Your videos are great and cool perspectives and deep dives on birds, I’d love to see more!
@JamesKelleyJr3 ай бұрын
Youre about to lose me.... 3min In is tell me (with your hands...a l o t) and we haven't heard about a single bird.
@JamesKelleyJr3 ай бұрын
4.....5....yup I'm out. This deal is about a 3rd over.
@perguto3 ай бұрын
Actual classification starts at 6:22
@turbotreehouse97805 ай бұрын
You did my boy the Lyrebird dirty. Thanks for mentioning the Kaguu tho <3
@turbotreehouse97805 ай бұрын
Jokes aside this was simply fantastic, thank you!
@eirenicShepherd5 ай бұрын
Thanks for making a video on this topic
@angeladkins32577 ай бұрын
Great video thank you for helping raise awareness!
@angeladkins32577 ай бұрын
Excellent Video and very informative!
@supme75588 ай бұрын
Hello nesting im a cavity is not genatic 22:19
@supme75588 ай бұрын
Made up guessing
@supme75588 ай бұрын
9:01 thats a duck duh
@supme75588 ай бұрын
I call b.s.
@supme75588 ай бұрын
No way an eagle is not related to a peregrine falcon sorry
@prussianblue63828 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great video! I loved the information, as well as your enthusiasm!
@sashabertasius10468 ай бұрын
12:26 for a second I thought that Grebes were related to Hesperornithines…
@mariiris14038 ай бұрын
Please leave the illustrating pictures up longer!
@mariiris14038 ай бұрын
... much longer!
@ClyDIley8 ай бұрын
Dude.... even engaging in the "is it real" discussion is, quite frankly, in poor taste. Idk how else to put it. The "is it real" question is answered by the facts. Cover the facts, stay away from the reddit atheist and their insufferable "definitely not an epistemology" epistemology. Be above that.
@SunDecline8 ай бұрын
I live in Hawaii. Interacting with diverse bird species has made I nterested in learning more about birds. I know that, in several species I’ve dealt with firsthand (repopulation of endangered species, invasives, and domestics), fewer of them were needed to establish healthy breeding populations than mammals, pointing to different genetic mutation mechanisms or rates. I bird-sat a Japanese White Eye rescued as a chick for several weeks. Learned some ways they communicate, especially the disapproval chirp. A White-Rumped Shama bird used this sound at me while I was doing yard work, and I knew to move from where I was squatting and cleaning up a planter-bed. When I was out of the way, she grabbed a huge centipede I unknowingly disturbed while cleaning! Crazy! Seems like these unrelated song birds have some sort of common language they use to communicate across species. Also saw common signature behaviors in another two species: American crows (North America) and Common mynahs (Hawaii). They both hold “court”. They get in a group, start squabbling, then gang up on one of the members as though to punish them. Looks brutal. Can’t find any information on these behaviors anywhere. Surprised there’s not more research on bird social behaviors.
@prodweylo8 ай бұрын
Corvids are pronounced cor (like in a word "cork") vids (vid is pronounced like in a word "video")
@prodweylo8 ай бұрын
You're such a cool guy. Idk why you only have 600 subscribers
@_robustus_8 ай бұрын
The name button quail has been given to two different species.
@johnwalters13418 ай бұрын
Enjoyed your romp through the Aves. At 28:38, your Indigo-bird appears to be an Indigo Bunting, in a different family of passerines. Indigo-birds live in Africa, while the Indigo Bunting is from North America.
@apteropith8 ай бұрын
i know the english spelling has been grievously butchered, but... "hoatzin" is more properly pronounced "wahtsin" or "wahtseen" the older spelling "huatzin" makes this much more clear
@apteropith8 ай бұрын
birbs
@rofavilla8 ай бұрын
that was a very cool overview on the subject, well presented with an enthusiastic presentation, kudos! Greetings from Rio!
@Cylindropuntia8 ай бұрын
Excellent video sir, there aren’t a lot of videos on KZbin covering the phylogeny like this one.
