The attack was by a female cowbird. Cowbirds do not build their own nests, but instead lay their eggs into the nests of other bird species and play no role in brooding or feeding the chicks. They are also known to retaliate if the adoptive family discovers their trick and throws out the parasitic egg, which is likely what happened in this video. Frustrating, but nature.
Maybe food competition, or maybe an attempted nest theft. Some birds steal nests instead of building their own. If the parents lose all the chicks they'll abandon the nest.
I do not know of anybirds that steal nests for themselves. Only cavity nesters like bluebirds,woodpeckers,sparrows, wrens ect try to steal nesting sites. Like birdhouses ect.
There is literally a thing called the Mafia Hypothesis among cowbirds (and others). These birds lay eggs in other birds nests. If those birds don’t raise the cowbird chick, they lose the rest of the nest. It provides evolutionary pressure to favor birds who are willing to raise the parasite chicks - pay the kingpin of you will.
Getting rid of the competition. Sad but true. Birds, such as English sparrows, commonly go into other sparrow nests and throw the young chicks out of the nest.
it is a cowbird, it probably laid an egg in that nest that was noticed and ejected by the parents. When this happens some cowbirds will respond by returning to the host nest and killing their young. edit: This is a brown headed cowbird female, incase anyone wants to know more about this particular species. (Also it is a protected species under the migratory bird act)
@@hiverchaud That owl would probably also eat the chicks without hesitation, considering how many times the bird stabbed them, they were all likely seriously injured/dead by then.
So if humans can have emotions, then no other species can? You are ridiculous!! Educate yourself. I'm not saying that the parents will fight over which kid does the dishes, but my God...they grieve just as anyone does.
Amy Emotions aren't morality. Grieving also isnt morality. Noone said anything about either. You just went on a psycho tangent that had nothing to do with the post.
There is a reason why birds like robins and sparrows commonly lay 3 eggs at a time, there is also a reason why these birds are known to lay up to two clutches within a single year as well. The mortality rate of small songbirds is crazy.
Some songbirds will lay many more eggs too. Bluetits will lay up to 12 eggs to try and account for the mortality rate, in the nests I've seen with 10-12 eggs hatched, usually 6-8 chicks survive long enough to be fledglings, then they're in even more danger after leaving the nest while they hop around for a few more days, predators like domestic cats or hawks is a big reason. Also speaking of chick mortality rate, it reminded me of the last bluetit nest I watched where 5 died out of the 12 total chicks but the mom didn't/couldn't remove the last 4 chicks that died. So the other 7 were just sitting in the nest next to or on top of the dead chicks, looked horrible especially since two of those chicks had almost all of their feathers when they had died, so probably 13-14 days old and were pretty big in the nest. Looked gross and depressing at the same time.
I have always wondered why parents are so quick to run off and abandon their babies? Some may stay and defend them for a second but they ultimately flee and just leave the babies.
Most of these birds aren't equipped to win fights with similar or larger sized birds. Ultimately it's a matter of it being easier to simply abandon a nest and work on the next clutch of eggs than it is to get yourself killed defending one. This is why a lot of birds will mate multiple times in a season and why they tend to mature so quickly. It's to make up for their atrocious mortality rates.
@@piranhaplantX I wasnt really referring to birds specifically. I was meaning animals in general. All different species of animals. There are some animals that will defend their young for a bit but if things get a little rough, they will quickly abandon them then try to return later to see if the babies survived. I always thought that instinctively, a mother would fight to the death for her babies but that's not the case at all for the most part. Most animals arent really willing to die for their babies. I have see some (octopus) that will give their last to their babies, but thats not many. I guess in nature, their instinct to survive overpowers their maternal instinct
Once upon a time people used to have enough kids that they worried about them less as the mentality was that some would make but were now in a coddled age of 1 or 2 children and overly protective parenting
@@ebonimom6964 естественный отбор в действии - закрепил ту модель поведения родителей, которая обеспечивает статистически большую вероятность продолжения рода.
