Carnivora - In a World With Cats, How Do Dogs Survive?

  Рет қаралды 132,359

Clint's Reptiles

Clint's Reptiles

Ай бұрын

Lions and tigers and bears and walruses! Oh my! If the Carnivora is not the coolest and most diverse clade of mammals on the planet, it is certainly the clade most likely to eat you! And the thing is that from the hyena to the skunk, the fossa to the seal, if there isn't something in this clade for you, you're on the wrong channel!
#clintsreptiles #animals #mammals
====
Attribution: docs.google.com/document/d/1i...
====
Clint is a professional biologist and educator, but above all, Clint LOVES reptiles and he loves to share that love with everyone he meets. Whether you're lover or a hater of reptiles, you can't help but get excited with Clint!
We post a new video every Saturday morning! So stay tuned!
Be sure to SUBSCRIBE: kzbin.info...
====
PATREON: / clintsreptiles
MERCHANDISE: www.clintsreptiles.com/merch
SUPPORT Clint's Reptiles by shopping AMAZON here: www.amazon.com/shop/clintsrep...
Schedule a virtual ONE-ON-ONE with Clint! square.site/book/JYBMZXG2X02F...
====
FACEBOOK: / clintsreptilevideos
INSTAGRAM: / clintsreptiles
TWITTER: / clintsreptiles
WEBSITE: www.clintsreptiles.com/
DISCORD: / discord
====
To contact us for BUSINESS purposes: clintsreptiles+business@gmail.com
====
You guys are so RAD!
====
Fan mail? Yes Please!
Clint's Reptiles
770 East Main Street # 127
Lehi, UT 84043
If you would like to send a LIVE animal - FIRST: please send us an email to make sure we can take it in. clintsreptiles+LIVE@gmail.com

Пікірлер: 1 100
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
Over 65 MINUTES of BONUS content from this video, exclusively for our Stinkin' Rad Fans on Patreon! Patreon is a great way to support Clint's Reptiles AND get awesome extras (including hundreds of other bonus videos)! www.patreon.com/posts/video-patreon-101079896
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
You didn’t do extinct families, but I think it’s relevant to mention that out of the 6 groups of animals to develop Saber-Teeth, 3 of them are in Feliformia. Edit: If you did go over the extinct Nimravidae and Barbourofelidae, cats wouldn’t appear as “hagfish” as they did in the video.
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb Ай бұрын
Hey Clint Laidlaw, Why don't you get to think of a suggestion and creating a KZbin Videos all about the 🐺🦊🐶🐕🦮🐕‍🦺🐩Canine Group (Wild Dogs And Domestic Dogs)🐺🦊🐶🐕🦮🐕‍🦺🐩 on the next Clint's Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb Ай бұрын
Hey Clint Laidlaw, Why don't you get to think of a suggestion and creating a KZbin Videos all about the 🦁🐯🐅🐆🐈🐈‍⬛🐱Feline Group 🦁(Wild Cats, Big Cats, And Saber Toothed Cats) 🐯🐅🐆🐈🐈‍⬛🐱, on the next Clint's Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
@@HassanMohamed-rm1cbI will be harshly judging this to make sure he gets it correct. There will be no “clouded leopards are saber toothed cats” when I’m around. I will also be closely watching to see if he gets Saber Toothed cats correct. Doing a Phylogeny of cats would be difficult because he’d have to go over Pseudaelurus-Grade cats.
@kennethmullen-qe9hg
@kennethmullen-qe9hg Ай бұрын
You had me rollin' (down the street stokin' niche trolls) this episode lol! Maybe the funniest video I've seen from you! Really cranked that JOKE DIAL up to eleven, today, my friend! Some good chivznet! Definitely am looking forward to the other half of it! :o)
@TheGesterr
@TheGesterr Ай бұрын
NO WAY CLINT JUST SAID "WHAT'S UP MY NICHES" LMAOOOO
@AngryKnees
@AngryKnees Ай бұрын
the sheer caucasity
@larachaplauske8818
@larachaplauske8818 Ай бұрын
Beat me to it.​@@AngryKnees
@ShaneWalta
@ShaneWalta Ай бұрын
I choked when I heard that 😂
@alicecain4851
@alicecain4851 Ай бұрын
Yeah... I totally died!😂😂😂
@lingus1382
@lingus1382 Ай бұрын
I love Clint. Truly a great educator and entertainer lmao
@laurawright719
@laurawright719 Ай бұрын
1:30 to quote Casual Geographic, "An herbivore is only as vegetarian as it's options"
@1mrcow143
@1mrcow143 Ай бұрын
Casual Geographic is awesome
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
That's a good way of putting it.
@benad3576
@benad3576 Ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptiles I would love to see you react to that guy. Casual Geographic has some good videos on all kinds of cats that roar and cats that purr
@cuddlecows
@cuddlecows Ай бұрын
Very true. Diets a spectrum. And that's coming from a strict vegan who is an animal nerd. Horses be sucking up mice sometimes. 😂😂 That video still haunts me. 😂😂
@zombiedoggie2732
@zombiedoggie2732 Ай бұрын
I wonder what'd happen if Casual Geographic and Clint's Reptiles team up for a video?
@anniecampbell3170
@anniecampbell3170 Ай бұрын
instead of saying civets look like stretched out cats we should be saying cats look like compressed civets
@AdrianneJH
@AdrianneJH Ай бұрын
I subscribed. Gimme my kitty video. Got sucked in by amphibian compare/contrasts and then hagfish but I think evolution was what originally brought me here months ago. And now I'm looking forward to kitties Sorry it took me so long to realize I wasn't subscribed. Your videos are great
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Wait until you see Nimravids and Barbourofelids.
@khoahthong4434
@khoahthong4434 Ай бұрын
Ya. I want people to say that other animals are the breaking apart of a platypus instead of the platypus being a combination of other animals.
@kyachdistent1301
@kyachdistent1301 Ай бұрын
Only civets are nicer.
@xion1629
@xion1629 Ай бұрын
"What's up my niches!" Needs to be the next piece of merch 😂
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
That would be so niche!
@nicolegoodew1547
@nicolegoodew1547 Ай бұрын
​@@ClintsReptiles 🤣 nice
@qlum
@qlum Ай бұрын
What's up my hagfish of niches!
@Nick-Nasty
@Nick-Nasty Ай бұрын
And they diversified all of that hizzy!
@sirrickthe2nd583
@sirrickthe2nd583 Ай бұрын
I'd buy it
@hanshotfirst686
@hanshotfirst686 Ай бұрын
15:22 Clint: Nobody calls multiple meerkats MeerKitties.... Me: Until now!
