I'm a retired dairy herdsman in Lancashire UK; I found this video fascinating, thank you.
@johobi8675 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, thank you so much! One detail: recently American Bison have also been reeintroduced into the Mexican state of Coahulia.
@KateeAngel Жыл бұрын
They have also been brought to Sakha/Yakutia and other places in Eastern Siberia
@sergiorincondelangel4365 Жыл бұрын
That's interesting, i'm from the state next to Coahuila (Nuevo León) and i don't know they had been reintroduced!
@Lurts99 Жыл бұрын
Also reintroduced into Chihuahua State and historically found south to Durango State.
@Hashishin13 Жыл бұрын
@@KateeAngel Wouldn't they have been the European Bison?
@Afrologist Жыл бұрын
@@Hashishin13American Bison (especially Wood Bison) are closer to the Steppe Bison in Siberia. If you look at a map it makes sense, Yakutia is closer to Alaska than it is to Poland.
@kendallkahl8725 Жыл бұрын
Yak are becoming popular in Montana, North Dakota, Alaska and other cold states. In Alaska their wool has people raising them with Llama and Alpaca, even musk ox to experiment with fiber blends to fend off Arctic level cold.
@dracodracarys2339 Жыл бұрын
also yak milk apparently makes great butter
@fatdaddy1996 Жыл бұрын
Isn't the Musk Ox actually a goat?
@vhe9560 Жыл бұрын
@@fatdaddy1996 Of the goat family, yes. I case there was confusion: OP didn't mean people were crossing the two species. They meant people were keeping Llama, Alpaka, Musk Ox and Yak for wool and then mixed the wool after sheering.
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
@vhe9560, there is no goat family, muskoxen and goats both belong to the family Bovidae, which is the largest and most diverse family of hoofed mammals, goats are actually more closely related to cattle than either are to the muskox.
@vhe9560 Жыл бұрын
@@indyreno2933 Ah, thank you for correcting me. My main intention was to explain what OP meant regarding their wool. And that there is no crossing of Musk Oxen with the other species by breeding. So I didn't look up the exact relations before commenting. Should have done that. Thanks again. 👍
@jonasbowles2802 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video! As someone who’s grown up around North American cattle species and bison, it was super cool to learn about quite a few cattle species I had never heard of before! Keep up the great work, I hope your channel continues to grow because you deserve it!!
@sethblandford2805 Жыл бұрын
I love cattle I’m a wetland ecologist and actually focus my study on turtles but I have always had a soft spot for cattle cause I grew up around them and spent a lot of my undergraduate studying them so I love these guys
@Mordecute Жыл бұрын
I had the unique pleasure of working with one of the lead tiger biologists of Bhutan. He was very comfortable working with tigers, but said the one time he had caught a Gaur in a live trap, he was too scared to go near it. I got to analyze some camera trap images of Gaur and they are terrifying and incredible to watch, we caught one chasing an elephant.
@agnelomascarenhas8990 Жыл бұрын
Gaur. I have seen them in the Nilgiri Mountains in South India at altitudes around 2000m/6000ft. They are huge and look menacing. They roam around in small groups on tea estates.
@Amuzic Жыл бұрын
they are the largest bovines...and probably the most dangerous too. They are disproportionately agile for their size...imagine a mid size rhino being agile like an antelope. Add to that their unpredictable mood. I live not very far from one of their largest inhabitats here in Terai region. While I once saw them from afar, my parents had a terrifying experience when they almost got attacked by one while they waited inside a car and the car slowly backed up. But, there are numerous incidents where they have attacked cars and even toppled them.
@diane9247 Жыл бұрын
@@Amuzic I saw a movie years ago that took place in India. One scene was of a gaur rummaging around in the family garden at dusk. If I recall correctly, the people had to wait inside - or maybe in their car - until it left on its own. It looked terrifying and it was just a movie! 😳 I had no idea what the animal was called until much later when I happened upon it in a television program. (Wish I could remember the name of the film.)
@HighMaintenancePS Жыл бұрын
Sure. But really I have seen zero footage of people working with near tiger. They seem much more wild than lion. Look at southern India where they routinely hunt humans. Here they even ambush humans travelling along roads on scooters.
