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@HassanMohamed-rm1cb7 ай бұрын
Hey Clint Laidlaw, Why don't you get to think of a suggestion and creating a KZbin Videos all about the 🐭🐹🦫🐁🐀🐿️ Phylogeny Group Of Rodents 🐭🐹🦫🐁🐀🐿️ on the next Clint's Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb7 ай бұрын
Hey Clint Laidlaw, Why don't you get to think of a suggestion and creating a KZbin Videos all about the 🦔Phylogeny Group Of Insectivores🦔 (Insectivora), such as Shrews, Moles, Hedgehogs, Solenodons, Gymnures, Moonrats, Desmans, the Extinct West Indian Shrews, Etc. on the next Clint's Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@joecamel9197 ай бұрын
R u going to do a video regarding the recent gila incident?
@Drquimbaymatumbo7 ай бұрын
Bird is a bird....a lizard is a lizard. I suppose all the re-classification in the scientific community is keeping many folk in jobs....
@indyreno29337 ай бұрын
Moonrats and gymnures are actually the same thing, "gymnure" is the more correct name for members of the family Echinosoricidae, since they are not rats at all, in fact, Insectivora is actually an outdated taxon, which is now replaced with six convergently evolved orders being Macroscelidea (Sengis and Fossil Relatives), Afrosoricida (Tenrecs, Potamoes, and Kruipmols), Soricomorpha (Shrews, Moles, Desmans, and Solenodons), Erinaceomorpha (Hedgehogs and Gymnures), Scandentia (Banxrings), and Dermoptera (Colugos and Fossil Relatives), the largest gymnure species is the Giant Gymnure (Echinosorex gymnura).
@malusignatius7 ай бұрын
🤔 If a Tegu watches a security feed, does it become a monitor lizard? 🤔
@izyaq7 ай бұрын
I’m looking at this Tegu on my monitor, does that make it a monitor lizard also?
@Eisenwulf6667 ай бұрын
more like " monitoring" lizard, a painter is not the picture he is painting.
@sampagano2057 ай бұрын
No, tegus just don't care about security in the way monitors do.
@1ntense7967 ай бұрын
Where do else do you think monitor lizards come from?
@teddnaing68517 ай бұрын
Make him do it under water.
@Exquailibur7 ай бұрын
"They are legless, unless THEY HAVE CRAZY GIANT MOLE ARMS!" That is the type of animal that i love, legless unless they have giant crazy mole arms.
@nicholaspost90177 ай бұрын
"Don't worry, because I have upsetting news for you today as well," he says with the biggest grin on his face. Clint is truly a treasure.
@Dee-nonamnamrson87187 ай бұрын
Gus gus's facial expression says "I'm so inconvenienced by your lifting me that I might write a letter to your local politician." 😂
@malusignatius7 ай бұрын
If by 'letter' you mean 'void my bowels all over the table'.
@qa3777 ай бұрын
@@malusignatiusHe will excrete his opinion all over the source of his inconvenience!
@malusignatius7 ай бұрын
@@qa377 You could say inconvenience make Gus Gus incontinent.
@DrachenGothik6667 ай бұрын
I love Gus Gus. He's so beautiful. I just wanna squoosh those cheeks!
@farkasmactavish7 ай бұрын
I gotta say, the best work you do for the reptile owner community is that "Well, hi, there!" at the beginning. So many people see reptile owners as dark, edgy weirdos, and so many reptile owners internalize that impression and act like it! So not only are you dispelling that misconception at the beginning of every video with a single, cheery greeting, you're also modeling for other reptile owners that it's possible for them to be like that, too! Of course, if being a dark, edgy weirdo is what makes you genuinely happy, don't change a thing. :)
@whychoooseausername47637 ай бұрын
I love reptiles and snakes and birds and exotics generally. I'm a cat owner of three years and would love to adopt a displaced exotic. I love seeing reptiles in the wild. I had a small Indian lizard (don't know what species) fall on me as a young child and my reaction was pure joy.
@DrachenGothik6667 ай бұрын
So many of us reptile aficionados are typified by an older guy with bald head or long hair, tattoos, long beard & black clothing with death metal logos; it's practically a stereotype, like we're all biker types who prefer scalies over fuzzies for pets. Just 'cuz we're supposedly "edgy" doesn't mean we can't love something. And, heck, not all of us even match that appearance, like Clint with his tie & Mormon ring. Frankly, I'm of the former personal appearance, yet, I normally have cats (I sadly can't afford to be the home of a lovely reptile, yet--one day, I hope to have some Garter snakes or a cute little Hognose, maybe a ball python--I'm partial to snakes, something that can handle being in a small space as I live in a small house). LOL
@nyeti77596 ай бұрын
Dark, edgy weirdos move over. We got a keen, cheerful weirdo 😁
@Kasperhp74107 ай бұрын
In Danish, one of the everyday terms for lizard is "four-legs" and I'm pretty sure I've heard people calling a legless lizard, like a slow worm, a "legless four-leg."
