21 Species Were Declared Extinct
22:33
The Science of De-Extinction
24:29
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@RainVine
@RainVine 5 күн бұрын
I suspect the ancient hobbies of ancient nerds may have included this 🧘🙏
@mint_420
@mint_420 6 күн бұрын
I was at Tiger's Nest in Bhutan and was unstacking a lot of rockstacks that I saw otw because people had picked rocks up from grassy and moist areas. Halfway up, one of the guides scolded me for doing that because it was a way people made wishes or prayed for good luck in their culture. I tried to explain but ofc he was mad and I said sorry because I didn't know about that part. I believe I was right though...
@chibuezeariguzo1876
@chibuezeariguzo1876 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this!
@danmax7456
@danmax7456 24 күн бұрын
Did I find it fascinating but when they fall in the water will they still survive and grow
@fccoop
@fccoop Ай бұрын
hey nice shirt i have the same one, also thanks for the info!
@chrisurfer83
@chrisurfer83 Ай бұрын
Omg he's walking all over the micro-habitat you MONSTER!!!
@tusharparab1813
@tusharparab1813 Ай бұрын
Fantastic!
@DevonLadd
@DevonLadd Ай бұрын
So its hippies fighting small battles on both sides. That makes sense. Cant wait until we hold corporations to the same standard regarding the destruction of massive and sontimes ancient biomes merely for their convenience
@wdwnutjm
@wdwnutjm Ай бұрын
wow- I never thought about what's living around & underneath the rocks. I just imagined that a really little animal might walk near it and get squished if it falls on them. thank you- interesting topic
@brianbrown2266
@brianbrown2266 Ай бұрын
Well I can tell you it was kicking in S.C in the 1980"s I actully found a dead one on road with the Black crest 😢 so I know it was not the it's more common cousin.I took her home found like these grubs in her stomach nothing else.the bird was just like the one showed on the old video in 1930's
@user-xw4tq3pm1l
@user-xw4tq3pm1l Ай бұрын
great 😂 thx Its great when something hostile is reused by those who it is against ... 🎉
@silverangelize
@silverangelize Ай бұрын
Thank you SO MUCH - you're a fantastic teacher
@tamsolo1584
@tamsolo1584 Ай бұрын
How is that not even COOLER 🤩
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon Ай бұрын
Right?? Super cool!
@alclay8689
@alclay8689 Ай бұрын
"I'm horny" "Yeah me too" "Yeah me too" "Yeah me too"...
@zerobanana
@zerobanana Ай бұрын
the type of stuff you wanne see on youtube shorts.
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@fredpierre2216
@fredpierre2216 Ай бұрын
I miss seeing fireflies in the summer back east and in New York.
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon Ай бұрын
I feel you. I grew up with em out in Texas, but here in Cali they've been lost. Moving back into their range this week!
@user-xe9dd3pz8i
@user-xe9dd3pz8i Ай бұрын
Looks like dragon 🐉
@stephenbadamo130
@stephenbadamo130 Ай бұрын
This has to be a joke
@jaeann8510
@jaeann8510 2 ай бұрын
Are you gonna do the black one the black eyed tree frog?
@autocorrectly764
@autocorrectly764 2 ай бұрын
So if I wear rainbow animals will stay away from me?
@popdogfool
@popdogfool 4 күн бұрын
nah, increases your chance of getting hate crimed
@yuanyuzhe7106
@yuanyuzhe7106 2 ай бұрын
Is it possible to do a joint phylogenetic signal of multiple traits / use multivariate traits? If yes what packages implement these methods?
@johnfrank4558
@johnfrank4558 2 ай бұрын
Wait till people find out they never left PA... Seen more than one in the 90's
@PTX0432
@PTX0432 2 ай бұрын
I’m from West Texas right next to the Davis Mountains we got some Big Cats I’ve seen out here
@cameron300
@cameron300 2 ай бұрын
Your channel is criminally underrated given how well you explained Phylogenies.
@Gmo1999
@Gmo1999 2 ай бұрын
I live close to there
@james.tupper
@james.tupper 3 ай бұрын
Excellent lesson. Thanks so much for sharing this.