@Lurts99 Жыл бұрын
Would love if you eventually made a video on all the world's wild pigs.
@rynfornow3411 Жыл бұрын
Yes I want that!
@Prober61 Жыл бұрын
Me too.
@Dovietail Жыл бұрын
I'm in!
@roytl Жыл бұрын
Yes!!!!!
@trevorstevenson403811 ай бұрын
Haha I love you guys enthusiasm
@i.m.evilhomer5084 Жыл бұрын
It's a shame that the ancestors of modern domesticated cattle are extinct. It is good to know there are conservation groups breeding Auroch-like taurine cattle & releasing them back in the wild. I wonder if the same can be done for the zebu. I have heard that feral zebu were introduced to India's Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary to entice rare native predators, such as the Asiatic lion.
@dv9239 Жыл бұрын
Kankrej breed of zebu cattle is the closest we have to the extinct Indian Aurochs
@snowmiaow Жыл бұрын
Since we rely on these animals we need took more of an effort to preserve the wild ones and not lose them like the Aurochs.
@MrMarinus1811 ай бұрын
I find it weird though that he didn't single out the Holstein breed. It is kind of what most people think of when they hear "cow". Holstein is the border region between Germany and Denmark and they fought several wars over it. It was conquered by Prussia during the wars of unification in 1870 and remained part of Germany all the way till it was given back to Denmark at the end of WW2.
@aylen7062 Жыл бұрын
1:38 I love the transition from black to white yak. Well done.
@MarcPagan Жыл бұрын
Thanks for a fun and interesting video. For pure cuteness and friendliness, I'm a fan of the very shaggy Highland breed from Scotland.
@flubbah4265 Жыл бұрын
Super interesting video! I do think it’s important to mention that the American Bison were purposely hunted to extinction to get rid of the tribes that depended on them though.
@SouffleDude_256 Жыл бұрын
Really‽ I didn't know that! That seems really cruel, but oddly fitting for colonialists...
@MidwesternCracker_2000 Жыл бұрын
No, they just considered it an added bonus of taking away a large part of their diet and helping to starve some additional people out to further settle western lands with Northwestern European settlers. If we wanted to eradicate them entirely, then I’m pretty sure we would have easily done so by not giving them ‘government rations’ (low quality, fatty foods) when they were put on reservations. It was one of the reasons they killed the buffalos, yeah, but not the number one reason. We could have very easily exterminated them in the end of the 1800s and early 1900s in less than 20 years. Only the Navajo had any sort of moderate autonomy, similarity to this day. They could have been put on those reservations (as they were), then modern mass extermination methods/firing squads and other industrial machinery used to facilitate it. Chose to no longer carry out such events after the Indian Wars ended in the 1880s (1890, technically). They then chose to Westernize and assimilate them to wear Western European style clothing, have a Europeanized diet, live in European settler-style housing, speak English, practice a Europeanized version of Christianity (mainly Protestantism and Roman Catholicism), practice European-settler brought holidays, etc.
@MidwesternCracker_2000 Жыл бұрын
@@SouffleDude_256 Not reality. Only helped to add more deaths to the toll. Would have been able to entirely ‘exterminate’ the population in 20 years maximum if they really wanted to with modern industrial machinery and mass execution methods after they put them on reservations, making them entirely at the mercy of the US. They chose to not do so after the end of the Indian Wars post-1880s.
@eVill420 Жыл бұрын
@@SouffleDude_256yep that sounds like a classic, almost reminds me of WW2 with Russia burning their own cities to slow down the germans
@stevielease795210 ай бұрын
Also, ranchers wanted the bison gone so they could graze their own cattle. Farmers wanted them gone so they could plow up the prairie and plant crops. The US government wanted them exterminated in order to starve out the Native Plains Indian tribes and take their lands and exploit their resources. Finally the expanding railroads wanted them gone because big free roaming animals were a hazard to speeding 🚂 trains .