@JCEmotep7 ай бұрын
As far as I understand it, "firben" (four-legs) technically only refers to lacertas, of which the only two species of native legged-lizards in Denmark, both belong to. The more generic Danish term corresponding to lizard would be "øgle".
@Kasperhp74107 ай бұрын
@@JCEmotep Huh, curious. I never even knew that it is that specific. But then again, øgle is also loosly being used to discribe pretty much any reptile with legs, so it doesn't surprise me that much. :)
@CainXVII7 ай бұрын
Well in Sweden we often still call the slow worm a snake. Our two other lizards are true lizards anyways.
@Kasperhp74107 ай бұрын
@@CainXVII Haha yea, we do both call the adder snake a worm though :)
@userequaltoNull7 ай бұрын
@@Kasperhp7410Well, as a New Englander, I'd like to point out that our shared ancestors also called dragons "worms", so this state of affairs goes way back 😅
@Plant_Parenthood7 ай бұрын
I love how Clint's favourite reptile in the world is whichever reptile happens to be in front of him when he's talking!
@corvins_cash7 ай бұрын
My nephew loved this video, though he wanted me to comment that WE are our lizards' most close relatives, because they are members of our family. :) Good teaching moment for what the scientific term "family" means, but that, yes, of course, our pets are our family members, even if not technically related. And also, you can hold the attention of a 5-year-old for over 20 minutes. I'm very impressed.
@skann90487 ай бұрын
3:45 "we'll get to them" I can't wait for the video about the phylogeny of celebrities
@Ryuondo7 ай бұрын
I immediately though, AH HA! CLINT TOO THINKS THEY ARE LIZARD PEOPLE!
@mischiefwargaming7 ай бұрын
I wonder who'd be the hagfish of celebrities?
@carschmn7 ай бұрын
Me too
@meisteremm7 ай бұрын
@@mischiefwargaming Bruno Mars.
@hilliard6657 ай бұрын
I'd say Jake Paul is the hag fish of celebrities. He doesn't look like a celebrity, or act like one, but if Mike Tyson is a celebrity (celeb from the sports phylogeny) and Mr beast is a celeb (from the KZbin phylogeny ) then Jake Paul has to be in the celebrity clade
@MEKCreations7 ай бұрын
“What are you watching?” Just this rad guy rocking his giant not-lizard like a little baby and telling me why lizards aren’t lizards but snakes are lizards. 😂
@semjart7 ай бұрын
Exactly why I love this channel 😂
@Oler-yx7xj7 ай бұрын
So snakes are lizards, but most lizards aren't. I wonder whether I am a lizard
@ShnarkNarc697 ай бұрын
That's actually funny, because we are in the synapsids group that contains animals like dimetrodon, and all gorgonopsids. So while we aren't lizards. We might be related to some
@mythguard68657 ай бұрын
No silly that’s only politicians
@johnrichardson76297 ай бұрын
Possibly a loungelizard?
@johnrichardson76297 ай бұрын
The assumption that you can't categorize things except along strict genealogical lines means, among other things, that there are no such thing as trees. You can name clades while also reserving the right to name morphotypes and ecotypes without disputing the reality of clades.
@emmyali9207 ай бұрын
I was once married to someone that was a snake, not a lizard. So maybe there are some lizard people out there too? :D
@lotus.b.lazuli20207 ай бұрын
This is fascinating. All of your videos remind me of this incredible wildlife binder series I had in the 90's growing up. Every month a big pack of new fold-out info cards would arrive and I'd learn all about so many obscure creatures I'd not seen again until I started binge watching this channel. This is ridiculously nostalgic. I do appreciate everyone who can donate to Patreon too, because youtube is basically becoming like public access TV in some regards, and if this many people support this channel, that gives me hope... also, if everyone treated one another the same way Clint treats lizards, non-lizards, snakes, frogs, ferrets and everything in between, then the world would be a better place. For reals. x
@DatNinjaCow037 ай бұрын
I absolutely love that when you picked up GusGus in the beginning to show us his scales he was about as concerned as my dachshund about it, as in not at all and just along for the ride so long as it's with a person he trusts
@MEKCreations7 ай бұрын
Gusgus thinks he is a lap dog so it works.