@@ebonimom6964 It is actually most of nature that will fight for the child it's just that a majority usually doesn't have to fight or don't have a birthing cycle/ dwelling that makes it easy to fight. Snakes after laying eggs still need to hunt and eat and can't stay near the eggs 24/7. A lot of insects will either have the children in a colony that's naturally defended or even carry the little guys until they hatch. Most birds and fish run on auto pilot so their ways are usually harsh but every other animal family usually has their shit together. Hell if there was a mammal or reptile equivalent of a cuckoo it would more than likely go extinct since mammals have the capacity for cruelty and retaliation. Birds however smart they may be are still pretty dumb hence the term bird brain.
The Cowbird is a brood parasite and eliminated the young so it could lay eggs in the nest with the eggs of the other nesting bird. When the chicks are gone from the nest, the female parent of the dead chicks will lay another clutch.
@@Boris_Chang Normally cowbirds find a nest with a few eggs in it and then the cowbird lays an egg in the nest. Sometimes the parent will accept the egg and raise the parasite. Other times the nesting birds abandon the nest completely or build another nest on top of the parasitized nest. Sometimes the parents remove the cowbird egg and raise their offspring from the eggs in the nest. It has been my experience that when birds have the young or eggs removed from a nest that the pair will raise another clutch in the same nest. I have personally witnessed this a number of times. This usually occurs if it is early in the breeding season. It does not happen with every nest . I disagree with you because I have seen evidence that birds will raise a second brood in nests that have had the young or eggs removed; the parents did not abandon the nest.
@@Boris_Chang 1. I never typed anything about revenge; someone else posted that idea. Do not reply to me about such a statement. 2. I never posted that the brood parasite returned to the nest that she previously parasitized. Do not reply to me about such a statement. 3. It is apparent that the bird did kill the young and remove the young from the nest. This aggression commonly occurs among various species of birds. These birds do this to expropriate the nest to lay their eggs and raise their young. The Chestnut Sparrow ( 𝑷𝒂𝒔𝒔𝒆𝒓 𝒆𝒎𝒊𝒏𝒊𝒃𝒆𝒚) does not even build a nest; this species removes the young or eggs and usurps the nest of another species. 4. I have already given you examples of nesting pairs that have lost a brood and raised another brood in the very same nest. 5. I have also witnessed birds attempt to take over the nest of birds of the same species. 6. I have observed house finches take over the nest of a breeding pair of barn swallows and after the finches left the barn swallows returned to the nest they built and raised two broods.
Oh yes, house/english sparrows, along with european starlings, have been known to fight purple martins over nest sites. A purple martin will defend their eggs/hatchlings to the death, but if they do die defending or are not around, a sparrow will kill their babies to claim the nest site for themselves. In this case, the cowbird is sending a message to the parents, raise my baby or I'll continue to kill yours.
Francis de Xavier Maurinus ok ok so the same way the chicks could attack the other birds chicks when they grow up is the same way that IF you had a child he/she could murder someone else’s children And because that person probably thinks of your child as a threat would you like it if they killed your child ?
Happened this weekend outside our balcony door. Mother robin coming back to missing nestlings and despatched dead ones was upsetting. But it's nature. Not our battle to wage or get involved in.
@@aishthapa4111 Umm...That bird deserves to die and there's no competition. This is just straight up murder. If I was around, and saw that. I'd grab a bb gun and shoot the bird. There was no sense in that birds murder.
This creator is using a part of an old film.the cowbird’s chick was thrown out of the nest. This is normal cowbird behavior when their young dies in a nest. “Murdered” is so wrong in so many ways.
The reason? Possibly because that might be a species of bird that take over another bird species’ nest, rather than build their own. Bird species are mean competitors.
What will actually happen is that the killer bird leave then the dad bird will come back then find them dead under the nest then the mom will come back then reveal that she is too stupid to look under to check if her babies are there when she can't find them. The same person who recorded this video also recorded that.
This is nature. Survival of the fittest. Just like rival lion clans killing the others cubs. Male bears kill young cubs so its bloodline has a better chance. So on and so on. Nature is beautiful but not to be mistaken for a perfect fairytale.