@therongjr
@therongjr Ай бұрын
Thus it has been resolved!
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
Let the movement begin!
@js66613
@js66613 Ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly!
@Helgatwb
@Helgatwb Ай бұрын
This 😂
@user-zr6er2xs3w
@user-zr6er2xs3w Ай бұрын
I will always say Mongeese.
@magicalelvishman
@magicalelvishman Ай бұрын
The TikTok animal is a Jaguarundi. I think KZbin is removing my comments because they contain a link to another KZbin channel, but you can find the original trail cam footage in 4k on KZbin under "Ocho Verde Wildlife Channel" along with many other creatures crossing the same creek. The name of the video is "Handsome Jaguarundi Cat On Trail Cam - Videos of Jungle Animals". I found it by running an internet search for "Madagascar Trail Cam Fossa Creek" and subsequently "Brazil Trail Cam Jaguarundi Creek" (though, in the end, the footage was actually captured in Costa Rica).
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Ya, don’t know how he ever called that a Fossa
@antarfodoh
@antarfodoh Ай бұрын
21:03
@elizabethpemberton8445
@elizabethpemberton8445 Ай бұрын
You are the hero we need, but don’t deserve. ❤
@FinneasJedidiah
@FinneasJedidiah Ай бұрын
He didn't, he said it looked similar to one. Which it objectively does.​@@Wolfie54545
@gpanthony
@gpanthony Ай бұрын
@@Wolfie54545 nobody's erfpect
@Epicness54
@Epicness54 Ай бұрын
"If you're going to be killed and eaten by a mammal it's probably one of these guys" Sir I do not see Hippos here.
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
"And eaten". But even still. I didn't think hippos would beat this entire clade.
@Epicness54
@Epicness54 Ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptiles do hippos not eat the people that they kill? I would assume an animal like a hippo likely isn’t very picky
@MumrikDK
@MumrikDK Ай бұрын
They're mainly herbivores, but very territorial and quite aggressive. Beyond attacking boats that get close, they apparently raid farms and end up fighting humans for the crops.
@astrinymris9953
@astrinymris9953 Ай бұрын
He did only say "probably". 😆
@TiggerIsMyCat
@TiggerIsMyCat Ай бұрын
Nope, Hippo will 100% kill you, but it won't eat you. Pure herbivores. They kill you because they're extremely territorial and aggressive, and they can. Hippos are like FINISH HIM. They look at you and see no hunger, but hatred. They absolutely WANT you dead. They'll kill you to get you out of their space, and probably save your body for the crocodiles, who WILL eat a body floating in the water. Just stay out of the river. 😂
@pixiesouter9461
@pixiesouter9461 Ай бұрын
"what's up my niches" caught me so off guard I nearly spat out my quiche 😂😂😂😂 Clint. You owe me a quiche.
@KimJuaniLLy1
@KimJuaniLLy1 Ай бұрын
I wasnt ready 😂
@munafruit
@munafruit Ай бұрын
i choked on my crumpet we deserve compensation
@Khunai.
@Khunai. Ай бұрын
I had walked into the other room with my headset on and stopped what I was doing to come back in, rewind, and make sure I heard that right 😂
@Taschenschieber
@Taschenschieber Ай бұрын
I hope you pronounce "quiche" like "kwitch"
@pixiesouter9461
@pixiesouter9461 Ай бұрын
@@Taschenschieber I will now.
@genlisae
@genlisae Ай бұрын
Got to the part where Clint said Felidae are intelligent, turned to my cats and said "Hear that? You are supposed to be smart," and one of them promptly licked the door.
@hereticFox716
@hereticFox716 Ай бұрын
I can not imagine a more perfect situation of events
@2ndAmendmenttillIDie
@2ndAmendmenttillIDie Ай бұрын
😂
@lenon3579ify
@lenon3579ify Ай бұрын
It is actually trying to play dumb. They understood you and proceeded to do exactly something that you would find dumb.
@sephikong8323
@sephikong8323 Ай бұрын
Cats' intelligence is wild, they can act like the most clueless of dimwits then all of a sudden surprise you by figuring out stuff they have no business to whilst you were not looking. I'm sure them being dumb is just a ploy so that we lower our guard (that or they need to give their braincells a few days to recharge after every smart action)
@thiemokellner1893
@thiemokellner1893 Ай бұрын
It just outsmarted you, as ... you didn't get the point in licking the door. Don't blame it for being smarter than me. 😂
@sparkyfister
@sparkyfister Ай бұрын
You are my Saturday morning cartoons.
@machematix
@machematix Ай бұрын
I'm 38 and I watch Clint on Saturday mornings in bed and get excited. I just have black coffee instead of cereal.
@Olivescat
@Olivescat Ай бұрын
"The hagfishes of mongooses" is a quote i want embroidered on my bathroom wall
@Hi_Im_Akward
@Hi_Im_Akward Ай бұрын
That clip of the tiger attacking the man on the elephant is absolute nightmare fuel.
@SeaWasp
@SeaWasp Ай бұрын
For some eye bleach check out Michael Jamison's channel. He's been caring for tigers (among many other animals) at his home in South Africa, and listening to him talk is really relaxing
@thewerewolfofwaggawagga8818
@thewerewolfofwaggawagga8818 Ай бұрын
you should see the one of a tiger chasing a guy on a motorbike
@rickh3714
@rickh3714 Ай бұрын
​@@thewerewolfofwaggawagga8818 Saw that a day or two back. A YT short I think from Thailand? Terrifying. People should also remember a certain pugilist MikeT hugging a large tiger & what it did to someone else ( less pugilistically proportioned ?) some time later! Not that even Mr Tyson could have stood much of a chance if it had turned on him back then.
@Frostfern94
@Frostfern94 Ай бұрын
Absolutely
@bb1111116
@bb1111116 Ай бұрын
Yes, terrifying. Reminds me of the tiger attack in the movie, Apocalypse Now. Incredible animals which deserve fear, respect and preservation.
@alecradtke
@alecradtke Ай бұрын
That clip of the tiger attack puts into perspective why conservation of what species we cherish isn’t exactly as big in the areas the species actually live
@ZumaZoom07
@ZumaZoom07 11 күн бұрын
Yup. First world issue
@jleer6178
@jleer6178 Ай бұрын
Keep 'Em Seperated... and there goes a nice mouthful of coffee right out my nose. God love a geek! LOL!