@DatNinjaCow037 ай бұрын
@@MEKCreations He is only a bit bigger than my (medium sized) dachshund, so that makes sense lol. Now my lab also thinks she's a lap dog, so I wonder if the same applies to bigger reptiles haha
@Leyrann7 ай бұрын
@@DatNinjaCow03 I can confirm that our Berner sennen dog also thought he was a lapdog, despite only barely being able to fit his _head_ on an average lap. Which was what he would usually settle for.
@emmyali9207 ай бұрын
I love the outtakes at the end! Gus seems like a great dude and watching you try to convince him to sit is hilarious...especially after that big poop he made. Love your videos and love love love lizards. They are such interesting creatures that are far more complex than we know. Thanks for another great video!!
@the_newt_nest7 ай бұрын
Where are the skinks, Clint, where are the skinks - this message has been brought to you by Skink Gang
@themelonman63027 ай бұрын
Skink gang unite!
@revol_0007 ай бұрын
Skink gang unite 💪
@ohhowfuckingoriginal7 ай бұрын
Here 14:09
@ohhowfuckingoriginal7 ай бұрын
14:44
@TheLaughingDove7 ай бұрын
Skink skink skink
@legodrakie7 ай бұрын
When I was a child I had an animal encyclopedia that included the Florida worm lizard in the snakes. I always thought it was weird, because it didn't look like a snake to me, but I didn't know what else it could be, now I finally do.
@erichtomanek47397 ай бұрын
Tuatara sits back and laughs uproariously.
@Sepi-chu_loves_moths7 ай бұрын
Squamates? What's that mean?
@DRRADSTONE7 ай бұрын
Cant wait for the feature length, going to get the whole family together for movie night.
@Planeta19517 ай бұрын
We all know birds are the only true lizards.
@ClintsReptiles7 ай бұрын
A stellar take for those that want to watch the world burn!
@johannageisel53907 ай бұрын
There is a reason why a feathered serpent exists...
@ericafoster43687 ай бұрын
The only true living dinosaurs not lizards.
@jedavisLV4267 ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptilesthat's hilarious
@oleksiyprotas63767 ай бұрын
If dinosaurs are terrible lizzards, does it mean lizards are terrible dinosaurs and consequently birds? Dinoaves? 🤔
@gableweeb7197 ай бұрын
"If you go to Wikipedia, which has been demonstrated in the sciences to be more accurate than the average college textbook" What a diss.
@oxylepy27 ай бұрын
In the immortal words of the coach from Letterkenny: IT'S * EMBARASSING
@YochevedDesigns7 ай бұрын
Considering that most college textbooks take their "research" from Wikipedia, it all comes full circle.
@auroraasleep7 ай бұрын
@@YochevedDesigns with a surcharge equal to the down payment on a house.
@markwynne7257 ай бұрын
Yeah, I'm not a college textbook author but I felt the burn
@ArjanKop7 ай бұрын
But not that strange. Deep phylogeny is in constant movement. By the time your textbook has left the printer, something is bound to have changed. Wiki is moderated by people who know their fields.
@markiangooley7 ай бұрын
“You’re NOT a lizard, Harry!”
@BurningApple7 ай бұрын
You're a Synapsid, Harry!
@jorie427 ай бұрын
I love Gus just hangin out, being held like a giant scaly baby.
@eflarsen7 ай бұрын
this taught me that i don't actually know what a lizard is.
@oxylepy27 ай бұрын
The people who named lizards didn't know what lizards were. The taxonomists are the ultimate pot stirrers
@eroero8307 ай бұрын
You do know what a lizard is, it's a lizard.
@zebedeemadness26727 ай бұрын
A true Lizard is a Squamate in the genus Lacerta, with Lacerta being Latin word for Lizard.
@MereMeerkat7 ай бұрын
Taxonomy gets pretty fuzzy around the edges sometimes. Nature does not read the textbooks!
@hokusai46877 ай бұрын
Clint repeatedly teaches me I don’t really know what ANYTHING is…
@FaelynDexter7 ай бұрын
I feel like Clint and his team need to think about updating the visuals of the opening. I love the theme and the style...but Clint has changed so much since the current one was filmed.
@OrchidNectar7 ай бұрын
I am super excited for these phylogeny videos but i was finding myself missing your best pet videos! I love anything you post though
@AGiantTalkingLizard7 ай бұрын
Yeah even though the poll mainly wanted to keep making them forever only 2% didn’t want to see them
@ClintsReptiles7 ай бұрын
We're still making them.
