Discovered and Disappeared - 5 Species That Have Only Ever Been Seen Once

  Рет қаралды 137,349

All.About.Nature

All.About.Nature

14 күн бұрын

Check us out on Patreon:
www.patreon.com/user?u=90710607
In this video, we're looking at 5 species of plant and animal that have only ever been recorded once.
1. Red Tigrina (Leopardus narinensis)
2. Arunachal Pit Viper (Trimeresurus arunachalensis)
3. Daintree’s River Banana (Musa fitzalanii)
4. Pocket Shark (Mollisquama parini)
5. American Pocket Shark (Mollisquama mississippiensis)
Music:
Chaldene
Van Sandano
www.epidemicsound.com/track/X...

Пікірлер: 277
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 13 күн бұрын
Hey guys. I want to say a huge thanks for all the kind comments, especially on this video. A big reason I enjoy making these videos is because this is the content I like to watch, and I'm always so happy to hear that so many of you enjoy this type of video too. So thanks again for being here.
@FireStick-nu4pn
@FireStick-nu4pn 7 күн бұрын
Despite saying only 25% has been officially identified, you get laughed at if you see a cryptid. My phone doesn’t even acknowledge the spelling of the word! Why? What are the establishment trying to hide so badly? Experiments that got loose from the lab? Animals they insist don’t exist, despite countless stories of encounters going back eons. Samples disappearing. I think it’s because the National Parks are a large part of revenue. If it was admitted that these things in fact do exist, they may be afraid that 1) people will get hurt or worse trying to see them and 2) regular people will be too scared to visit, thus loosing cash. But, knowing about the Missing 411, or just listening to Lilith Dread or Donovan Dread, and you hear there are things out there that can’t always be explained away as being a “bear.” Gosh. They don’t have to be cryptids. I heard one story of a guy in the swamp that saw a snapping turtle the size of a Volkswagen Beetle, take down a feral hog. He was afraid to tell anyone about it personally, because he was afraid of being ridiculed.
@roundstone5965
@roundstone5965 2 күн бұрын
There is a fern tree in Englanf which is still living and only seen once
@kelleemerson9510
@kelleemerson9510 13 күн бұрын
I would bet a good percentage of people, in their life time, have come across a plant, bug or less likely a critter that hasn't been recorded and never knew it.
@kookamunga2458
@kookamunga2458 13 күн бұрын
I've had that experience. A few years ago dozens of wasps of a very striking blue color set up a home behind the rain gutters on the eves of my house . They came buzzing around me everyday as I passed by. These wasps were so friendly that I actually enjoyed having them around. These wasps never went near the garbage can or in it so they definitely weren't common house flies .
@benjaminhenegar291
@benjaminhenegar291 13 күн бұрын
I believe that
@brynkotz5262
@brynkotz5262 12 күн бұрын
@@kookamunga2458 ru in North America? It might’ve been a ‘common blue mud dauber’
@banzakidimye348
@banzakidimye348 12 күн бұрын
A difference between seeing something that no-one else has ever seen and KNOWING that you have seen something that no-one else has ever seen. And then going onto RECORD what, when and where you saw it.
@darklight6013
@darklight6013 12 күн бұрын
15 years ago i was fishing with a friend in a local harbour, i got this crab to my hook who was actively munching on the bait. Initially it looked like some kind of spider crab but, after a quick view, i noted its last 6 legs, in the back, had paddles... just like sand crabs but it had 6 flipper-like legs instead of only 2... I flip it in the sea and it started swimming forward, "flying" in the water with alternating movements of the finned legs, like a 6 flipped turtle or a penguin. It swam near the surface for a while before diving and disappearing forever. That harbour is full of blue water fishing boats; my theory is that, whatever that thing was, some fishing boat caught it in its net, deep offshore. The fishermen must have toss it back in the water when the were already in the Port
@vg77574
@vg77574 13 күн бұрын
I’m actually planning on an expedition to rediscover the Arunchal Pit Viper with my fellow Indian herpetologists. I’m a birder by passion and I visit Arunchal Pradesh regularly. It is a pristine biodiversity haven.
