, what a bee does depends on their age, so can basically say how old a bee is depending on what job it does.

  • @Don-ds3dy
    @Don-ds3dy Před 11 měsíci +1

    15 years ago i called into a radio station to answer the question "what animal sweats like a human", i said penguins, they said pigs, eitherway i still feel ripped off.

  • @ericreativecuts
    @ericreativecuts Před rokem +19

    Honestly I used lemon instead of hydrogen poroxyde and it worked just as well on my dog and I when we got sprayed by a skunk. It honestly wasn't that bad and my dog sure learned his lesson and has steared clear of skunks ever since, even protecting me from a hidden one once! Now if only I could convince him to keep away from the raccoons...

    • @markpimlott2879
      @markpimlott2879 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yes, it's substances such as acetic acid (vinegar) and citric acid (lemon juice) that are the most effective in cutting through and neutralizing any of the anal gland secretions (and other external glandular secretions of mammals), in my lifelong experience as a Wildlife Biologist.
      Many hunters, trappers, and taxidermists, for example, would also be able to confirm.
      Tomato juice is too expensive and only marginally effective due to its acidic nature!
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