@SeliahK Жыл бұрын
This was a really good video. I just wanted to point something out in regards to our buffalo here in the U.S. Their numbers did not decline only due to overhunting. They were deliberately slaughtered - massacred by the thousands - as a tactic by colonists, government agents and military specifically BECAUSE our indigenous plains people relied so much on them. They were slaughtered to try and destroy indigenous tribes on the plains. I'm sure overhunting contributed, but it was by NO means the primary cause.
@i_am_x_wild Жыл бұрын
Speaks the truth / facts
@ooffordays566 Жыл бұрын
I remember being taught about it in history class back in grade school, and they showed us a picture of a cowboy standing atop a mountain of bison skulls-it must have been nearly a thousand skulls in just that picture alone. The bison hunting of the 1800s were essentially a wide-scale extermination campaign, and they nearly drove the American Bison to extinction.
@asomethingrather Жыл бұрын
I read something like "Every buffalo killed is an Indian gone"
@dv9239 Жыл бұрын
@@asomethingratheras an Indian I can confirm its game over when our buffalos are gone I'm an Indian from India btw but this still makes sense to me 😂
@asomethingrather Жыл бұрын
@@dv9239 you got cows close enough
@bradleytenderholt5135 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Thank you. I subscribed because it is the first video that explains cattle like it should be! I'm a farm boy and you are amazing! I am going to binge watch your videos. Thanks so much!
@kangtheconqueror8784 Жыл бұрын
I regularly watch your videos. Your Topic selection is great, specially unknown topics like species of fox,cattle etc. Love from Bangladesh. 🇧🇩
@louisvonmalaise8009 Жыл бұрын
No idea I needed to know about different species of cattle but now I do and I’m so glad I got to watch this. Fascinating
@clairecakes9860 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Buffalo bill was actually a show that happened after the frontier closed to reiterate the conquering of the frontier. And most cowboys were not the lonesome explorers that one might think of. Being in the cattle business was hard labor.
@Hollylivengood Жыл бұрын
Buffalo Bill was a man. Bill Cody. The wild west show was just a show with all these old out of work soldiers, as well as Sitting Bull, who was a friend, and Black Elk, who was known at the time as knowledgeable about most Oglala dances and believe it or not, business. Black Elk had managed a general store from his early teens on up, and had a good mind for organizing. I know, I was surprised too, but a healer can also be practical. But he started it for economic purposes, and it happened to also be educational. Whoever you are, if you're from a country that wouldn't have Buffalo Bill in your history books, I get that. But really, when talking about real people, it's better to look up the actual information.
@clairecakes9860 Жыл бұрын
@@Hollylivengood Eh? Just learned it in American history class? My teacher must be misinforming? My bad lol thanks for correcting
@Hollylivengood Жыл бұрын
And there are still cowboys, which everyone forgets. A lot of the ranchers around the big national parks lease park land and it's all free range. No fences. So they have to have cowboys to keep the herd together.
@clairecakes9860 Жыл бұрын
@@Hollylivengood Yes, I did not mean to imply that either. I was mostly talking about the time period.
@clairecakes9860 Жыл бұрын
@@joeschmoe8320 I don’t believe I got that wrong?? I completely understand cowboys and pioneers were two different people. I talked about cowboy jobs at the end of my comment. I do recognize i was wrong about the history of Buffalo Bill though.
@lucasjames7524 Жыл бұрын
This channel deserves a million subscribers!! Excellent video, as always!! 🐮
@MaxH-15 Жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree more
@catsamazing338 Жыл бұрын
Most enjoyable 👍 Was hoping you’d mention the wild cattle of Chillingham UK. Found them fascinating on a visit.
@dio8636 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for including the metric system!!! Many non-Americans will be grateful not to have to google all these numbers. Great video :)
@dottiedavis355 Жыл бұрын
“Ginormous” used as a scientific term…I love it!
@muhammadeisa1459 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. Informative, and the footage was spectacular as always.