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 13 күн бұрын
Awesome! When will it be?
@vg77574
@vg77574 13 күн бұрын
@@all.about.nature1987 I scheduled it for August this year but two of my team members are predisposed so the date is still tentative. Me and my lead herpetologist and longtime birding partner are raring to go, we are still zeroing in on the area around the district of West Kameng where it was found, the terrain is somewhat challenging.
@vg77574
@vg77574 13 күн бұрын
Recently during my birding trip to Mishmi Hills in Arunchal I came across a dead snake (roadkill) that quite resembles the Himalayan Keelback but the pattern is not fully identical. I still haven’t shared the picture with my herpetologist friends but I have to now.
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 13 күн бұрын
@@vg77574 awesome! I hope you find it! That's the sort of thing I DREAM of getting to do.
@vg77574
@vg77574 13 күн бұрын
@@all.about.nature1987 Will keep you posted. Kudos to you for the amazing work you are doing. I’m also obsessed with rare species. If I can rediscover a stable population/habitat you can come visit.
@Rainforestdelight
@Rainforestdelight 13 күн бұрын
Another species to consider for another episode is Atelopus Chirripoensis (Not to be confused with Atelopus Chiriquiensis). This species of harlequin toad was only observed once during a single breeding event in a paramó pond on Costa Rica’s highest mountain Cerro Chirripó in March of 1980 and only a single specimen was collected that day by Costa Rican biologist Luis Diego Gómez. It was only later in 2009 that it was described as a new species but by then no further sightings were made and it is presumed to have gone extinct like many amphibian species in the region when the deadly Chytrid fungus was introduced in the 1980’s. Today only the one specimen collected in 1980 remains in the zoological museum at the University of Costa Rica and some other biologists contend that it was actually a misidentified Atelopus Ignescens from Ecuador that was somehow introduced to Cerro Chirripó but this is highly unlikely unless we do discover an isolated relic population like that has happened to other harlequin toad species that we’re also feared to have gone extinct but have been rediscovered.
@eric11450
@eric11450 13 күн бұрын
Its always a good day when AAN drops a new video!
@ikaikaorkidtakarakatinafan2066
@ikaikaorkidtakarakatinafan2066 13 күн бұрын
Your so right I love there videos
@shaunkelley4131
@shaunkelley4131 13 күн бұрын
It really is. It's like a surprise gift every single time, and it's always top tier
@melhawk6284
@melhawk6284 12 күн бұрын
With my love of gnarly little predators, i cross my fingers for the Red Tigrina.
@just_passing_through
@just_passing_through 13 күн бұрын
I wonder how many of these specimens could simply be genetic mutations of a known species? I mean, if someone discovered a single example of a homo sapien with dwarfism, or Down syndrome, would they not identify them as so different in morphology that they would classify the individual as belonging to a new species?
@kellybraun7048
@kellybraun7048 12 күн бұрын
Sounds like something that would depend on what dna markers are used to classify, some of which would cause mistakes. In another comment reply, someone mentioned that classification has a lot of debates, different definitions of species and how many or few variations should be grouped together. It was a great thorough explanation, if you are willing to look through the comments.
@kiraduma2128
@kiraduma2128 13 күн бұрын
A glowing shark! 😍 Had no idea such things existed
@m.streicher8286
@m.streicher8286 13 күн бұрын
I understand why they wouldn't be on a serious list, but honorable mention for Beebe's abyssal fish.
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 12 күн бұрын
I actually made an entire video about this. But apparently I pronounced his name wrong for the entire video and offended everyone who knew the story.
@kellybraun7048
@kellybraun7048 12 күн бұрын
Red Tigrina- Did they put the cameras at the right height? 😂 Idr where I heard this or what animal they were looking for, might’ve been on this channel, where a lost species was missed bc the trail cameras were too high to spot them.