@F_ERAL
@F_ERAL Ай бұрын
Glad I'm not the only one. 🤙
@jleer6178
@jleer6178 Ай бұрын
@@F_ERAL 🤙
@liambohl
@liambohl Ай бұрын
This is the third place I've heard that line in as many days
@jleer6178
@jleer6178 Ай бұрын
@@liambohl And we all know your only hobby, besides imitating coprilytes, is to harass random people on social media. Not gonna spoil my day.
@paulaccuardi9071
@paulaccuardi9071 Ай бұрын
Come out and play
@Timelost_Techpriest
@Timelost_Techpriest Ай бұрын
Housecats are kind of a fascinating case. The relationship between humans and cats is one of the most purely mutualist in the anthrosphere. Humans gain pest control, the cats, while people usually think they gain food, actually gain the security of being admitted into the territory of the most aggressively territorial vertebrate on the planet, while historically neither really gave up anything. Food isn't really an issue for housecats, they're supreme generalist small predators and finding prey really isn't that much of a problem for them, but having the things that prey on them held at bay by the almost Hymenopteran territorial aggression that H. Sapiens manifest in larger groups is an _immense_ benefit.
@LS-xy7zt
@LS-xy7zt Ай бұрын
That's an amazing take I'd never considered. I'd always heard/assumed that as agriculture developed, rodents came for the grain stores and cats came for the rodents, then just stuck around. But there undeniably is an advantage of being in the good graces of a territorial, aggressive, and capable species. Cats deal with the vermin that we're too big to effectively handle, and we deal with vermin big enough to threaten both of us.
@leilavalens3617
@leilavalens3617 Ай бұрын
Dogs may be Man’s best friend, but cats are Man’s coolest neighbor.
@latieplolo
@latieplolo Ай бұрын
In the regions where cats originally "domesticated" themselves, there's an even better reason for us to appreciate their company. I'd have a huge love of any animal that kept scorpions and venomous snakes away from the places where my children play
@Nutmeg142
@Nutmeg142 Ай бұрын
They are also one of the largest invasive species in the world.
@ptorq
@ptorq Ай бұрын
@@Nutmeg142 Cats or humans? An argument could be made for either.
@nataschavisser573
@nataschavisser573 Ай бұрын
A group of my friends went camping once and we had a carrot cake. A piece of cake was left on the plate and a civit started approaching it like it was stalking prey. It was so cute - its little ears, the serious way it was stalking the cake etc. - we were all cooing. Then suddenly it barred its teeth and jumped on the cake, claws out. It was the only real life jump scare I have ever had. Edit: now I don't know if it was a civit or not. It was in the Western Cape and it was a little mongoose-cat thing with round ears and spots.
@fixedwithglue
@fixedwithglue Ай бұрын
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genet_(animal) :) , an amazing animal, a rare find in the western cape, consider your very self lucky :)
@cathleenc6943
@cathleenc6943 Ай бұрын
"This is a panda! It's a bear. And this is a panda! It's not a bear." That was so funny I had to run it back twice just to watch it again, I was laughing so hard! 😂🤣😂🤣
@averyvanderlouw1193
@averyvanderlouw1193 Ай бұрын
I remember interning at a zoo when I was in highschool and whenever people would ask me about “black panthers” I’d have to prepare myself to explain “that could basically mean any big cat that’s melanistic”. People generally weren’t too happy with that explanation
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Wait until you tell them Cougars and Cheetahs aren’t big cats but Clouded Leopards are.
@malkomalkavian
@malkomalkavian Ай бұрын
What was the question?
@Frostfern94
@Frostfern94 Ай бұрын
Yeah, it is interesting to try and explain
@Thekritterkamp
@Thekritterkamp Ай бұрын
Honestly clint i love the longer phylogeny videos, I actually understand it when you explain everything
@rantingrodent416
@rantingrodent416 Ай бұрын
I enjoy the fact that these videos always consist of something like 10-15% roasting of morphology, by air time.
@Mick116
@Mick116 Ай бұрын
@12:19, “What’s up my niches”. OMG. Instant cringe, and instant like. Well done, sir. Well done.
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
The bifecta!
@usonumabeach300
@usonumabeach300 Ай бұрын
I love that I'm getting etymology lessons from a biologist. This is why Clint is a treasure. Sincerely, an English major
@imlivinlikelarry6672
@imlivinlikelarry6672 Ай бұрын
I have a question Niche is viewed as an unadapted borrowing from French (this is just what Google says), meaning it hasn't been conformed to the target language of English Wouldn't this mean that the initial pronunciation of "nitch" *was* incorrect and should have been "neesh"? Obviously now it isn't incorrect As an example, schadenfreude is an unadapted borrowing from German, and in English it's still pronounced like the German word
@pixiesouter9461
@pixiesouter9461 Ай бұрын
@@imlivinlikelarry6672 technically both would be considered correct in English, as when borrowing words from other languages it was common to "anglosize" (pretty sure I'm spelling that wrong 😂) them. So, either would work.
@Lowlandlord
@Lowlandlord Ай бұрын
If it was an etymology lesson he would have taught us that English got the word "niche" from French, and that it would have sounded different from how he says it in both languages at the time, and that French got it from other Romance languages and it's ultimate origin was Latin, nidus, which also didn't sound like the way he says it. Love Clint, but what he gave was an explanation for his pronunciation, he did not touch on the etymology of the word, and his argument for how it was historically pronounced in English is without a solid foundation.
@objective_psychology
@objective_psychology Ай бұрын
@@imlivinlikelarry6672 It is morphologically adapted though. So the only sense in which it's unadapted would be the pronunciation, in which case /niʃ/ is a more recent unadapted borrowing event
@objective_psychology
@objective_psychology Ай бұрын
@@Lowlandlord “got it from other Romance languages” LOL, you mean inherited it from its ancestors. What does that have to do with anything though?
@awsgeneral
@awsgeneral Ай бұрын
"What's up my niches! And they diversified all over that hizzy" oof
@trenaareen1216
@trenaareen1216 Ай бұрын
You will not find whiter white people than Utah white people. Maybe with the exception of the midwest??
@JiviteshBakshi
@JiviteshBakshi 18 күн бұрын
i thought he would say something else after wassup my ni-
@nicolegoodew1547
@nicolegoodew1547 Ай бұрын
Clint: No one calles them Merekitties Me: I am now 😂
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
My work here is done!