@skepticalmaiden
@skepticalmaiden 3 ай бұрын
For some senseless reason “ Bexar “ is pronounced “ 🐻 “ by the locals. They’re wrong. There’s no reason it should be pronounced that way. I say as it’s pronounced correctly. I can’t understand the reasoning behind it. I live in San Antonio .
@jennagrimshaw3275
@jennagrimshaw3275 3 ай бұрын
Great video on phylogenetic signal! And I really appreciated the case studies... Many times tutorials have simplified their examples to such a degree that it is difficult to apply them intuitively to real data
@jgolden45tuba1
@jgolden45tuba1 3 ай бұрын
I can tell you what happened these birds were really loud and people shot them
@JasonMillerOutdoors
@JasonMillerOutdoors 3 ай бұрын
Getting that Jaguar on my trail camera was incredible! I will get him again...
@joesantora158
@joesantora158 3 ай бұрын
I offer the following retort to your video: you are gay.
@Shasta69
@Shasta69 3 ай бұрын
Good grief. Poster boy for environmentalist geek.
@stevenoconnor3256
@stevenoconnor3256 3 ай бұрын
Jaguars were originally a North American species as South America was isolated from North America for millions of years. Jaguar's ancestors probably entered the Americas from Eurasia.
@syedkaleem868
@syedkaleem868 3 ай бұрын
now what is this species over or not what is its future
@Rockmonanov
@Rockmonanov 3 ай бұрын
We need to start getting cameras out to KZbinrs so they can start taking pictures of all the Ivory Billed Wood Peckers they’re seeing!
@tchalymonestime7292
@tchalymonestime7292 3 ай бұрын
Underrated bro
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 3 ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@skylerstevens8887
@skylerstevens8887 3 ай бұрын
Neat
@JulianNaturalHistoryMuseum
@JulianNaturalHistoryMuseum 4 ай бұрын
have you read Venomous Animals of North America Larry Jones? I'm in there because of these ants. Wild experiment not recommended.
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 3 ай бұрын
I haven't but ill need to check it out! What got you in that book? Bad bites?
@JulianNaturalHistoryMuseum
@JulianNaturalHistoryMuseum 3 ай бұрын
@BiologistDillon you'll see. Venomous Animals of North America Larry Jones a great book. I'm alive
@Dorfjunge
@Dorfjunge 4 ай бұрын
The Problem with rock stacking. What I expected: People randomly piling up rock-stacks will lead hikers into wrong directions. What I got: Mah poor moist salamanders and microalgae and also I'm gay!
@backsideboy1642
@backsideboy1642 4 ай бұрын
Thanks Dillion!
@Dchicuy14
@Dchicuy14 4 ай бұрын
We got gay bugs before gta 6
@WHHAALLTA_WHITE
@WHHAALLTA_WHITE 4 ай бұрын
Dang even bugs are gay now
@PixelRockett
@PixelRockett 4 ай бұрын
It also means that when in captivity, poison dart frogs and hooded pitohui are no longer poisonous!
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 3 ай бұрын
Yea! that poison sequestration is pretty fascinating
@panafricandesignsandapparel
@panafricandesignsandapparel 4 ай бұрын
Man thank you for the detail presentation...08:03 - What are Sister Groups 19:17 - Common Mistake: Phylogenies can rotate
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 3 ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@jacobstevens9719
@jacobstevens9719 4 ай бұрын
Dillion this is fucking fantastic! I'm currently composing a disaster research study about the coqui infestation, and this is honestly the best video I've ever found covering these species. I can't believe I didn't find you sooner, I will be citing you! Seriously man, this is awesome I'd even call this a mini documentary.
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 3 ай бұрын
Hey im glad you liked it! Appreciate the comment
@Redtornado6
@Redtornado6 4 ай бұрын
Where’s the line of killing 2 ants in my house and killing a worm in nature.
@user-op2ro5xt9d
@user-op2ro5xt9d 5 ай бұрын
I do the all-carnivore diet, have done it for years, and haven’t suffered health problems or deficiency. I have however resolved health issues and deficiencies.
@vishalupadhyay416
@vishalupadhyay416 5 ай бұрын
How to find an outgroup in the phylogenetic tree 🌳??????