@AGiantTalkingLizard7 ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptiles yay!
@AGiantTalkingLizard7 ай бұрын
@@ClintsReptiles if I’m being honest it’s my favorite of ur content but it phylogenies are still really nice
@auroraasleep7 ай бұрын
My kid has been watching you since your third video, and you are basically his Jack Hanna. So, thank you for being one of the Critter Heroes of this generation.
@samrizzardi22137 ай бұрын
I'd love to see more Euro lizard content, particularly Zootoca vivipara (the most widespread lizard) or Podarcis siculus (which has insane phenotypic diversity).
@theotheseaeagle7 ай бұрын
The common lizard (zootoca vivipara) is also the most northern lizard species. We get them in the UK
@GLitiatc07 ай бұрын
Podarcis contain such a fun and easy species. What a shame people aren’t more into them.
@KateeAngel7 ай бұрын
Zootoca vivipara is the only one I've seen in the wild, they are so cute, including babies and pregnant females. Unfortunately they are hard to find among reptile pet lovers here
@indyreno29337 ай бұрын
@theotheseaeagle, Zootoca vivipara is more correctly called the viviparous lizard as Lacerta agilis is more original than it, thus making Lacerta agilis the real "common lizard".
@samrizzardi22137 ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933 Hey Reno, what are your thoughts on the taxonomy of Homo sapiens?
@brianlewis56927 ай бұрын
OR, all snakes are lizards, and all amphisbaenians are lizards, now all Squamates are therefore "Lizards"! ☺
@chelseakat7 ай бұрын
Gus Gus is my favorite little dude ever it's always great to see him show up
@nckojita5 ай бұрын
i think the best part is how completely unbothered he seems to be with all the handling he gets lol like dude is just chillin
@andrewscoppetta49447 ай бұрын
5:03 that little guy lol “Why Clint? Why have you murdered me to show my belly scales? I’m coming mother! To death’s sweet embrace! I am slain!” So dramatic 💀💀💀
@racerrouth64847 ай бұрын
I'm working on getting a blue gus gus cannot wait!
@Jyiber7 ай бұрын
You know what's funny, my grandma had a story about a giant worm thing that had 2 arms coming in and out of the ground when she was a child and it might have been one of the last of that family because this was Oklahoma in the 1930s.
@DrachenGothik6667 ай бұрын
I wonder if it may have been a subspecies of Mexican Mole lizard at an extreme Eastern limits of it's range, even though it's normally listed as a Baja California animal. There may have been a subspecies that lived further East that never got formally classified? Or a completely different species on it's own, just related. Extreme speculation on my part, & I'm not a biologist of any skill. Just an interested bystander.
@kezia80277 ай бұрын
"flip over lizards from any other group" Well if you insist Clint. From now on, you can call me The Lizard Flipper. Any time you've got a lizard that needs flipping, I'll be there.
@FinneasJedidiah7 ай бұрын
Hey Clint, i know this was probably just a 'fact' you picked up somewhere and have used without really thinking much about it, but there are 100% canaries in the canary islands. The canary islands are one of the main places that wild canaries are native to. (The others being the Azores and Madiera)
@danicoeMB7 ай бұрын
I was a bit confused about this myself, but I think it is just the set up for the joke. From what I understand, what we consider canaries are the domesticated lineages of Serinus canaria, which, as you say, are found on (and named after) the islands. I may be wrong though, as it would not be the first time that Clint says something that completely contradicts my understanding of a fact or topic. Either way, it was a good joke :)
@sydhenderson67537 ай бұрын
@@danicoeMB And the islands are named for dogs, so canaries are dog birds.
@mcdongle87527 ай бұрын
love the close up Gus-Gus cam!! it looks like hes on the verge of falling asleep when you pet him hes so cute
@apteropith7 ай бұрын
those big face scales, along with the head shape, make it very easy to tell tegus apart from monitor lizards
@iluvtacos12317 ай бұрын
Things heating up in the lizard Fandom.
@liam6nugget7 ай бұрын
Can we please call the Florida Worm Lizard the Shark Worm? It’s just so gloriously (in)accurate!
@DistanceTraveled7 ай бұрын
We are the shark bite capital of the world, too. So perfectly fitting. Florida always needs more chaos.
@DJFracus7 ай бұрын
at least they're more closely related to sharks than they are to annelid worms
@theapexsurvivor95387 ай бұрын
Shark-worm snake seems perfect, as it is none of them but looks like all of them.