@bananatassium7009
@bananatassium7009 Ай бұрын
"What's up my niches!" was so jarring coming from clint that i can't help but respect it
@redhotdevilwoman03
@redhotdevilwoman03 Ай бұрын
Oh Clint. The Offspring reference made me spit out my drink. And the outtakes are so funny too. love love love from Canada
@emri4454
@emri4454 Ай бұрын
Clint your passion and enthusiasm not only for educating people, but especially when talking about animals. I always love seeing a new video from you, every time I learn something new and that's pretty neat
@sarahsander785
@sarahsander785 Ай бұрын
A really cool thing about hyenas is the fact, that there are African villages that throw out their leftovers to attract Hyaenas to the outskirts. The hyaenas in turn hold lions and especially leopards at bay, keeping the village safe.
@alicemilton8756
@alicemilton8756 Ай бұрын
So much information in this one! I like that each opposite side produced an animal that became an excellent house pet 🐶🐱
@Malvikins
@Malvikins Ай бұрын
The eyelids of all French speakers watching this video: *twiche* Also super excited for all the carnivoran content! Looking forward to the caniforms!
@LS-xy7zt
@LS-xy7zt Ай бұрын
*tweesh*
@mittenstheninja626
@mittenstheninja626 Ай бұрын
I read the comments so I saw the “what’s up my niches” coming but that delivery still made me guffaw. Will have to work that into daily conversation somehow
@egg_bun_
@egg_bun_ Ай бұрын
SAME
@SonLucasX
@SonLucasX Ай бұрын
I'm from Brazil 🇧🇷 and when I saw this video here on the channel I immediately thought about Jaguarundi, I thought "this isn't a fossa" but I still had doubts
@toubi4316
@toubi4316 Ай бұрын
I have met some extremely friendly cats, like one who would meow incessantly until they got petted.
@andressigalat602
@andressigalat602 Ай бұрын
Yeah, my niece had one of those. She always referred to her as "my catdog". 😄
@retsaMinnavoiG
@retsaMinnavoiG Ай бұрын
Yeh they're a rarity but I've seen cats straight up playing fetch, swimming, going for walks with the owner (not on a leash) etc. etc I guess with the right genetics and enough environmental pressure you can see how they're similar.
@carschmn
@carschmn Ай бұрын
I’m listening to this while feeding my household caniformae and my feliformae.
@thanatonyxmoura
@thanatonyxmoura Ай бұрын
Carnivora is probably my favorite order of mammals. I'm so excited to see an episode on them!
@AlmightyRawks
@AlmightyRawks Ай бұрын
About seven years ago I visited the Natural History Museum in London, but in my attempt to escape large groups of school children (please kids, learn all there is! It's just very noisey for me
@piers_bellman
@piers_bellman Ай бұрын
that's my favourite museum in the world!
@williedavis9465
@williedavis9465 Ай бұрын
I'm sorry but the plural of mongoose is polygeese.
@FlintSparkedStudios
@FlintSparkedStudios Ай бұрын
This should have more likes
@user-ty5di3ku6o
@user-ty5di3ku6o Ай бұрын
Panda: I'm a bear ... I'm not a bear ... wait, I'm a bear again! Yay?
@brfisher1123
@brfisher1123 Ай бұрын
I think that the clades Canidae (dogs), Mustelidae (weasels) and the Felidae (cats) all deserve to get their own individual phylogeny videos especially the cats! It's also funny how dogs are actually the "hagfish" of the Caniformia clade considering that it was clearly named after them! 😂😂
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
Actually, there is no most basal extant family of the suborders Caniformia or Feliformia, both are actually split into infraorders, with the infraorders of Caniformia being Cynopsia and Galopsia and the infraorders of Feliformia being Aeluropsia and Crocutopsia, the Cynopsia infraorder is split into the parvorders Eufissipedia and Pinnipedia with the former being further split into the superfamilies Canoidea and Ursoidea and the latter being further split into the superfamilies Phocoidea and Otarioidea, within the Eufissipedia parvorder, the Canoidea superfamily contains the dogs of the extant family Canidae and their closest extinct relatives the parictids, which constitute the family Parictidae, whereas the Ursoidea superfamily contains the extant families Ursidae (Bears) and Ailuropodidae (Giant Panda and Fossil Relatives) and the extinct families Hemicyonidae and Ursavidae, within the Pinnipedia parvorder, the Phocoidea superfamily contains the extant families Phocidae (Seals) and Cystophoridae (Hooded Seal and Elephant Seals), whereas the Otarioidea superfamily contains the extant families Otariidae (Sea Lions and Fur Seals) and Odobenidae (Walrus and Fossil Relatives), the Galopsia infraorder is split into the superfamilies Procyonoidea and Musteloidea, the former is constituted by the extant families Mephitidae (Skunks and Stink Badgers), Procyonidae (Raccoons and Bassarisks), Ailuridae (Red Panda and Fossil Relatives), and Nasuidae (Coatis, Kinkajou, Olingos, and Olinguito) and the latter is split into the families Melidae (Badgers), Mustelidae (Weasels, Ferrets, and Minks), Lutridae (Otters), and Ictonychidae (Zorillas, Muishund, Shulang, Huro, Grisons, Wolverine, Tayra, and Martens), both superfamilies are very different and not closely related, which is why the Galopsia infraorder is also split into the parvorders Mesopalmata for the superfamily Procyonoidea and fossil taxa more closely related to procyonoids than to musteloids and Parapalmata for the superfamily Musteloidea and fossil taxa more closely related to musteloids than to procyonoids, the Aeluropsia infraorder contains the extinct superfamily Dinictidoidea and the extant superfamily Feloidea, the Dinictidoidea superfamily includes the extinct families Hoplophoneidae and Dinictididae while the Feloidea superfamily contains the cats of the extant family Felidae and their closest extinct relatives of the family Barbourofelidae, which makes cats the only extant family of both the superfamily Feloidea and the infraorder Aeluropsia following the extinctions of the taxa Barbourofelidae and Dinictidoidea, and the Crocutopsia infraorder contains all of the more superficially caniform-like feliforms and is split into the superfamilies Hyaenoidea and Viverroidea, the Hyaenoidea superfamily contains the extant families Protelidae (Aardwolf and Fossil Relatives) and Hyaenidae (Hyenas) and the extinct families Lophocyonidae and Percrocutidae while the Viverroidea superfamily contains the extant families Nandiniidae (Feripaka and Fossil Relatives), Prionodontidae (Linsangs and Fossil Relatives), Poianidae (Oyans and Fossil Relatives), Genettidae (Genets and Fossil Relatives), Viverridae (Civets), Herpestidae (Mongooses), and Eupleridae (Malagasy Carnivorans) and the extinct family Palaeogalidae, the extinct carnivoran families Amphicyonidae and Nimravidae are the most basal families of the suborders Caniformia and Feliformia respectively and do not fall under any of their respective infraorders.