@Pabloyo820 Жыл бұрын
cuando veo videos de este canal el tiempo se pasa volando
@PPChickenNug8 ай бұрын
Hello guys, welcome to top 18 cow
@RafaCB0987 Жыл бұрын
Such a gorgeous family of animals
@nolanhiggins8166 Жыл бұрын
very good video, keep it up. hope you get to 1,000,000, you deserve it
@caydensteele6001 Жыл бұрын
YES! Oh my gosh I'm so happy, cattle are my favorites!!
@Celeste-in-Oz11 ай бұрын
I had no idea there were so many different kinds! Fascinating, thanks! Love some of those African ones with the huge horns 🤩
@--Paws-- Жыл бұрын
Love how you included the original cowboys of the southwest. Both countries still have "cowboy" culture and have the same sad song of the music.
@The_Robert.Fletcher Жыл бұрын
What a marvellous video. There are some majestic and beautiful animals. We not have a small herd of European bison in the UK.
@RussTillling Жыл бұрын
"...we now have..."?
@Cricket27315 ай бұрын
@@RussTillling, seems to me tge biggest herd od Europeab. Alsp herds in Portugal & S9ain? Bison sre in0oiland?
@surajbiradar9827 Жыл бұрын
What a coincidence!! Just today a huge gaur strayed in our town, and this video is in my suggestions.
@CaesarT973 Жыл бұрын
Preserve wild cattle before too late 🙏🏿 Thank you for your time for common good No more deforestation 🦚🌳🪷
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
Why prevent deforestation as a strategy to save wild cattle? Most wild cattle prefer grasslands over forested areas. If you really want to help wild cattle, give them a prairie or steppe.
@agnelomascarenhas8990 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering Wild cattle and their domesticated counterparts.
@Ken12610 ай бұрын
Wowwww. I have been researching about Cattle & their origins. It video has easened my research. Just a quick question, what are the origins of the Ankole Cattle? And from which "wild Cattle" do they originate from? It was clear in the video
@pprehn5268 Жыл бұрын
Having passed through some 40 countries back in the 70's I was witness to many of these 'breeds' - 'species' and enjoyed this global overview of a subject I know very little about. I did get to witness dried yak dung to start the fire for us when we were bed/breakfasting at 12,000 feet in Nepal and it inspired me to totally rethink modern developed world life realizing we were the disaster while these few remaining humans had everything necessary.
@whyareyoureadingmynickname8158 Жыл бұрын
This was a very amoosing video (sorry). By the way, can you cover cetaceans sometimes in nearby future? I think they're among the most intriguing animals in the world with some really cool adaptations.
@sheebathefunnyrescuedog692 Жыл бұрын
We also have thousands of feral asian buffalo in Northern Australia 🇦🇺
@MaxH-15 Жыл бұрын
Literally yesterday I was watching you and then I was wondering about a video about cattle then today you released one
@adstheantagonist77417 ай бұрын
glad to hear you mention beffalo had a comment ready about them. They smell terrible but can be very docile around certain folks.
@trevorstevenson403811 ай бұрын
I appreciate these videos where it focuses on the animal in its current form and use.
@HighMaintenancePS Жыл бұрын
I want to see lots more on cattle. I grew up in northland NZ where Angus, Hereford and black and white face were raised for meat production. These cattle can be left in large undeveloped land blocks and mustered in when needed. This video left me with more questions than answers. We moved between wild species and domestics and left out so much information. I did appreciate it but want more 😂
@evetimothy49714 ай бұрын
I love this video! It’s giving bovines the respect they deserve.
@CalvesFanatic Жыл бұрын
This video is great!! I love learning about cattle. I never knew of the saola.
@Kingdom_Of_Discovery11 ай бұрын
*Thank you for an amazing video, it provided me with a lot of valuable information*
@AniFam Жыл бұрын
Awesome~👍 Thank you for sharing this video~🤗
@Saber_Outdoors Жыл бұрын
Good video to help me calm my racing brain before bed.
@comradeobunga6524 Жыл бұрын
It was not Mexico but Spain (who owned Mexico at the time) which started much of the American cattle industry in the West and South, including those in Texas. The Spanish brought sheep, cows, and horses to the Missions they opened up all around New Spain. Florida was the first state in the US to have cows and it was also a Spanish territory and introduced by the Spanish. Criollo cattle for the most part have been replaced by other European and Zebuine breeds.