@aspennie7 ай бұрын
This channel helped me realize I want to go into zoology! Hopefully this year I’ll finally start college
@Stothehighest7 ай бұрын
If you ever do a Caribbean visit, do talk about the sphaeros, much love for our little micro geckos.
@HD-mp6yy7 ай бұрын
I just saw today a beautiful 40 cm long male Green European Lizard (Lacerta viridis) basking in my garden today and now he is here in the thumbnail.
@sampagano2057 ай бұрын
I've missed gus gus. Happy to see him again.
@chickadeestevenson54407 ай бұрын
I've just stopped using the term "lizard" as it seems about as accurate as Fish. I just call them Squamates.
@zebedeemadness26727 ай бұрын
Genus Lacerta you can confidently call a Lizard, with Lacerta being Latin for Lizard, so are true lizards. I try not to use lizard where i don't have too, i don't class Geckos, Iguanas, Skinks, Monitors, Dragons (bearded, water, forest etc) as being lizards.
@nationalsniper54137 ай бұрын
The world lizards basically means squamates except snakes. That is the meaning of the word, which works very well in language. Similar to how the world reptile does not include birds and the word amphibian does not includes reptiles, mammals and birds. Words like fish, amphibians, reptiles, Dinosaurs, lizards, work a lot better than terms like non tetropod fish, non amniote amphibians, non avian reptiles, non avian Dinosaurs and non serpent lizards. Everybody knows what you mean when you use the words I used at the beginning. When you say lizard or fish everybody in normal life knows exactly what you mean.
@nationalsniper54137 ай бұрын
@@zebedeemadness2672 All these groups (gecko's, skinks, iguanas, agamids (which you call dragons) are lizards in langauge. That is what the world lizard means in language: the squamates apart from serpentes. It is also the world everybody knows. Similar to how the world reptile does not include birds. It just makes it a lot easier to talk about a certain selection of animals apart from saying a mouth flll like 'all the amphibians apart from the amniotes'. Even Clint has gecko's, iguanas, monitors, agamids in best pet lizard videos. Because they are all lizards in language but snakes are not. Despite some lizards being more closely related to snakes than other lizards.
@zebedeemadness26727 ай бұрын
@@nationalsniper5413 Squamata (squamate) means scaled/having scales, NOT Lizard or Snake, the order Serpentes means Snake, the Family Lacertidae means Related to Lacerta / Lizard, with only the genus Lacerta (Latin for lizard) being true Lizards, the taxonomy of squamate has changed fairly recently, this is why most squamates are referred to a "lizards", but it's no longer just three tidy suborders. Of Lacertilia, the Lizards (not valid), Amphisbaenia, the Amphisbaenians (Not valid), Serpentes, the Snakes (still valid).
@nationalsniper54137 ай бұрын
@@zebedeemadness2672 English is not my first language so perhaps you misunderstood. I know what squamata literally means, this group contain the lizards and snakes (and worm lizards if you consider them separate from lizards). All the other animals in squamata apart from serpentes are lizards. Despite some being more closely related to snakes than other lizards. I know lacerta means the 'real lizards'. The word lizard is a paraphyletic group in LANGUAGE, a word in the real world which means all the squamates except snakes. Like the word amphibian excluding the reptiles, mammals and birds despite these being direct and indirect descendants of amphibians. However nobody in real life is going to say things like non serpentes squamata or non amniote amphibians. In fact most people won't even know that you mean. Things might be totally different in scientific classification a few years from now, it changes all the time. 🙂Sometimes the classification or even the scientific name of an animal changes back and forth. So I just say things like they are in language in real life. When I say reptile or lizard everybody knows what I mean. Many people unfamiliar to reptiles don't even know what an agamid is, so when I say I have pygmy bearded dragons (litertally translated to dwarf beraded agamids from my language) I explain these are lizards. In which case they have a general idea. In monophyletic classification the words lizards and reptiles do not exist at all. Only squamata and sauropsia exist there. Paraphyletic terms are words that include a certain group of animals that are related but not all of their descendants. Like reptile and lizard. A bearded dragon is a lizard but not a 'true lizard'. However, outside of the monopheletic classification there is something called real life in which the worlds reptile and lizard are valid existing words (just check the dictionary) and have a clear meaning. There are tons of books about reptiles and lizards. Neither of them include birds and snakes respectively. And imagine a book about fish, will it have to include amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals as well? 😀 If you go to a reptile store or expo and you say you are looking for a nice pet non serpentes squamate as a pet people will look at you strange and not understand, when you say you are looking for a nice pet lizard they understand. That is the difference between words in real life and the theoretical monophyletic classification, which is useful in science, but not in real life. Even Clint has 'best lizard' videos.