@TheLeopardSeal-kq4fx
@TheLeopardSeal-kq4fx Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 All of that information is incorrect.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
@TheLeopardSeal-kq4fx, no it is not.
@brfisher1123
@brfisher1123 Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 Did you not see the phylogeny of the caniforms he had on the screen? It showed that the Canids (dogs) are actually the least related among all caniforms with all of the other caniforms being more closely related to each other than to dogs themselves.
@TheLeopardSeal-kq4fx
@TheLeopardSeal-kq4fx Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 Provide sources for your claims please.
@vernonfridy8416
@vernonfridy8416 Ай бұрын
9:40 The range of the Striped Hyena very much extends into Asia, as far east as India. 13:45 In fact, in practically all media in which I’ve come across Fossa fossana (a confusing scientific name, I might add) with the exception of Wikipedia, its name is not “Malagasy Civet”, but “Fanaloka”.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
Similarly, "feripaka" is now the correct name for Nandinia binotata, "zorilla" is the correct name for all in the genus Ictonyx, "muishund" is the correct name for Poecilogale albinucha, "shulang" is the correct name for Vormela peregusna, "huro" is the correct name for Lyncodon patagonicus, and "vontsira" is the correct name for all in the subfamily Galidiinae.
@azurelegends2696
@azurelegends2696 Ай бұрын
I’ve seen a few separate sites give Fossa fossana the common name Malagasy Civet. Animal Diversity Web is probably the most notable. I mean so many animals have multiple common names that are, and can be, used interchangeably. I mean Malagasy Civet isn’t even the only common usage name for Fossa fossana that has civet in it.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
@azurelegends2696, except because there are no civets and mongooses in Madagascar, Fossa fossana is more correctly referred to as a "fanaloka" and "vontsira" is the correct name for all members of the subfamily Galidiinae, the fanaloka (Fossa fossana) is not a civet because it is not part of the family Viverridae and vontsiras (subfamily Galidiinae) are not mongooses because they are not part of the family Herpestidae.
@azurelegends2696
@azurelegends2696 Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 “Correctness” when it comes to common names is an interesting subject. There aren’t the same parameters or level of rigidity for common names that there are for scientific names. Common names don’t have to be unique or show the actual relationship between species. Common names just originate from common usage, and calling something a “Malagasy Civet” doesn’t mean that it is truly a civet either. It can just mean that the animal is visually similar to a civet but is from Madagascar. I don’t think that a standard of correctness for common names should be heavily enforced when scientific names already exist.
@azurelegends2696
@azurelegends2696 Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 What you are saying is undeniably true. I am just saying that not all common names make phylogenetic sense.
@carschmn
@carschmn Ай бұрын
15:23 they really should be called merekitties.
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Just started watching but I will be watching closely to see if you get cats correct. Clint: There is a cat that functions close to a Hyena. Homotherium: Ayyyy-! Clint: Cheetah. Homotherium:
@eric2500
@eric2500 Ай бұрын
Homotherium: quit your lion!
@Blaikser
@Blaikser Ай бұрын
Learning that my favorite animal my Punk Kittens (Skunks) are actually more Canine than Feline is kind of crazy to me after all this time calling them kittens, I love learning about life!
@LS-xy7zt
@LS-xy7zt Ай бұрын
Time to start calling them Punk Puppies?
@inspiredcolours
@inspiredcolours Ай бұрын
Omg Sumatran tigers are one of my all time favourite animals! Please please do a deep dive video into the felidae fam and give them a shout out, they need more love ❤
@canis2020
@canis2020 Ай бұрын
Why is Clint so devilishly happy about "if you're going to get eaten by x group its going to be from these guys" initiate broad smile
@sephirothjc
@sephirothjc Ай бұрын
Between 'what's up my niches' and quoting The Offspring, Clint is becoming my new favorite youtuber.
@pkre707
@pkre707 Ай бұрын
I absolutely love that this channel has pivoted more towards taxonomy and biology. This is the good stuff, keep it up!
@HarryisI
@HarryisI Ай бұрын
07:40 No idea why but using pensive Clint as the human standard for size comparison got a good chuckle out of me
@wolfman2.055
@wolfman2.055 Ай бұрын
Clint , only three of the four hyenas are exclusively found in Africa. Striped hyenas are found in parts of Asia and the Middle East too
@needfoolthings
@needfoolthings Ай бұрын
The Middle East is a part of Asia.
@felixhenson9926
@felixhenson9926 Ай бұрын
"They were like 'what's up my niches, and they diversified all over that izzy!" 😂
@snowgirl3522
@snowgirl3522 Ай бұрын
10:17 ive only ever said neesh but this stock photo has me seriously reconsidering things. i cant be this bereted gentleman
@SuperFlyGhost
@SuperFlyGhost Ай бұрын
"They diversified all over that hizzy" 😂
@telepopepic
@telepopepic Ай бұрын
Wonderful! As usual, your enthusiasm is infectious and your content is spot on.
@Grutmaw
@Grutmaw Ай бұрын
YES! I've been waiting for this video, thanks Clint!
@Joe-Przybranowski
@Joe-Przybranowski Ай бұрын
This guy is really a great science communicator. Always fun, always packed full of information I didn't know. Love this channel.
@lurientheenjoyer6711
@lurientheenjoyer6711 Ай бұрын
I love this channel, I love your vids, I could binge watch the whole phylogeny playlist every day, but even I felt kinda baited by the two part thing
@carsonianthegreat4672
@carsonianthegreat4672 Ай бұрын
I’ve always pronounced niche as “nitch” when it’s a noun and “neesh” when it’s an adjective.
@blackkittycat15
@blackkittycat15 Ай бұрын
I'm glad I'm not the only one who does this.
@Pidoprill
@Pidoprill Ай бұрын
I looove cats and your videos that are formatted this way where you show the phylogenetic tree of different animals are my absolute favorite videos of yours! Which means I've probably watched this video 6 times these 10 days since you posted this. This is so much fun! And oh do I feel like the biggest nerd after writing this comment... proud nerd!
@Oyster_Man
@Oyster_Man Ай бұрын
Always love your work. Kudos to Clint and the team!