@chinotrejo1708 Жыл бұрын
At what time ? he clearly said in the 19th century, Mexico achieved its independence from Spain in 1821, which it’s still part of the 19th century. Yes the Spanish were the ones who brought horses, cattle sheep etc.. to the Americas that correct.
@Jeffreymart Жыл бұрын
🤠
@kazwilson425 Жыл бұрын
I notice that Australia was left off the list re wild cattle. But we have something like 150k of wild water buffalo running around the top end. We also have wild Banteng in the Top End as well.
@kwakagreg Жыл бұрын
Yes, I don't know how they are classed tho. They were originally a domesticated strain that have since turned feral. So how their genetics differ, I don't know.
@absalomdraconis Жыл бұрын
@@kwakagreg : If they're the descendants of domestics, then they _aren't_ wild, but _are_ feral. Wild is for those that were never domestic, feral is for domestics that "went native". The difference is because wild & feral individuals will still be behaviorally different from each other (this can be used to identify which characteristics are specific to a breed, vs being the result of training). It's worth noting that "tame" doesn't always differentiate between wild & domestic ancestry, but "tamed" always means that the individual was _believed_ to be either feral or wild.
@epidares11 ай бұрын
@@absalomdraconisHere it's not so easy. The stock came from farmers but meanwhile with genetic tests it was identified that they were pure Banteng. Perhaps the farmers supplemented or built up their stocks with wild-caught animals and then preferred to sell them again when they had the opportunity.
@rankingresearchdata Жыл бұрын
Yak, Gaur (beast), water buffalo, zebu found in India 🇮🇳
@casaroccafamilyking Жыл бұрын
Absolutely awesome, informative video!
@wkkimmy Жыл бұрын
Great video, but you forgot to mention the Muskox?? How could you forget the great bovine of the tundras!
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
Whoa -- Muskox ain't Bovine. Muskox are in the sheep - goat - ibex family.
@wkkimmy Жыл бұрын
Actually they are bovine. But I did read upon it out of curiosity, and apparently they are more closely related to goats and sheep so you do have a point there. I'm surprised cus they look so much like oxen
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
@jamesgoode9246, cattle, goats, sheep, and muskoxen are all in the same family, which is Bovidae, both goats and sheep are both more closely related to cattle than goats and sheep are to muskoxen.
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
@@indyreno2933 -- Yes, all of these critters are in the family Bovidae. However, cattle and water buffalo are in the subfamily Bovini. Sheep, goats, and muskox are all in the subfamily caprini.
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
@jamesgoode9246, actually, Bovini and Caprini are tribes not subfamilies, also water buffalo are cattle, and no, muskoxen do not belong to the subfamily Caprinae, they now belong to the subfamily Ovibovinae along with the takin, gorals, mountain goat, serows, chamoises, and tahrs, thus restricting the Caprinae subfamily only to the goats (tribe Caprini) and sheep (tribe Ovini), the subfamilies Ovibovinae (Muskox, Takin, Gorals, Mountain Goat, Serows, Chamoises, and Tahrs) and Caprinae (Goats and Sheep) are not closely related, the Ovibovinae subfamily forms a clade with the subfamilies Hippotraginae (Grazing Antelope) and Alcelaphinae (Hartebeests, Wildebeests, Damalisks, and Hirola), while the Caprinae subfamily forms a clade with the subfamilies Antilopinae (True Antelope and Gazelles), Cephalophinae (Duikers), and Neotraginae (Dwarf Antelope), the Caprinae + (Antilopinae + (Cephalophinae + Neotraginae)) clade is actually most closely related to the Peleinae + (Reduncinae + Bovinae) clade, while the Ovibovinae + (Hippotraginae + Alcelaphinae) clade is basal to both, this officially divides bovids into ten subfamilies under three major clades, historically, all bovids other than bovines were included under the now defunct clade Aegodontia, but this taxon is rendered as polyphyletic as goats, sheep, true antelope, gazelles, duikers, dwarf antelope, reedbucks, lechwes, kobs, pukus, waterbucks, and rheboks are all more closely related to bovines than any of them are to muskoxen, takins, gorals, mountain goats, serows, chamoises, tahrs, grazing antelope, hartebeests, wildebeests, damalisks, or hirolas, because of this, the muskox, takin, gorals, mountain goat, serows, chamoises, and tahrs do not belong to the subfamily Caprinae anymore and the Aegodontia taxon is no longer recognized.