@safron2442
@safron2442 12 күн бұрын
I notice daintree's banana specimen has fruit and seed in the specimen, is it possible they could be germinated and figure out once and for all if its a unique taxa or not?
@derangedbottle8327
@derangedbottle8327 12 күн бұрын
I'm a layperson when it comes to Zoology and I have a genuine question. How are we so confident these are new species and can over-classification be a problem? We designate new species over very tiny differences and yet we view all humans as part of one. I thought species were distinguished based on reproductive compatibility, not "Is the color of its skin different" or "Is its tail long or short". I'm sure you can imagine what the human equivalents to those would be and the absolute shitstorm that would cause.
@terryhunt2659
@terryhunt2659 12 күн бұрын
Life is so diverse that a single definition of what distinguishes species just doesn't work. Reproductive compatibility is one of only about 30-50 different definitions of species, some of which work with some 'types' of life (plants, or bacteria, or fungi, for example) but not others. Even amongst mammals, recognised different species can sometimes reproduce (hybridise) with varying degrees of success. Each species also (usually) has local variations within it, sometimes called sub-species. Sometimes a thought-to-be single species or sub-species is re-analysed and found to be two (or more); sometimes two (or more) are re-analysed and reclassified as one. How great a difference is needed in one of the many measurable criteria to make two populations different (sub-)species is often a subjective judgement, and Biologists argue about it _all the time_. Those that favour fewer species with greater internal variety are sometimes called 'Lumpers', and those that like to define more sub-species (or species in a genus) are sometimes called 'Splitters.' This is more than just an abstract matter - whether something is recognised as a separate species (or sub-species) or not can determine whether or not it is protected by conservation laws.
@derangedbottle8327
@derangedbottle8327 12 күн бұрын
@@terryhunt2659 Thank you for your insight. Today I found out I'm a lumper. Looking at humans and the amount of diversity within groups, it seems wrong to me to not apply that same view towards our fellow creatures but I can see how it would be difficult to pinpoint watersheds.
@kellybraun7048
@kellybraun7048 12 күн бұрын
If you’re interested in hearing the controversies of classification, I recommend Clint’s Reptiles. He talks about why an animal is classified a particular way and how a lot of animals are being reclassified based on DNA sequencing, changing it from observable characteristics that classified things originally (such as two similar looking animals that were classified as the same genus being found to be from different evolutionary branches - convergent evolution). This has led to higher accuracy, as well as discovering new species we didn’t know existed (new anaconda species- Dav Kaufman’s Reptile Adventures; new frog species- Planet Wild, June 2024 project).
@OakenTome
@OakenTome 12 күн бұрын
@@derangedbottle8327Human diversity is largely superficial compared to other species, we're all extremely closely related genetically-speaking.
@itzmetous
@itzmetous 11 күн бұрын
So Im a studying bio student and had the same question back when i started! But its a fairly simple answer from what I understand now. The tail being longer and markings being different used to be more important in classifying species before genetic testing, now however they're like clues for if a species should be tested. Because while a different pattern is always notable, creatures can just be muted sometimes. In which their DNA would still be mostly identical to another species. This is different between humans because on average any 2 humans are about 99% genetically similar. Thats not really something that gets jotted down as noteworthy when testing for new species. New species are usually a combination of finding patterns/visual differences, seeing them in a different location/niche, and then testing to show that they arent actually the same species. This is also why now people are a lot more hesitant to name species than they used to be, a lot more work goes into it than, "that looks different," even if that looking different is the start of it. Mayhaps not the best example, but wild horses vs donkeys vs zebras, if you found one of each and they all had a solid black mutation you might think them all the same animal (especially wildhorses since they are short and squat like donkeys and zebras), but thatd be wrong without genetic testing because they are different enough chromosomally to make sterile offspring. Sorry for the long winded reply! I got excited.