@falcolf
@falcolf Ай бұрын
The jaguarundi's closest relative is its cousin the cougar/puma, which shares the crown of being the biggest kitty that can purr with their next closest relative, the cheetah! Big cats (Panthera) canNOT purr and can roar instead (but what is a roar but a very gruff meow? Similarly, the small cats - yes, even cougars and cheetahs - canNOT roar. Intact females will yowl piercingly loudly when they are in heat and keep you up all night long however as they cry out for boyfriends.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
Big cats are not defined by the genus Panthera, they are actually defined by the tribe Pantherini as a whole, you seem to forget that cheetahs (genus Acinonyx), pumas (Puma concolor), jaguarundis (Herpailurus yagouaroundi), and bohebaos (genus Neofelis) are big cats, also, the tiger, ounce, and jaguar do not belong to the Panthera genus anymore because they are all more closely related to the bohebaos (genus Neofelis) than they are to the leopard and lion, the ounce and tiger both now constitute the genus Uncia while the jaguar is the only surviving member of the genus Jaguarius, leaving the leopard and lion as the only two extant members of the Panthera genus.
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 None of this is true. “Big cat” are the subfamily Pantherinae, which only includes Panthera and Neofelis (Clouded Leopards) alive. Cougars, Cheetahs, and Herpailurus are all in the subfamily Felinae. They are small cats. Also no, Panthera includes Lions, Tigers, Leopards, Snow Leopards, and Jaguars. None of those other Genera have been valid in decades. You have spread misinformation on every single comment you reply to.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
@Wolfie54545, also, there is no such thing as a snow leopard, the correct name for Uncia uncia is "ounce" and there are no such things as "clouded leopards", the correct name for species in the genus Neofelis is "bohebao", Panthera pardus is the only cat that is truly called a leopard.
@iapetusmccool
@iapetusmccool Ай бұрын
​​​@@indyreno2933of course "snow leopards" exist. That's just the common name for _P. uncia._ You can't just declare that a common name is wrong or doesn't exist. That's not how common names work. And I can't find any source for you claim that tigers have been moved from _Panthera_ to _Uncia._ Just the reverse (snow leopards moving to _Panthera_ ).
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
@iapetusmccool, there are now twenty extant genera of cats, also, the word "leopard" refers exclusively to Panthera pardus, therefore there are no such things as either a snow leopard or a clouded leopard, Uncia uncia is more correctly referred to as an "ounce", while members of the genus Neofelis are more correctly referred to as "bohebaos", this is because ounces and bohebaos are not leopards, the Panthera genus now only includes the leopard and lion, while the tiger and ounce are both moved to the genus Uncia and the jaguar is treated as the only extant member of the genus Jaguarius, both genera are more closely related to bohebaos (genus Neofelis) than they are to Panthera, with Jaguarius being the sister genus to the bohebaos (genus Neofelis), therefore, there are now twenty extant genera of cats.
@mikeclarke952
@mikeclarke952 Ай бұрын
"WHAT'S UP MY NICHES!" OMG that's so good.
@CaptainH8322
@CaptainH8322 Ай бұрын
I have wanted this exact video for so long. Thank you!! THANK YOUUUUU!!
@unmeltabledjdkrnrjdjsnd9317
@unmeltabledjdkrnrjdjsnd9317 Ай бұрын
This has become one of my favorite KZbin channels. Love the upbeat vibe
@PhinClio
@PhinClio Ай бұрын
A Caniform video later this month? That's tomorrow!
@ladykoiwolfe
@ladykoiwolfe Ай бұрын
Aye, there's not much month left.
@juniormynos9457
@juniormynos9457 Ай бұрын
Watching the chart, I noticed the carniformia has members that took to the sea. So why didn't Feliformia do the same?
@taleravenreads4826
@taleravenreads4826 Ай бұрын
Your videos bring me so much joy. Thank you for your channel and letting me scratch that learning itch, even as an adult with a career that has nothing to do with biology or zoology.
@Khunai.
@Khunai. Ай бұрын
Lmao, I appreciated your Offspring joke there at the end 😂
@tacogaviglio575
@tacogaviglio575 Ай бұрын
I am a factory worker. But one could call me the Hag Fish of factory workers.
@thewanderingxs5422
@thewanderingxs5422 Ай бұрын
If not friends, why friend shaped??
@nariu7times328
@nariu7times328 Ай бұрын
You make Saturday mornings awesome, thank you!
@krisw2965
@krisw2965 Ай бұрын
23 and a 1/2 minutes of pure awesomeness generously sprinkled with humor. Love it. And looking forward to the next couple 👍 ❤️❤️
@5tnblnkt
@5tnblnkt Ай бұрын
Canines are generally smarter and way more effective at working in groups that felines are (lions do work in groups yeah, but they are the only ones and not nearly as effective as wild dogs that live in the same ecosystem) , that's mainly why.
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Did you just say Canids are smarter than Felids? I don’t think that can be said. Cats are overpowered. They used to be much more the top predators when the Machairdonts were still around.
@5tnblnkt
@5tnblnkt Ай бұрын
@@Wolfie54545 I'm not saying felines are dumb by any means, because they certainly aren't, but yes, most canids are smarter than felines. That's basically how they can thrive in the same echosystem as bigger felids, that's why Dohles can live near tigers and hold their ground as species there and even having a higher percentage at catching prey than leopards and tigers on mostly the same prey. They are not OP at almost anything but smarts and teamplay and using both together.
@5tnblnkt
@5tnblnkt Ай бұрын
@@Wolfie54545 that's also why most predators actually fear us when they can easily kill us 1v1, we are way smarter, we use guns and stuff to compensante being underpowered on everything but stamina and brains
@Vexio504
@Vexio504 Ай бұрын
Social interaction elevates the intellect of some species. For example, even if not as successful as canines. No other feline is more intelligent than a lion, and anyone who knows the tactics that lions know how to employ knows this, unlike their relatives, they go beyond just ambushing, this is their difference.
@Fahrenheit4051
@Fahrenheit4051 Ай бұрын
Actually, Chiroptera is the clade containing most carnivorous mammal species. Technically correct, which is the best kind of correct.
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
I agree with your point.
@Fahrenheit4051
@Fahrenheit4051 Ай бұрын
😀
@tulliusexmisc2191
@tulliusexmisc2191 Ай бұрын
Mammalia is the clade containing the most carnivorous mammals. Even more technically, and therefore even bester.
@Fahrenheit4051
@Fahrenheit4051 Ай бұрын
@@tulliusexmisc2191 You win!
@thiemokellner1893
@thiemokellner1893 Ай бұрын
Many thanks. Contagious enthusiasm and a right dose of humour of the right wavelength.
@krishnagardiner5272
@krishnagardiner5272 Ай бұрын
clint we are so excited when we see your videos. thank you for teaching me about phylogeny
@bhuggins6059
@bhuggins6059 Ай бұрын
CARNIVORANS LETSGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@belablanck
@belablanck Ай бұрын
The striped hyena still lives in Asia
@miquelescribanoivars5049
@miquelescribanoivars5049 Ай бұрын
It used to range in to Southeastern Europe in historic times, AFAIK.