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 4 ай бұрын
Hey! Just answered your question as a short kzbin.info_erKX-44fjE
@alizuqarnain4785
@alizuqarnain4785 5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much Mr.Dillon, you really made it very simple to understand , even i'm an undergraduate student but still i was able to understand the each concept... May God bless you more✨
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 4 ай бұрын
Thank you! I really appreciate it
@Nathavolt
@Nathavolt 5 ай бұрын
I'm brazilian. If the USA wants to get jaguars to return to their territory and preserve them there, it might be interesting to talk to Leandro Silveira, a great Brazilian expert on jaguars. Perhaps his work at the "Instituto Onça Pintada" (Jaguar Conservation Fund) can inspire people in the USA to do something similar, adapted to their reality. He and his wife Ana have many years of experience with jaguars, especially those in the "cerrado" biome region (which is more like a savannah than a forest). Note: in Brazil, jaguars from the Pantanal biome are the largest, those from the Amazon region are smaller than those from the Pantanal and there are also jaguars from the "cerrado" biome. Having a population with a good number of these animals again may create situations similar to what occurs in Brazil: the conflict between jaguars and rural producers, especially cattle breeders, so it's better to be prepared to resolve this issue with the farmers, otherwise the farmers will eliminate the jaguars. Watch the video titled "SIM, A ONÇA-PINTADA ATACA O SER HUMANO! | RICHARD RASMUSSEN" where Leandro Silveira explains to Brazilian biologist Richard Rasmussen that large rural properties are better for jaguar conservation than small properties (activate automatic translation). But this is in Brazil, where because of the "Legal Reserve" law. The "Legal Reserve" is a percentage of the area covered by native vegetation, located within a rural property in Brazil. The Legal Reserve is mandatory by law. In the Amazon Jungle the percentage is 80%, that is, whoever buys an area in this region will only be able to deforest 20% of it and keep 80% untouchable. In the rest of the country the percentage is 20%. These "Legal Reserves" on each farm create mini refuges for wildlife and jaguars can go from one to another until they find an ideal region for them. Leandro is aware that it's impossible to eliminate large farms, so Leandro's work is essential to resolve conflicts between rural producers and jaguars. Leandro's work with the cooperation of these large farmers shows that it's possible to preserve jaguars without having to harm agribusiness. Also watch the video titled "UMA ONÇA-PINTADA SELVAGEM INVADIU O INSTITUTO! | RICHARD RASMUSSEN" from 8:20m, where Leandro explains a lot of interesting things about jaguars. There are 02 Brazilian channels on KZbin that are linked to the “Instituto Onça Pintada”, which are: “Família Animal” and “Tiago Jácomo”. This institute usually receives many little orphans taken by our Environmental Police or they go looking for them when local farmers and residents call them. Many of these orphans arrive at the institute traumatized and in poor health, recover with good treatment and live happily in the sanctuary. The video titled "Jaguar: o destino de uma espécie em extinção - HD Animal Documentary" shows how Leandro Silveira and his team work. In Brazil, the government created a law that prohibits the killing of wild animals. If our environmental police catch a hunter carrying a dead wild animal, he will be arrested without the right to pay bail. The conservation of jaguars must not only be carried out by a group of people, but must also have the help and participation of the government and the population. Only with everyone's participation can jaguar conservation be successful.
@BiologistDillon
@BiologistDillon 4 ай бұрын
Really appreciate this thorough answer!
@Nathavolt
@Nathavolt 4 ай бұрын
@@BiologistDillon I imagined that you, being a biologist, would enjoy receiving this information. As a Brazilian, I didn't know that jaguars used to exist in the USA. I hope that the USA will be able to have jaguars on its territory again and will make an effort to preserve them. Also watch the video "AS DIFERENTES ONÇAS DO BRASIL! | TIAGO JÁCOMO", where he explains the different characteristics of the jaguars that live in the Pantanal (the largest of all), those that live in the Cerrado (the second largest) and those that live in Amazon (the smallest of all). I'ts very interesting. Tiago Jácomo is the son of biologists Leandro and Ana.