@persimmontea6383
@persimmontea6383 12 күн бұрын
that mysterious banana is politely screaming for DNA analysis
@jasonhernandez619
@jasonhernandez619 12 күн бұрын
I found myself wondering how long the seeds stay viable. Unlike domesticated bananas, wild bananas have seeds, and it looked like those herbarium specimens included fruits.
@persimmontea6383
@persimmontea6383 12 күн бұрын
@@jasonhernandez619 maybe! But generally tropical jungle seeds cannot survive drying out.
@friedpancakes266
@friedpancakes266 13 күн бұрын
I want to meet Jeffery. If he has an entire species of cat, then he must be pretty cool
@sabsab878
@sabsab878 13 күн бұрын
I‘m a little jealous, I must admit. I hope he stops to hog them all for himself
@EmpressOfExile206
@EmpressOfExile206 13 күн бұрын
*Geoffroy lmao
@zackakai5173
@zackakai5173 12 күн бұрын
Plot twist: it's actually just one cat *named* Jeffery.
@ZomboseTM
@ZomboseTM 12 күн бұрын
@@zackakai5173 they just keep on seeing the same cat and haven't realized yet
@graphite2786
@graphite2786 13 күн бұрын
The banana certainly is suspect and the red tigrinus is probably gone😢 But i reckon the other 3 species are still out there, especially the pocket sharks! Great video, ❤😊
@Mud-Brain
@Mud-Brain 10 күн бұрын
I know it's not exactly a new species, but I stumbled across a white blackberry bush last year on a public walking trail. They looked unripe, but were full-sized and sweet berries. Tasted a little bit mellower than the other blackberries nearby. Unfortunately I didn't get a cutting of it, and it was dug up by the town soon after as they cleared the edges of the trail.
@Mario-bl5ud
@Mario-bl5ud 5 күн бұрын
White mulberry, most likely.
@GreatSageSunWukong
@GreatSageSunWukong 13 күн бұрын
When I was a child I found a bug in the kitchen it was like a ladybird but it was white and fluffy and looked like it had 2 heads one at each end, both were black and more pointed then a ladybird very pointed, my mother thought it was freaky looking and threw it out, I've never seen a bug like it since, I wanted to catch it and take it to the natural history museum, that was about 30 years ago
@ShadySheev
@ShadySheev 13 күн бұрын
What country was that?
@nicodabastard
@nicodabastard 13 күн бұрын
It was a bigfoot.
@IanDavidOnDU
@IanDavidOnDU 12 күн бұрын
​@@ShadySheev Enceladus
@GreatSageSunWukong
@GreatSageSunWukong 12 күн бұрын
@@ShadySheev UK
@justineagle6744
@justineagle6744 13 күн бұрын
One of the rare KZbinrs I have the notification bell on
@sforza209
@sforza209 12 күн бұрын
I don’t have any bells on. I hate notifications.
@justineagle6744
@justineagle6744 9 күн бұрын
@@sforza209 good for you… I ain’t missing a vid
@Theunknownperson456
@Theunknownperson456 13 күн бұрын
I’ve been waiting for another video from this franchise to drop. 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 Love ur vids dude
@MCADDONS789
@MCADDONS789 13 күн бұрын
Make this channel big I love it
@Phuskooz
@Phuskooz 12 күн бұрын
I couldn’t imagine watching this at normal playback speed
@wolfie1703
@wolfie1703 2 күн бұрын
You have the attention span of a maggot bro😭🙏
@Lance_Head
@Lance_Head 13 күн бұрын
LOVE THESE VIDEOS!!!
@FreyIvy
@FreyIvy 13 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this, when my depression is overwhelming your voice helps me stop crying ❤
@hi_tech_reptiles
@hi_tech_reptiles 11 күн бұрын
Veranus zugorum falls into this category. One museum specimen mislabeled as a Mangrove Monitor, some locals claim to have seen them, and one or two specimens resembling the species have been seen and a couple claimed but not verified imported for the pet/herpteculture hobby, but only the one verified really. Silver Monitor Lizard, seem beautiful like many monitors, but so rare no idea if they are extinct, threatened, who knows. Snakes are one where they are so genetically diverse and subspeciation is so easily accomplished, interbreeding, etc. That red viper is awesome though. There are many many more unknown out there though I'm sure.