@JudithChrispell-jl4pd4 ай бұрын
Thanks🎉❤Nice 👍 to SEE n learn positive various Bison,Cattle, n Yak types it helps us through our RUFF daily Issues that make us 😢.Thanks for making us ❤😊!!!
@seeing8spots3 ай бұрын
The bali cattle are beautiful! And have really interesting faces. Almost deerlike
@eggoslayer1001 Жыл бұрын
I love every single one of them
@Amuzic Жыл бұрын
2:40 these are hardened cheese from Yak's milk locally known as Chhurpi. Very useful for high altitude trekking or activities that need stamina. You can keep them in mouth for hours and they provide a constant source of stamina...speaking from personal experience.
@dhruvilkumpavat603711 ай бұрын
More I watch, more gratefulness I have abt you man. So good and amazing quality videos ❤
@ernestoherreralegorreta137 Жыл бұрын
Superb work.Thank you!
@bocar412710 ай бұрын
I couldn’t help but notice- Anoas look and move just like mouse deer!
@williebourke996211 ай бұрын
A very informative video on the origins of cattle worldwide 👏👏👏🇨🇮
@zebrahunter695610 ай бұрын
The fact that one of them is so rare now that they just pulled images from currency instead of actual footage. And other is a taxidermied one
@clivematthews95 Жыл бұрын
I live for these videos 🙏🏾❤️
@tomix3568 Жыл бұрын
you and me both, friend
@diane9247 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the most interesting videos I've seen in ages! Thank you for this really great information, presented in such a professional, yet entertaining way! I feel very well-informed about cattle, now.😀
@magdam1508 Жыл бұрын
Great video! And you said Białowieża almost perfect, respect for that! Żubry are our Polish pride
@animalsVisiting10 ай бұрын
Good video to help me and other people to know about the differences kind of animals follow the different places or different area!OK I love your videos!
@--Paws-- Жыл бұрын
The Maasai culture even my teachers have taught about in elementary school, especially around the forms for different economics and forms of currency like cattle. However, I grew up with water buffaloes. In my country the smaller ones are more common but seeing the gigantic ones is a rare and almost happens on occasion. They were one of the first huge animals I have ever seen. No matter which animal, they also make large piles of poop which are surprising easy to clean up when it dries.
@kadenstimpson3167 Жыл бұрын
The Maasai place massive importance on ownership of cattle. After the 9/11 attacks, they sent 14 cattle to America as a condolence gift
@sheilatruax6172 Жыл бұрын
@@kadenstimpson3167 what a wonderful gift! Thank you, Maasai!
@SaiyyedAliyanAli Жыл бұрын
Sir your video is very informative. Sir please make a video of Indian mammals specially on primates. You can take reference from ( Indian mammals a field guide by Vivek Menon)
@saltpony Жыл бұрын
Thank you. A wonderful video.
@DayDayind Жыл бұрын
I love your videos. They'e well narated, good b roll and I don't understand why you haven't hit 1M followers yet? The every species of... series is my favourite. I dare you to do every species of shark. Probably too big of a job?
@Bouboukenka Жыл бұрын
What about the Highland cattle?
@nilanjanachatterjee9023 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video 😊
@AvB.83 Жыл бұрын
"75,000,000 bovine livestock in the EU" alone, and the most numerous wild bovine species (which I assume is the African Buffalo, although slightly outnumbered by captive Bison) has about 400,000 ... we created a rather absurd world. I hope I'll soon get the opportunity to see some wild European Bison (before the bureaucrats decide they don't belong in Germany). I did run into one of those cow herds in the alps last year when hiking, that was quite the experience 😅very calm and curious. And weirdly "polite" when one of the bigger ones decided they've had enough and started to gently push me. "Not meaning to be rude, but we got some grazing and ruminating to do if you don't mind, have nice day."