The video maker: I'll record it but I wont give any more details because I have a family. Mafia bird: that's what I expect. Fleeing bird: I'm a bit afraid but I can't stay silent. NBC Dateline: Murder Mystery episode.
That’s a cowbird emptying the nest as revenge for her parasitic egg having being removed..when she puts her next egg in that nest the host will keep it out of fear..evolution right before your eyes
HAHAHAHA. Sorry but true. You're too funny. These cowbirds will never "evolve" into a raven or blue jay unless intelligent designers, humans, get involved. No bird has ever been proven to by chance change into anything else other than to their own kind of...bird. Mathematics, the only none bias and none prejudice science, proves evolution false, not only millions (which is enough), but trillions of times over the point where Probability becomes impossible, a fantasy. You are too funny.
the other birds aren't going to keep a cowbird egg out of fear. How would they even know this was revenge for that act? It's more likely that the cowbird laid parasite eggs in multiple nests and now she is wiping out competition to her other chicks, which are currently being fed by less scrupulous parents. She also probably gets another chance to parasitise this breeding pair if they go make another nest and try to lay eggs again. She gets another attempt. And finally, by having less birds who can successfully identidy parasite eggs and remove them, by stopping them from having chicks, she increases her and her offspring's chances of laying parasite eggs undetected. None of these thing will be consciously thought out by the cowbird, just instinctual
As Scipion3 said, chick opens mouth hugely, expecting food, then in total terror realizes it IS the food. Watch 2:48-2:50 in slow motion; in two seconds one specific chick, in open-beak horror, has Inquisitionish torture before falling to hopeless doom on the ground. Lots of lessons here for us.
Explanation: Killing in nature is necessary to- Eliminate any food competition that is not his/her bloodline. Birds will steal a nest if there's an opportunity to. Because building a nest is a lot of work, and would rather steal it than build it themselves. What you see in this video is very normal and happens in nature everyday and in all species including humans.
That is a brown-headed cowbird attacking the nest. This bird does not raise its own chicks. Instead, it lays its eggs in the nests of certain other birds, which are then raised by the other parents. It usually will lay its eggs with other eggs but because these were already hatched, it killed them first, then appears to lay its eggs when it sat in the nest after the carnage. Or it came back to do so.
They don't lay right after they kill chicks, if a nesting attempt fails, as seen here, the nest is instantly abandoned and a new nest is built(not by the cowbird of course) elsewhere.at this time the cowbird will target the nest to lay her eggs at the same time the host female begins to lay her eggs.if she laid her eggs in the same nest that she killed chicks they wouldn't get incubated and perish.
Cowbirds often respond against hosts that eject their egg by destroying the hosts eggs/chicks, hoping that the experience inflicted on the host parents deters them from ejecting future parasitic eggs laid by the cowbird
it's been pointed out by multiple commenters that the bird that attacked the nest is a female cowbird. Cowbirds destroy the eggs and young of other nests, then lay their own egg in it. They will watch over the cowbird chick for a time. If the egg is removed or the cowbird chick dies, they will do what happened in this video in retaliation.
He kills and tosses them out, then tries out the nest and says " ah, it's not cozy enough after all" takes a piss in it, and flies off to go chill somewhere else 😂
I searched across this because yesterday on 4th of July I had a water bottle and threw it in the air hoping it would land It hit a birds nest causing 2 new borns to fall out,1 ran away and the other the broke it's neck but still was twitching until a crow got hold of it,mom must of been so clueless
He told them to keep the noise down but they didnt listen. This is what happens to noisy neighbors. Take away that birds sleep, he will take away your nest. Charge it to the game...
That pair of birds likely ejected the cowbird's egg from the nest. So this cowbird cleared the nest as both a threat and to force them to lay another clutch. At Which point she will try to drop an egg in their nest again. The goal being to get them to spend energy raising the cowbird chick, who will hog a lot of the food and attention.
my cat did this once to a nest of robins - :( i was soooo upset with her - she was so proud of herself too - i ran out to stop her but it was too late - i cried - they were so little - one was still alive - i put it back in the nest and buried the others . nature is cruel.