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 11 күн бұрын
Yes, it does. I actually covered it in one of the other two videos I made on this topic. 👍🏼
@julescaru8591
@julescaru8591 12 күн бұрын
Once again, I am very happy to see that you have made another well researched and narrated piece, thank you for the work you do and the time invested to share with us. All the best Jules 💕
@barbarajean
@barbarajean 13 күн бұрын
Love these videos!!
@seyerus
@seyerus 10 күн бұрын
Dude looks evil, holding that Miaow Miaow.
@absolutfx
@absolutfx 2 күн бұрын
Yeah what is that expression lol
@Lael1212
@Lael1212 13 күн бұрын
Love your videos!!
@uggadasbugga5007
@uggadasbugga5007 13 күн бұрын
I remember your first video, watched it and later subscribed. Your content is so good, wish you all the best!
@sharendonnelly7770
@sharendonnelly7770 12 күн бұрын
Love your videos! Fascinating and educational with great narration.
@StokeLordTanner
@StokeLordTanner Күн бұрын
Subbed and loved, please continue my good man
@vidviewer100
@vidviewer100 12 күн бұрын
thank you fascinating and well made. A real youtube channel
@artawhirler
@artawhirler 4 күн бұрын
I just found this channel today and I love it! New subscriber! 🙂
@kellyharrison5184
@kellyharrison5184 13 күн бұрын
Fascinating! Thank you for these illuminating videos.
@margiestevens2384
@margiestevens2384 12 күн бұрын
Thanks! Can’t do a patreon just yet. But loved the show, especially finding out about tiny sharks that make their on fishing lights😆
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 12 күн бұрын
Wow! Thanks so much, Margie. You're only the second person to ever do this, and I'm really appreciate it.
@christianlifesofpets8549
@christianlifesofpets8549 13 күн бұрын
Love these types of videos
@sarahsunshine8455
@sarahsunshine8455 13 күн бұрын
Another great video thank you very much❣️🫶🏻☀️
@alexandermattock8300
@alexandermattock8300 13 күн бұрын
Always a pleasure to watch and listen
@chir0pter
@chir0pter 12 күн бұрын
8:17 rather like another riverine species- the Franklinia tree- which was seen in the wild only once, upon its discovery in the early 1800s, and also on a lowland riverbank. It seems likely this relict distribution is the result of repeated desertification/glaciation events over the past couple million years, and it wasn't able to recover to its former more higher-altitude Appalachian habitat during the current interglacial. I wonder if a similar set of circumstances isolated this Australian banana species in less-suitable downstream habitat, especially given the human-caused extinction of the megafauna that likely would have spread its seeds.
@user-ke7ey5hv9c
@user-ke7ey5hv9c 11 күн бұрын
Does Franklinia exist in cultivation
@chir0pter
@chir0pter 11 күн бұрын
@@user-ke7ey5hv9c Yes, fortunately the expedition that discovered it also collected seeds! If they hadn't, it would be completely extinct as it was never seen again in the wild! It's a gorgeous tree and has long been a botanic celebrity especially given its origin story
@BMW7series251
@BMW7series251 13 күн бұрын
Another very interesting video. Many thanks for posting, regards, John. UK.
@Graeme_Lastname
@Graeme_Lastname 12 күн бұрын
Some excellent subjects to attempt cloning methinks.
@mjolninja9358
@mjolninja9358 12 күн бұрын
Saw a weird plant, looks like a dwarf banana tree and the trunk is like few inches tall only and the rest are leaves. It basically looks like banana leaves on the ground arranged in a circle.
@user-ke7ey5hv9c
@user-ke7ey5hv9c 11 күн бұрын
Bird-of-paradise, canna lily, or a young banana shoot
@jeremysmith3522
@jeremysmith3522 11 күн бұрын
Very cool video !