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb7 ай бұрын
Hey Clint Laidlaw, Why don't you get to think of a suggestion and creating a KZbin Videos all about the 🦔Phylogeny Group Of Insectivores🦔 (Insectivora), such as Shrews, Moles, Hedgehogs, Solenodons, Gymnures, Moonrats, Desmans, the Extinct West Indian Shrews, Etc. on the next Clint's Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@michaellee42767 ай бұрын
Uh oh.. in cladistics, Insectivora is the dirtiest of dirty words.
@Brospokenerd4247 ай бұрын
A wastebin taxon@@michaellee4276
@indyreno29337 ай бұрын
Moonrats and gymnures are actually the same thing, "gymnure" is the more correct name for members of the family Echinosoricidae, since they are not rats at all, in fact, Insectivora is actually an outdated taxon, which is now replaced with six convergently evolved orders being Macroscelidea (Sengis and Fossil Relatives), Afrosoricida (Tenrecs, Potamoes, and Kruipmols), Soricomorpha (Shrews, Moles, Desmans, and Solenodons), Erinaceomorpha (Hedgehogs and Gymnures), Scandentia (Banxrings), and Dermoptera (Colugos and Fossil Relatives), the largest gymnure species is the Giant Gymnure (Echinosorex gymnura).
@sqrt22957 ай бұрын
For me it would make more sense to call all lepidosaurs lizards, like... who ever saw a tuatara for the first time and said "yep this is not a lizard", come on, it even has lizard scales and it sheds its tail, and being the sister clade of squamates means you don't have to include birds or any other extremely un-lizard-like animals as it would be if crocodiles were called lizards. So yeah, I declare tuataras should be lizards. Also finally Leo from the hit Adam Sandler movie "Leo" could be uncontroversially called a lizard.
@DJFracus7 ай бұрын
I think being able to say that tuataras are not lizards is a cool nod to their distinct lineage. I mean, you could still tell people about that even if you included them in the lizards, but I think the easiest and most elegant way to get the idea across is to simply not include the tuataras in the lizards.
@nationalsniper54137 ай бұрын
@@DJFracus In fact in my language (Dutch) the name for Tuatara is also brughagedis, which translates to bridge lizard.
@DonaldLawrance-jx1mj5 ай бұрын
Tuatara don’t look anything like lizards close up. Look at their eyes . They operate at low body temps are a way more ancient lineage than lizards actually. Related to plesiosaurs
@tomsimpkins12114 ай бұрын
Man, I haven't enjoyed a video I didn't understand in quite a while! Brilliant energy, I can tell you love your work. Whatever it is.
@sarsmask7 ай бұрын
17:08 Using those little arms to climb, too adorable
@susanmartin37627 ай бұрын
😂🙂 the way he just hangs in your arms is so funny! So limp and content.
@annataymond95297 ай бұрын
Like how isopods and spiders aren’t actually bugs but also they’re totally bugs.
@1TakoyakiStore7 ай бұрын
Good news is I have seen a wild Florida Worm Lizard. The bad news is that it was accidentally cut in half by a shovel... 😢 Also I find it fascinating that the skull shape of some of the amphisbaenids looks a lot like caecilians despite being from entirely different clades.
@EpicMathTime7 ай бұрын
I grew up in Louisiana and saw the blue tailed skinks very frequently. Extremely rural area. I could disturb some brush and there would be a good chance I'd see one. Their most shocking attribute wasn't the blue tail, it was their speed. They are FAST. They are so fast that I saw them as blue flashes countless times before learning what exactly they were. As in, when I learned what a skink was, I thought "oh, that's what I was seeing all of those times." Shockingly fast.
@sydhenderson67537 ай бұрын
I'm having a hard time picturing Gus Gus getting up on his hind legs and racing across the room, though I'm sure he's faster than he looks.
@AshendrisSilvermist7 ай бұрын
LOL @ your Canary Islands bit in the outtakes! ❤️ GusGus. Great video, Clint! I'd love to see you go abroad with your team and film documentaries.
@sunburstbasser7 ай бұрын
I used to live in Kansas, and would spot many of those Racerunners in the summer. They really move!
@FeeshUnofficial7 ай бұрын
Completely unrelated question: do you like speculative biology? And if so, what's your favorite spec bio project?
@blackkittycat157 ай бұрын
Gus Gus is so cute, but always have paper towels ready.