@kellyharrison51848 ай бұрын
Fascinating! You just got yourself a new subscriber.
@vinniepeterss8 ай бұрын
❤❤
@kolesaurusdickinsoni3648 ай бұрын
BIRD FAMILY TREE MENTIONED‼️‼️‼️
@derrickstorm69768 ай бұрын
That intro almost made me cry, it was so bad but clearly had full attempt behind it
@BirdManCam8 ай бұрын
I'm wearing a regent bowerbird shirt while I watch this, how pleased I was to see a picture of one pop up on screen! Great vid, ive thoroughly enjoyed. Laughed and learned
@brianlewis56928 ай бұрын
Hoatzin is pronounced like "Watson"
@meadow-maker8 ай бұрын
I really like the video, thank you. it would have been great if you'd added the names of the birds along with the photos the flashed up and left them on the screen just a bit longer so we could look at them without having to rewind the video. thanks.
@SilverScarletSpider8 ай бұрын
thank you clint’s birds
@Jesus_equals_LOVEnForgviness8 ай бұрын
I don't know bro. I mean I'm confused how this vid got 11k views but you only got 500 subs. But good for you in the views. I love natural history.
@CazabichosManny9 ай бұрын
I'm a zoologist (I specialized in soil invertebrates) and, well, my ornithology classes were fucking awful, taught by a professor who clearly didn't know anything about birds, whose exams were hard as fuck, and whose ppts were mostly oudated text and wikipedia links... I ended up hating the group as a whole and never got to understand it, to date they are my least favorite group. With this video, now I can say that I understand the basics on the phylogeny of birds. Thank you.
@robinmatz66868 ай бұрын
I took part in a trip to hungary (from germany) for my bachelors degree. The Professor was a misogynistic, racist alcoholic and his ppts were mostly photographs, mostly his own that went on for like 50 pages. For my presentation on my part of his material i condensed it to 12 pages, and he was so sceptic at first if that would be enough. But guess what, you can efficiently present concepts on few well defined slides. Anways, i also had to construct the list of our observed birds in phylogenetic order. The order that he gave me was probably around 30-50 years old i guess, lots of morphologic trait clustering in there. That dumb fuck said that phylogenies dont make sense anymore since "the damned geneticists" started "meddling" in the systematics. The guy was 83 years old at that point. Except for the Professor that was a solid trip
@janetpoulsen21229 ай бұрын
I am so happy to find this video. I've been wanting for quite some time now to learn more about the details of the bird family tree. I've watched this 2 times in a row just now.🐦🦆🦉🦅
@noah.noah129 ай бұрын
Absolute banger of a video.
@kenworthunofficial19349 ай бұрын
this is everything ive had a special interest in for years, throw in a transformer at the end and buddy i would have exploded! tysm for sharing this with us!
@Chompchompyerded9 ай бұрын
I would have thought that cranes were more related to forklifts than rails, and that rails would be more closely related to I-beams. Shows what I know.
@Chompchompyerded9 ай бұрын
Classical music joke warning! Q: What do you call a bird that composes music? A: Edvard Greib. A: What is Edvard Greib's favourite dance form? Q: The Flamingo (flamenco).
@valinagabrielle9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much, you are a charismatic and charming host, great vid, very entertaining
@rursus83549 ай бұрын
You know your stuff! Good video!
@rursus83549 ай бұрын
Creationists that want to argue can go to the KZbin channel Gutsick Gibbon. She loves to discuss Creation theory from a former Creationist Anthropologist perspective. I, who never was a Creationist, would like to *_not_* hear about it. It isn't science, but a bunch of nut-jobs that think that the Bible is truer than "the religion" Science because it is true, and it doesn't matter that that is circular reasoning and misses the point.
@RadicalCaveman9 ай бұрын
At the end of the video, I half-expected you to fly away.
@michaelwood3689 ай бұрын
Please do one of these where you explain how theropods are related! You can start with birds, raptors, and troodontids and work from there!