@user-zr5yj1od5q
@user-zr5yj1od5q 13 күн бұрын
How do you know it’s not just a deformity or a one off of another species if there are no others?
@reidrayfield6685
@reidrayfield6685 11 күн бұрын
I always wonder how often hybrid plants and animals are responsible for these mysterious new species encounters.
@Welcometothewild
@Welcometothewild 13 күн бұрын
awesome topic keep it up
@Togepyy
@Togepyy 13 күн бұрын
I love these vids so interesting
@bradenengdahl4916
@bradenengdahl4916 11 күн бұрын
Great video
@Book-Mark
@Book-Mark 12 күн бұрын
The Pit viper is absolutely stunning.
@Janmayjai
@Janmayjai 12 күн бұрын
i live off your videos for motivation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
@chandraathithan11
@chandraathithan11 13 күн бұрын
Super video.
@jkromes20
@jkromes20 13 күн бұрын
How are they able to determine some of these aren’t ever some weird hybrid? Are the genetics different enough? Is it just something that’s easy to determine looking at genetics?
@pierreabbat6157
@pierreabbat6157 13 күн бұрын
The Tigrina, in South America, is not to be confused with the Tigriña, in the Horn of Africa.
@IanDavidOnDU
@IanDavidOnDU 12 күн бұрын
Just think how many undiscovered species of spiders we accidentally swallow in our sleep.
@slymongoose420
@slymongoose420 2 күн бұрын
I once was bodyboarding at flagpoles at kailua beach. And there was this small bug in the water it swam underneath my board from right to left came up out of the water and flew away. It was maybe a quarter inch long dark in color and swam kinda like a squid and flew away like a insect. Really weird.
@anthonychristina5038
@anthonychristina5038 9 күн бұрын
Wow another banger
@GetToTheFarm
@GetToTheFarm 13 күн бұрын
The banana expedition was likely around the time when the original "best" banana ( based on taste, harvest, transport and storage characteristics) was wiped out by Panama Disease. All bananas are root clones of the mother plant so all the banana plantations were at risk. They switched to the Cavendish banana which was resistant to the disease... It is the banana we are all familiar with. However the Cavendish variety is now showing signs of suseptablity to Panama disease and they will have to go the next "best" banana and start over again....
@persimmontea6383
@persimmontea6383 12 күн бұрын
I hope whatever new banana they come up with has some flavor. I discovered in Bangladesh a few years back that bananas actually have flavor! (but not the Cavendish)
@isabelrodriguezsjolund9701
@isabelrodriguezsjolund9701 13 күн бұрын
Super interesting (and sad) video
@RCSVirginia
@RCSVirginia 12 күн бұрын
I must confess that I would much rather see the kitty reappear and be found alive than the viper.
@CJM-rg5rt
@CJM-rg5rt 12 күн бұрын
That was a super cool looking viper, if you're going to put your hope into something I think that's a safer bet.
@mackedatpottkind1752
@mackedatpottkind1752 13 күн бұрын
👍🏻 Thank you
@artawhirler
@artawhirler 4 күн бұрын
The reason the trail cameras never photographed a Red Tigrina is because these fascinating little creatures are invisible when they're alive, and only take on a visible form after death. 🙂
@jaktosilk5206
@jaktosilk5206 12 күн бұрын
I'm always waiting for AAN to post a new video this the best day ever
@cory980
@cory980 6 күн бұрын
As a child growing up in Tacoma, I once encountered a remarkably vivid blue snake, and it was fast. To this day, I have yet to come across something quite like it. It could be that years have passed, and I may remember things differently. Some kind of garden snake? I do not know.
@user-pp5jz9qz2i
@user-pp5jz9qz2i 13 күн бұрын
Hi o love your vids
@FireStick-nu4pn
@FireStick-nu4pn 7 күн бұрын
I found a strange Wolf spider today that I have never seen before. I took a picture and let it loose. It was long and skinny. Like a daddy long legs, but clearly a Wolf spider.