@AlexRojas-db6yd7 ай бұрын
No Gus Gus isn't a lizard. HE IS A KING
@d0pomein7 ай бұрын
I'm from Florida, and have never heard of or seen a Florida Worm Lizard... But plenty of Iguana, which are not lizards. You learn something every day.
@LegitHoneybadger7 ай бұрын
I’m so happy to see a video with my lizard in it! She’s an Italian wall lizard, a lacertidae p. Siculus, and it is very hard to find info on her online from a pet sense so she seems rather rare and any mention of her is exciting
@sreace7237 ай бұрын
Chris Gillette just found a Florida worm lizard a few days ago at the sanctuary. It's the first time I'd seen one. Glad you did this today!
@abdullahhamkari62577 ай бұрын
"Let me know how that goes" made me laugh so hard
@t3hwaddledee7 ай бұрын
There are videos around of big old tegus running on two legs and they’re great. I love tegus.
@TheBrewster3207 ай бұрын
I’ve had my adult male tegu get out of his enclosure and get a hold of one of my box turtles. Luckily I caught him in the act and we were able to save the turtle, but the turtle looked like he got hit by a car… lung exposed and everything. Tegu jaws are no joke! Also do not trust a turtle’s shell to protect them from a tegu!
@YaBoyIggy2 ай бұрын
I find your videos so fascinating, Clint. As a phycologist, the idea of an artificial group is just so natural to me. I love seeing it in a completely different area!
@Dr.Ian-Plect2 ай бұрын
"As a phycologist" - very suspect
@adamlax277 ай бұрын
Such a coincidence! I was at uni today and saw Lacerta written on a box and I was desperately trying to think where I knew lacerta from, and now I finally know it was from you ahah
@waffletop10187 ай бұрын
a lizard with only the front two limbs being visible and functional? sounds familiar...
@larachaplauske88187 ай бұрын
😂 The wiggle! I cackled! I have to meet GusGus someday.
@LEDewey_MD7 ай бұрын
Mind blown. Subscribed! Thanks for an amazing coverage of this menagerie of species! ❤
@IainG107 ай бұрын
I'm with Clint, with most Squamata being 'lizards'.
@Jo1day7 ай бұрын
I think the real question with Amphisbaenians is, if you had one as a pet, would you see it more or less than a Kenyan Sand boa? (If they even do well as pets)
@KoroWerks6 ай бұрын
What is the difference between Amphisbaeneans and Caecilians which classified as amphibians but... Visually very similar to Amphisbaeneans which are... Not reptiles? Amphisbaeneans have different mouth and skull shapes, and Caecilians do not always have scales, though they often do in a similar ringlike shape. Caecilians are typically slimy, more similar to Annelid worms.
@fuzsyskunk42527 ай бұрын
I love this channel so much 💖 the most informative and wholesome thing on the internet 👌 And congratulations on 7 years! 🎉
@TigerStyleFanMIZ7 ай бұрын
One of the biggest things I've learned from this channel is that I don't know what anything is. 😝 I wonder if there are any KZbinrs who do phylogenies on plants. I would love to see one on snake plants. .
@aurelielagrange21737 ай бұрын
That’s not “Crime Pays But Botany Doesn’t” doesn’t get into that but so worth watching,
@DJFracus7 ай бұрын
I have tried learning plant phylogeny on my own a bit, but it is so difficult to easily tell what kind of family a plant belongs to... animals are way easier in comparison I feel
@bubbacharlietripp7 ай бұрын
On Swamp Wars they always made the tegus sound so mean and terrifying. Gusgus seems lovely.
@daemon24267 ай бұрын
I personally view the term "lizard" to be synonymous with Squamata. But I think that's my brain wanting everything that's commonly called a lizard to be under the same umbrella
@nationalsniper54137 ай бұрын
The world lizard in language means all squamata except serpentes (snakes). Like how the world reptile includes the sauropsida except birds and the world Dinosaur does not include birds. It makes sense to exclude some decedents otherwise groups would become to large the world amphibian would contain all reptiles and mammals as well and the word fish would include pretty much all vertebrates.
@Feranogame7 ай бұрын
Wikipedia now lists amphisbaenians as legless lizards
@Boaman5435RedTailBoaLover7 ай бұрын
Amazing Video Clint! I learned a lot of facts from this video. I learn so much from your channel. I loved reptiles before i stumbled upon your channel and I learned so many new interesting facts from your channel clint.
@biancahumble7067 ай бұрын
“but don’t worry; I have upsetting news for you today as well!” 😂
@allenwalters88127 ай бұрын
Around 1980 I found a legless lizard digging a hole near patoka lake in southern indiana. It was pink and had a shorter length compared to the ones you showed. Like a lot shorter. I always thought it was a weird snake till i saw this.