@pattheplanter Жыл бұрын
17:34 "There is something odd about these cattle". ETA: Love the title in the thumbnail.
@ryanbeard1119 Жыл бұрын
So Zabu are grown in I Dia for meat?
@robertsansone1680 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Thank You
@rankingresearchdata Жыл бұрын
Buffalo domestication was started in India and cow milk is famous in every religious events in India of Hindu
@shiladityamohanty1711 Жыл бұрын
gaurs are an absolute unit
@hungvu262 Жыл бұрын
18:18 wonder why ther're less cattle in mozambique compared to neighbors.
@ShadySheev Жыл бұрын
Come on, people, hit that like-button! This guy's videos are great!
@jaideepsingh3596 Жыл бұрын
this video is the defination of awesome
@WolfMan-hc8ey Жыл бұрын
Were is the Muskox? isn't it a wild bovid?
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
It is still a bovid, just not a bovine.
@fatdaddy1996 Жыл бұрын
I don't think it is. I think it's a goat.
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
@fatdaddy1996, you seem to forget that bovids are the largest and most diverse family of hoofed mammals, muskoxen are not goats, goats are more closely related to cattle than either are to the muskox.
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
Musk Ox are not cattle. Musk Ox are part of the sheep - goats - ibex family.
@wendyscott8425 Жыл бұрын
Who knew there were so many bovine species? The one I'm most familiar with is the South Poll, which has been bred to do well on only grass, especially on regenerative ranches.
@KenAnderson-i5b8 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Thank you for making this
@willholly18449 ай бұрын
At 16:22 can you imagine having a set of horns like that as your hood ornament on a Cadillac? They're wider than the car.
@e.s.lavall9219 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video in all ways but the most important moment is the anoa wearing a leaf as a hat 😊
@biohazard9202 Жыл бұрын
Would anyone know what the background song is during the introduction when he discusses the Fertile Crescent?
@richardkut3976 Жыл бұрын
Excellent!
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
At near 13:50-13:55 in the video, You state that Native Americans refer to American Bison as "buffalo." Where do You get that idea? Do You have a source for it? I've heard Lakota refer to the American Bison as "Tatonka." The Cherokee refer to the American Bison as "Yanasi." The Lipan refer to the American Bison as "Ayani." In what Native American language are American Bison called "buffalo" ?
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the american bison has many of these local names, similar to how the european bison has two local names being "wisent" for the german bison (Bison bonasus germanicus) and "zubr" for the polish bison (Bison bonasus bonasus).
@chingyik1238 ай бұрын
@@indyreno2933there is only two subspecies B. b. athabascae (wood bison) B. b. bison (plains bison)
@aptorres01 Жыл бұрын
Great video
@absalomdraconis Жыл бұрын
Italy doesn't make it's Mozarella from Water Buffalo milk, it makes that cheese from the milk of ordinary eurasian cattle. The reason for the confusion is linguistic: The word "buffalo" was introduced to English from French traders, who used it to refer to American Bison; within French it's just a word for cattle, is of Latin origin, and is basically the same word that is used in Italian, Portuguese, and probably Spanish and all the other surviving Romance languages. The Normans introduced the word "beef" (another word derived from the same root) to English to refer to the meat of cattle, but they didn't normally raise the animals themselves (they left their own peasants and cattle in Normandy, and just used English ones while in England), so they didn't introduce whichever version of the word "buffalo" that they were using. So "beef" refered to the meat of cattle in English, while "buffalo" refered to cattle-like animals that weren't exactly conventional cattle; thus, when people run across the mention of buffalo milk being used to make Mozzarella they assume that this is buffalo in contrast to _cows,_ where it's actually buffalo in contrast to _goats and sheep._ It took me a while to work this out, as it seemed very odd that a major Italian cheese would be made only with the milk of an animal from nowhere near Italy, but the sources I saw almost always just said "buffalo" without clarifying _which species_ of buffalo- eventually I realized that in English it shouldn't be "buffalo" at all, and it was yet another case of a bad translation.