@inuendo6365
@inuendo6365 Ай бұрын
Yeah he got it slightly wrong. He was referring to the larger "cave hyenas" but they didn't die out until their preferred megafauna prey species became scarce. Wolves never became "top dog" until AFTER the big hyenas died out, filling in the niche when Eurasia favored smaller, lighter builds. It just so happens that was around the time hominids took over Eurasia too.
@TamagoSenshi
@TamagoSenshi Ай бұрын
Definitely a jaguarundi. Also, red pandas have been really fun to study, especially behavioural observations. They're quite cat-like, especially captive red pandas that have direct interactions with their keepers. The way they watch each other also carries that feline awkwardness of "What's going on over there?" Sleeping and eating habits too
@jordanstephenson6953
@jordanstephenson6953 Ай бұрын
The The Offspring reference made my day Clint, thank you! 😂
@inuendo6365
@inuendo6365 Ай бұрын
Slight correction on caniforms taking over Eurasia; bone crushing hyenas and other large predators died off when megafauna prey species became scarce, not when smaller N. American predators came in. Wolves of the time never became "top dog" until hominids swept through Eurasia. Smaller caniforms just happened to be in the right place when Eurasia favored smaller animals. Even Gray Wolves "filled in" where Dire "Wolves" died out AFTER the megafauna became scarce, not before.
@toeornottoe4951
@toeornottoe4951 24 күн бұрын
At about 9:35 Clint says Hyenas are found only in Africa, however the striped Hyena’s range while partly in Africa also includes a large part of the Middle East even as far as Iran, Pakistan, and Northern India. Great video though I love your channel ^-^.
@marting1984
@marting1984 5 күн бұрын
Great video. Lots of great one liners
@crackerjack9320
@crackerjack9320 Ай бұрын
We are the knights who say "niches"!
@susieleehorton6398
@susieleehorton6398 Ай бұрын
When he said "WHATS UP MY NICHES" I choked on my drink 😭😭😭🤣
@MemesSpaghetti
@MemesSpaghetti Ай бұрын
Clint saying "WHAT UP MY NICHE'S!!!" was not something I was expecting to hear today 🤣
@dynamoterror7077
@dynamoterror7077 Ай бұрын
Another absolutely amazing and hilarious clade overview video! One small thing I noticed though, when talking about Hyenas you stated that all extant hyenas live in Africa, however Striped Hyenas also live in southern and Western Asia and a little bit of southeastern Europe.
@wizardblizzardgaming4460
@wizardblizzardgaming4460 Ай бұрын
Quite ironic that red "pandas" are more closely related pinnipeds than to true bears lol
@otterylexa4499
@otterylexa4499 Ай бұрын
We learned in the bear video that red pandas are the original pandas.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
Actually, both bears and pinnipeds are more closely related to dogs than they are to the red panda.
@wizardblizzardgaming4460
@wizardblizzardgaming4460 Ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 no, that's incorrect. Pinnipeds are the Sister group of Musteloidea (which the red panda belongs). The Sister group of Pinnipeds and Musteloidea are the true bears and hemicyonidae. And since Musteloidea and Pinnipeds shared a common ancestor more recently than true bears and canids, which means that Musteloidea are more closely related to Pinnipeds than to the other clades of Caniformes. Canids and Bears are basically the hagfish to Musteloidea.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Ай бұрын
@wizardblizzardgaming4460, nope, none of the extant families of carnivorans are the most basal within their two suborders, instead, carnivorans are now officially split into four infraorders based on morphology and morphology alone, which are the infraorders Cynopsia, Galopsia, Aeluropsia, and Crocutopsia, the Cynopsia infraorder is split into the parvorders Eufissipedia and Pinnipedia with the former being further split into the superfamilies Canoidea and Ursoidea and the latter being further split into the superfamilies Phocoidea and Otarioidea, within the Eufissipedia parvorder, the Canoidea superfamily contains the dogs of the extant family Canidae and their closest extinct relatives the parictids, which constitute the family Parictidae, whereas the Ursoidea superfamily contains the extant families Ursidae (Bears) and Ailuropodidae (Giant Panda and Fossil Relatives) and the extinct families Hemicyonidae and Ursavidae, within the Pinnipedia parvorder, the Phocoidea superfamily contains the extant families Phocidae (Seals) and Cystophoridae (Hooded Seal and Elephant Seals), whereas the Otarioidea superfamily contains the extant families Otariidae (Sea Lions and Fur Seals) and Odobenidae (Walrus and Fossil Relatives), the Galopsia infraorder is split into the superfamilies Procyonoidea and Musteloidea, the former is constituted by the extant families Mephitidae (Skunks and Stink Badgers), Procyonidae (Raccoons and Bassarisks), Ailuridae (Red Panda and Fossil Relatives), and Nasuidae (Coatis, Kinkajou, Olingos, and Olinguito) and the latter is split into the families Melidae (Badgers), Mustelidae (Weasels, Ferrets, and Minks), Lutridae (Otters), and Ictonychidae (Zorillas, Muishund, Shulang, Huro, Grisons, Wolverine, Tayra, and Martens), both superfamilies are very different and not closely related, which is why the Galopsia infraorder is also split into the parvorders Mesopalmata for the superfamily Procyonoidea and fossil taxa more closely related to procyonoids than to musteloids and Parapalmata for the superfamily Musteloidea and fossil taxa more closely related to musteloids than to procyonoids, the Aeluropsia infraorder contains the extinct superfamily Dinictidoidea and the extant superfamily Feloidea, the Dinictidoidea superfamily includes the extinct families Hoplophoneidae and Dinictididae while the Feloidea superfamily contains the cats of the extant family Felidae and their closest extinct relatives of the family Barbourofelidae, which makes cats the only extant family of both the superfamily Feloidea and the infraorder Aeluropsia following the extinctions of the taxa Barbourofelidae and Dinictidoidea, and the Crocutopsia infraorder contains all of the more superficially caniform-like feliforms and is split into the superfamilies Hyaenoidea and Viverroidea, the Hyaenoidea superfamily contains the extant families Protelidae (Aardwolf and Fossil Relatives) and Hyaenidae (Hyenas) and the extinct families Lophocyonidae and Percrocutidae while the Viverroidea superfamily contains the extant families Nandiniidae (Feripaka and Fossil Relatives), Prionodontidae (Linsangs and Fossil Relatives), Poianidae (Oyans and Fossil Relatives), Genettidae (Genets and Fossil Relatives), Viverridae (Civets), Herpestidae (Mongooses), and Eupleridae (Malagasy Carnivorans) and the extinct family Palaeogalidae, the extinct carnivoran families Amphicyonidae and Nimravidae are the most basal families of the suborders Caniformia and Feliformia respectively and do not fall under any of their respective infraorders.