@fiveelevenevan7 ай бұрын
I love how these videos confuse me to end, but I still feel like I've learned.
@sandrastreifel64527 ай бұрын
I love Gus Gus, he is so cooperative with handling! I look forward to visiting your Reptile Room to see him, but Utah is a long way from here!
@talroitberg59137 ай бұрын
The amphisbaenid skill at 12:31 looks like something by H.R. Giger
@shaunleslie41437 ай бұрын
2:42, that not-lizard squinty glare. Locking my door tonight.
@Exquailibur7 ай бұрын
So a weird worm dude floated to the old world from North American and the floated back over to South America? That is so goofy.
@golwenlothlindel7 ай бұрын
Other animals: walk from North America to South America. Amphisbaenids: Imma take the scenic route. Which is ironic for animals that barely have eyes.
@Exquailibur7 ай бұрын
@@golwenlothlindel yeah it really is
@Chaz23037 ай бұрын
I’m so excited for that documentary!!!!!!!!
@christopher-wolter7 ай бұрын
Clint! Just when I thought I couldn't be more captivated, you surprise us with such mind-bending insights about🦎! Hard not to poke fun at our misconceptions under your charismatic guidance 💃
@tobyihli94707 ай бұрын
You had to look at your watch to know seven years? Love it!
@pastorbillychidester93097 ай бұрын
Clint, before I can get thru this video, I just want to say thank you for making me laugh and making this content fun. Appreciate you!
@CyBromancer75627 ай бұрын
Clint, the fact you brought up the Space Slug and Mynock really makes me want to hear you cover Star Wars creatures, or just more fictional media wildlife! Whether that be individual species facts, phylogenies, the best pet, I am down!
@russellwhisenant55547 ай бұрын
"Do you see anything like this?" Yes. The monitor lizard has a similar pattern of rectangular scales which seem to form bands.
@randigo99927 ай бұрын
Make an episode about Viviparous Lizards cause they are unique on how they are capable to survive in Ireland and UK
@lilyayora2 ай бұрын
OBSESSED with that skull. I've been around hazelworms my entire life but I didn't know they had teeth like that! Interestingly, they do drop their tails.
@macmacox7 ай бұрын
I don't know why, but I'm thinking of sandwiches and adjunct sandwiches when phylogeny comes up. and then I start thinking of if a True lizard is a Reuben or Club sandwich, a worm lizard would be a hot dog, and a gecko might be a open faced sandwich.
@Thomasstearns427 ай бұрын
I'm going to happily watch this video but man... I was really hyped for part 2 of the carnivora.
@storey6627 ай бұрын
I’ve only recently discovered your channel, but I’ve had a fascination with all things animal-adjacent for as long as I can remember. Your channel makes me feel like a kid again, constantly learning something new. And not just new, but something new that’s interesting and wonderful and FUN! Honestly, the fact that you’re not approached on a daily basis with offers to create TV shows or movies is insane to me. I’ve already binged a TON of your videos and have no intention of stopping until they’re all watched.. and honestly, I’ll probably just start from the top even then! Thank you for creating such a wonderful place for people like me and the rest of your subscribers. I’m so happy to have been recommended your channel, it’s a new favorite of mine. I hope you know how much we all appreciate you sharing your expertise with the rest of us. Learning from you is a gift, and I’m thrilled that I get to be one of the lucky few who receives that gift. ❤
@ClintsReptiles7 ай бұрын
Thank you for such a wonderful piece of encouragement! You'll never know how much comments like this help to keep me excited about what we are doing. Thank you so much for taking the time to leave that message.
@gemsht0ne7 ай бұрын
That intro was AMAZING. Lizards, with such trepidation, excellent 👌🏽. ❤Can't get enough of this channel. I cant help but call it, Social Media at its finest 😊 ✌🏽 ! Thank you so much for the knowledge and education. Your passion really stands out, and I can't help but experience the joy that you do!! The love of animals, and the respect for them, by us humans.. its so important. And i genuinely appreciate your contribution to this cause via your social media ❤. Thank you 🙏🏽
@carschmn7 ай бұрын
3:03 good boy status confirmed for the critters that let you show their bellies.
@AbqDez7 ай бұрын
I want to ask about the "Hoatzin" What? How? Why? Is it? What kind of bird is it? What is it related to? Does it really have a cow stomach?
@hamishfox7 ай бұрын
I love the tiny legged stretch lizards so much. They are adorable and also I am going to exclusively call them that from now on.