@Fishfanplayz
@Fishfanplayz 12 күн бұрын
LETS GOOO PART THREEEEE
@darren6564
@darren6564 9 күн бұрын
I saw the cornfed brown trout once. I had Chipotle 8 hours before.
@Njurk
@Njurk 10 күн бұрын
It’s basically finding undiscovered Pokémon and spotting legendary Pokémon’s
@stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369
@stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369 11 күн бұрын
wow epic video
@stevescott7195
@stevescott7195 13 күн бұрын
Crazy
@tarekmohamed3263
@tarekmohamed3263 13 күн бұрын
SUBSCRIBED.
@artawhirler
@artawhirler 4 күн бұрын
Several times in my life, I have seen some weird looking bug and seriously wondered if I was the first human who ever saw one of these things! (The chances of that may be low - but they're not zero!)
@FireStick-nu4pn
@FireStick-nu4pn 7 күн бұрын
I once saw a white ball with long (apx 2 inch) fur, the size of a basketball, moving up a backyard fence in the middle of San Francisco. It wasn’t a cat. I don’t know what it was. It didn’t roll. It didn’t climb it, because it’s body wasn’t stretched out like that. It looked like a large tribble, gliding up a wooden fence. I only saw it once. It was so bizarre! This was in the mid 2010’s.
@robrice7246
@robrice7246 13 күн бұрын
6:46 - 6:57 My one problem with this fruit is that it rots way too easily after a few days.
@all.about.nature1987
@all.about.nature1987 13 күн бұрын
Agreed. There's like a 3 day window in which I'm willing to eat them.
@otnamyebot1620
@otnamyebot1620 13 күн бұрын
Try dead man's fingers or chocolate vine.
@nunyobidness2358
@nunyobidness2358 12 күн бұрын
All good zoologists know how to titillate an ocelot
@nunyabiznazz2210
@nunyabiznazz2210 6 күн бұрын
Makes me wonder what those "banana lizards" are/were. When I was growing up I saw a relatively large (about the size of an iguana) yellow lizard. I thought it was a snake at first until it moved and I saw it had legs. At first I thought it was someone's pet because it looked "exotic", but then I saw another one in a different location far from any houses. I have tried looking them up online and have had no luck. The little town I grew up in is located on the edge of the wilderness at the base of two mountain ranges so there are some strange critters..
@MAYBEMAYNOTBE2
@MAYBEMAYNOTBE2 12 күн бұрын
Dude you sound very innocent 😇
@stupidminotaur9735
@stupidminotaur9735 5 күн бұрын
suggested topic , the Mahamba, giant crocs of the congo ... dont know if you can find more reports of these giants that arent more wildly known , they're might be more of these in dutch than known in english.
@danielleclark-zack864
@danielleclark-zack864 13 күн бұрын
I wonder how many holotypes were one-off mutations or something.
@Perikkel
@Perikkel 9 күн бұрын
Cool
@futurepig
@futurepig 10 күн бұрын
Someone needs to make an expedition to find Pocket Sharks. Gotta Catch 'Em All!
@thedarkmasterthedarkmaster
@thedarkmasterthedarkmaster 13 күн бұрын
Makes sense for ocean things
@MagnaEssence
@MagnaEssence 12 күн бұрын
i once found a weird spikey snail-shelled...THING, that looked like a leech, except...spikey snail, under a rock in a stream near alaska (but since i was a kid, i got scared of it BIG TIME, because...it was a pokey weird bug) AND THEN, my mom once found a weird scorpion-shrimp thing that came out of a lake near alaska too, -and it was using it's tail to shoot liquid at her. -she caught it in a jar and there happened to be a research group nearby the lake, and so she brought it to them, and they said they would get back to her on what it was, and...yeah, they...never got back to her and they just ran off with it. we can't find any documentation of the creature, but it's out there, waiting to be rediscovered (i assume the research team either had some WEIRD motive not to tell people what was found, OR, they lost it and didn't care to try find another one) it would be super cool if i could go back one day to try find one, but i fear that the liquid it was shooting was meant to blind creatures because i know there are some things that do that in other parts of the world, but it lives in a HUGE glacial lake, and is SUPER SUPER far away from any hospital or city. so...there's alot of species, but they're still out there!!!, and sometimes there are stupid situations (like me getting scared, and her thinking she could trust some researchers to get back to her) and, maybe i could go back to find the spikey thing too!!!, -except, the stream i found it in seems to be drying up...i looked recently on google earth, and the lake it is attached to is SEVERELY drying...i am so sad, it was my favorite place when i was little.