@wizardblizzardgaming4460
@wizardblizzardgaming4460 Ай бұрын
You can't do a phylogeny on morphology alone, since convergent evolution can result in very similair morphology. Genetic data does also support the phylogeny that I previously explained. I also couldn't find any sources or papers that supports your claim.
@rescyn1190
@rescyn1190 Ай бұрын
Niche is French. Where are you getting the information from that says otherwise?
@KylesMonitors
@KylesMonitors Ай бұрын
Merriam-Webster
@AaronDC83
@AaronDC83 Ай бұрын
From Merriam-Webster Dictionary: "[\NICH\] is the only pronunciation given for the word in all English dictionaries until the 20th century, when \NEESH\ was first listed as a pronunciation variant in Daniel Jones's English Pronouncing Dictionary (1917). \NEESH\ wasn’t listed as a pronunciation in our dictionaries until our 1961 Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged, and it wasn’t entered into our smaller Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary until 1993. Even then, it was marked in the Collegiate as a pronunciation that was in educated use but not considered acceptable until 2003."
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles Ай бұрын
Niche is French when you're speaking French. I don't speak French. Our videos are in English. I'm talking about how it is pronounced in English.
@b.a.erlebacher1139
@b.a.erlebacher1139 Ай бұрын
​@@ClintsReptilesYou're speaking American English. There's a lot of pronunciation differences between different groups of English speakers. Here in Canada, I mostly hear neesh. English words can have different pronunciations without any of them being right or wrong.
@rescyn1190
@rescyn1190 Ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptiles American English perhaps. Not in, err, English English. Or those European nations that have strong English (such as the Dutch).
@mattwyro7339
@mattwyro7339 Ай бұрын
Clint's videos are always so good
@Symphing12
@Symphing12 Ай бұрын
Fantastic video! Looking forward to the Caniformes! I love me some pinnipeds, my personal favorite group within Carnivora.
@singingcrow439
@singingcrow439 Ай бұрын
Fun fact: Siberian tigers are known to outcompete wolves to the point of localized extinction. They are that dominant.
@aottadelsei980
@aottadelsei980 Ай бұрын
What’s interesting, that in the us ever since wolves were introduced to yellowstone they had cougar numbers dropping off but in more forested areas like in Washington they are known to kill wolves. It seems in more forested places cats have the upper hand and in open environments wolves take the advantage. Size also matters coyotes kill bobcats but the Eurasian lynxes kills golden jackals. Really interesting that these animals are each other’s greatest competition and that environmental has just as big factor on the outcome of these confrontations as size dose if not more.
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 Ай бұрын
Cats are overpowered. See: Any Saber toothed cat.
@Vexio504
@Vexio504 Ай бұрын
​@@aottadelsei980 Cougars and wolves eat the same prey, and this makes them animals that are very hostile to each other. Hostile interactions are more frequent than people believe. But coyotes and bobcats are simply open warfare. They are mesopredators that eat many of the same prey, live in the same environments (to avoid wolves and cougars) and end up having each other as their biggest problem. I would say that no species of wild dog and wild cat hate each other more than coyotes and bobcats.
@johnsinth8261
@johnsinth8261 Ай бұрын
looking forward to your next video on these beautiful creatures
@shig.bitz.3205
@shig.bitz.3205 Ай бұрын
This is an awesome video! Though I will dispute your pronunciation of 'niche', as it is originally a latin word, which was adopted into French and then adopted into English. A lot of the time we don't change the pronunciation when we adopt words from French, like croissant or baguette. But then again, you're speaking US English, which does use quite different pronunciation and spelling to English. Either way, really enjoyed the video as always
@philsonofcoul5025
@philsonofcoul5025 Ай бұрын
Very creative video topic. These comparison videos that deep dive into families of life are great!
@quantumshenanigans
@quantumshenanigans Ай бұрын
Love this, bring on the mammal content!!! Would love a mustelid video from you
@kathleenedwards8472
@kathleenedwards8472 Ай бұрын
Thank you all for the work you put into these videos! All of you! ❤
@theunease5541
@theunease5541 Ай бұрын
I nearly did a spit take when "what up my niches?" hit 😂.
@cigurett8884
@cigurett8884 Ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing video as always, I feel like we're solving a detective case together. I think you're pretty close to perfecting the artform of phylogeny videos. Keep it up!
@xmagx
@xmagx Ай бұрын
Hilarious and entertaining. 👏 👏 thanks for the great content.
Gorillas Are Monkeys, and So Are You! You Can't Evolve Out of a Clade.
34:52
ОДИН ДОМА #shorts
00:34
Паша Осадчий
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
He Threw A Banana Peel At A Child🍌🙈😿
00:27
Giggle Jiggle
Рет қаралды 17 МЛН
Weird Old Names For Fingers
10:58
Name Explain
Рет қаралды 3,3 М.
I Didn't Know These Whales Existed! **And I'm a Zoologist
28:06
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 476 М.
All 8 Species of Bears and How They're Related
21:32
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 184 М.
Top 5 Animals We Should Bring Back From Extinction
8:22
Kytchaboo
Рет қаралды 573
Pandas Aren't Bears (They're Closer To Walruses)
33:46
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 143 М.
5 Deadly Pet Snakes (+10 Non-Deadly Alternatives)
13:20
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 250 М.
I Have Terrible News About Penguins...
30:51
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 175 М.
How Did Birds and Crocodilians Escape Extinction?
12:33
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 231 М.
Mangshan Pit Viper, The Best Pet Snake?
19:58
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 124 М.
Evolutionary Biologist Reacts to Creationist Arguments
32:37
Clint's Reptiles
Рет қаралды 399 М.
DEFENDENDO O AMIGO
0:10
Stefani Belotti
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
cute she bebu  trending 🤣🤣🤣 short video my vlog
0:12
Sanju Rao2223gh
Рет қаралды 16 МЛН
Rare Moments with Animals 🤯
0:20
Galinho FC
Рет қаралды 34 МЛН
The hero who saved the cats ( cat ) ( kitten )
0:37
Fantastic farm
Рет қаралды 45 МЛН
The dog drinks milk 🍼
0:18
Fun and Education
Рет қаралды 37 МЛН