@epidares11 ай бұрын
But in fact: Italian Mozzarella is made by cow or buffalo milk or by a mix of both. And the one with the name "Mozzarella di Bufala Campana" have to be produced only with buffalo milk from this region.
@dandavatsdasa8345 Жыл бұрын
Informative!
@nicholasgirard8246 Жыл бұрын
nice one fella! no musk ox?
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
The muskox actually belongs to an ancient and more primitive subfamily of bovids known as Ovibovinae, which also contains the takin, gorals, mountain goat, serows, chamoises, and tahrs.
@nicholasgirard8246 Жыл бұрын
thank you dude!@@indyreno2933
@RussTillling Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. Good for rewilding as well, as lots of creatures use their dung and benefit from their browsing & wallowing habits.
@kevinroark5815 Жыл бұрын
This video turned out to be more interesting than I thought.
@tenzindharpo Жыл бұрын
Very good
@MaMa_Kreativ Жыл бұрын
Awesome video!
@MidwesternCracker_2000 Жыл бұрын
15:38 Cattle herding didn’t exist in pre-Hispanic/pre-Latino/pre-Columbian culture in Amerindian societies. Cattle herding and ranching was introduced by European Spanish colonists who taught tribes they came in contact with their customs (Westernization), originating in the Iberian Peninsula. The earliest evidence of the proto-cowboy hat by the Mexican mestizo Vaqueros, which didn’t exist in pre-Hispanic times, like the sombrero hat that did. The hat has a mixture of Spanish hat-making techniques introduced and Amerindian natural landscape coloration designs. The Stetson hat design, the current cowboy hat we know today, designed by European American John Batterson Stetson of British descent. It can also be said that the English invented bowler hat was actually the most commonly worn hat in the Old West and not the cowboy hat, contrary to popular belief. Also, the majority of cowboys in the US were in fact European Americans, whether that’s European settlers or those pf European descent born in North America. Only 1/4 were black, recently freed slaves
@jamesgoode9246 Жыл бұрын
I'm guessing that You are including Vaqueros in the European descent grouping, even though they are mostly of mixed ancestry. Please note that many modern "cowboys" in the western U.S. are of Native American descent, but not of Spanish descent.
@zebuaurochs7 ай бұрын
Thanks for information, Its really useful for us ..
@rankingresearchdata Жыл бұрын
Gaur is my favourite found in India, bodybuilder with eating Grass ❤
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
Did you know that the gaur, banteng, and kouprey all belong to the genus Bibos as they are most similar to each other.
@kevinquinonez838 Жыл бұрын
We have the Zebu, Domestic yak, Domestic water buffaloes, Bali cattle, and Gayal so many different types of bovine we have domesticated and yet most people only know of the European cattle
@indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the bail cattle is a subspecies of the Banteng (Bibos javanicus), the gayal/mithun is a subspecies of the Gaur (Bibos gaurus), the zebu is a subspecies of Paleotropical Aurochs (Bos namadicus), the taurine ox is a subspecies of Palearctic Aurochs (Bos primigenius), the domestic yak is a population of the himalayan yak, which is one of the only two valid subspecies of Yak (Poephagus grunniens), and the domestic water buffalo is a population of the indian water buffalo, which is one of the only two valid subspecies of Asiatic Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis).
@rankingresearchdata Жыл бұрын
These all are domesticated in India too
@cristianafavre4900 Жыл бұрын
I would have never expected the alps cow tradition to be mentioned, thank you from Aosta Valley
@franciscoguinledebarros4429 Жыл бұрын
Some added tidbits about Southern Brazilian cattle history: expansionist conflicts made the cattle of Missionary Settlements run wild, making some herds feral, with that context many gauchos got started in the domestication and migration of similar wild herds, the so called "boiadas", the journey between the southern herds towards the city centers of Rio de Janeiro and Salvador played an important part in the growth of São Paulo and the main interstate highways of BR101 and BR116 (and, as an extra, some believe those exact routes were already marked as ancient indigenous routes)