@akenjah
@akenjah 17 сағат бұрын
I remember walking into my uncle's garage in Southern California and finding an all white black widow spider. I know what black widows look like shape size and all. It must of had albinoism or something. I never seen one again.
@synivy4576
@synivy4576 11 күн бұрын
There’s so many species that’s waiting to be described or rediscovered just sitting in museum collections there’s many instances of this happening lol
@leostgeorge2080
@leostgeorge2080 11 күн бұрын
The oceans still hold many secrets since exploration is limited. As for terrestrial, Some thought to be a new species could easily fall into the category of mutant or physical/visual abnormal mutations of a normal known species. It would explain the sight of only one ever.
@jasonhare8540
@jasonhare8540 9 күн бұрын
Okay but why is dude holding the cat like he personally strangled it .... Professor creepsalot
@AzureDeathHaseo
@AzureDeathHaseo 12 күн бұрын
Loved the video, not shitting on any of the researchers involved in the publication but, "Only fragments of the plant were collected"... My dudes what did you expect from Eugene and Ferdinand? TO COLLECT A WHOLE BANANA TREE?
@cruzada07
@cruzada07 10 күн бұрын
Why not put the link to the other 2 vids on the discription
@xi4835
@xi4835 12 күн бұрын
Big foot been seen more?
@kookamunga2458
@kookamunga2458 13 күн бұрын
I've had that experience with spiders. I've seen a spider with zebra stripes and what looks like tiny little armour plating on its legs and abdomen. I can't seem to see another one like it but others I've spotted are just as impressive.
@efnissien
@efnissien 13 күн бұрын
It's believed that the best place to go looking for new species is your back yard. Each backyard may have a unique (compared to it's neighbours) environment.
@triston2009
@triston2009 13 күн бұрын
🔥🔥🔥
@julieking5151
@julieking5151 10 күн бұрын
Perhaps they could be mutant “one off’s” as well
@agentbarron9768
@agentbarron9768 10 күн бұрын
I'm sure I've been bit by bugs while doing yard work that have never been seen before
@sheepboy2560
@sheepboy2560 13 күн бұрын
Hoped to see my mother in law in this list
@nitroxide17
@nitroxide17 10 күн бұрын
Aww poket sharks 🦈
@roger6867
@roger6867 13 күн бұрын
It is astonishing that two such individual sharks should have been discovered in different oceans but I do wonder why they are regarded as different species rather than sub species or morphological variations of the same species?
@EmpressOfExile206
@EmpressOfExile206 13 күн бұрын
Lmao did you not watch the video? 🤔 They have skeletal differences in their # of vertebrae which definitely means they are different species👍 Also being a small deep water species with low population density means it would be incredibly unlikely to find a single species on both sides of the Americas! So much time has passed since the 2 continents became connected that even _if they were_ originally one species, their geological isolation would have caused speciation into 2 new ones 💯
@andi_pasti
@andi_pasti 11 күн бұрын
You make excellent videos! Not are they well researched, I also like the relaxed and pleasant narration. Many other creators are inserting a lot of noise or talk too much and fast. But you sound like I have a conversation with you ❤ don’t let you tell otherwise, this is great! I wanted to do blog posts like this but don’t have the time or the resources to access papers to read, and there so many excellent creators like you already, so why bother 😂
@rodmehta5356
@rodmehta5356 12 күн бұрын
2:10 that's a great album cover 😅
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