Mandy Simsong It was already updated a long time ago. Here you go! m.ua-cam.com/video/u0FyywNNsdU/v-deo.html If you want to know if there is/was a new video uploaded in the UA-cam channel, then check on the UA-cam channel by visiting it.
He was just playing with them, lol. 01:35 - one of baby dinos decided that it is too boring and left 02:17 - time to learn how to fly, cute one! 02:31 - cowbird helps tired baby snack to return back to the nest 02:48 - time for the last exciting adventure! Wish our little heroes luck! One day i will play with baby birds too. They are insanely yummy and playful.
I believe the cowbird wouldn't have done this if she had already successfully snuck an egg into another bird's nest. I think she killed the brood to get the robin to lay a second clutch and then slip her own into the new clutch.
@@jaadea Because playing with baby dinos is fun, lol. Don't you want to throw some little pink fucks in air to see them open their beaks in awe? They are born to fly, after all. To fly and to be food or toy.
Or so female would mate again. Juvenile males will do this to their own breed so the female will be prepared to make another nest...hence be willing to mate again
The attack was by a female cowbird. Cowbirds do not build their own nests, but instead lay their eggs into the nests of other bird species and play no role in brooding or feeding the chicks. They are also known to retaliate if the adoptive family discovers their trick and throws out the parasitic egg, which is likely what happened in this video. Frustrating, but nature.
And I thought vengeance was a trait unique to humans.
The daddy ran away from a female? Sad
@@nhunka44 scientist call it mafia tactics lol
cowbirds are dicks worse than cats
@@Coolstrongwarriorbro27 all daddy species run away from females including humans 😁
All these bird nest watching videos have taught me 2 things :
1) birds are insanely stupid
2) birds are insanely violent to each other
not really that different from how some crazy people treat each other
I recommend never to watch ''videos'' about people !!! That would probably teach you only one thing: to vomit :(
Some birds are actually quite intelligent
But when it comes to building nest, birds are incredibly smart
Maybe food competition, or maybe an attempted nest theft. Some birds steal nests instead of building their own. If the parents lose all the chicks they'll abandon the nest.
I do not know of anybirds that steal nests for themselves. Only cavity nesters like bluebirds,woodpeckers,sparrows, wrens ect try to steal nesting sites. Like birdhouses ect.
Learning from humans😳
David Andrew owls steal nests. They harrass the occupants until they leave and then the owls take over
@@maurineramos2090eagles will attack others to run them off..
why is dad such a chicken ? he could have killed this bird. and where is the camara man ? why didn't he save it ?
There is literally a thing called the Mafia Hypothesis among cowbirds (and others). These birds lay eggs in other birds nests. If those birds don’t raise the cowbird chick, they lose the rest of the nest. It provides evolutionary pressure to favor birds who are willing to raise the parasite chicks - pay the kingpin of you will.
So you mean she watches them raise the cowbird chick to make sure the DONT ef up??
Evolution is a big lie. Worth reinvestigation. Evidence of a creator is all around.
some birds have evolved to recognize parasitic birds' eggs, so they will either cover up the egg or leave the nest to build another.
Reminds me of certain members of society run around getting pregnant only to let the tax payers pay the bill to raise the children
Sheesh
Getting rid of the competition. Sad but true. Birds, such as English sparrows, commonly go into other sparrow nests and throw the young chicks out of the nest.
I hate house sparrows. The garbage birds of the world.
@@Vallentie._Fam that would be cuckoos....
@@inspiradorupees3029 that would be seagulls
Looks like a crow to me.
Psycho killer oh run run away !!
Child bird serial killer, wanted in 3 counties.
This bird has some serious dunking skills.
😂
Yooooo🤣
hahahaha the bird was taking drugs hahaha
He a basket ball player
23 !
it is a cowbird, it probably laid an egg in that nest that was noticed and ejected by the parents. When this happens some cowbirds will respond by returning to the host nest and killing their young.
edit: This is a brown headed cowbird female, incase anyone wants to know more about this particular species. (Also it is a protected species under the migratory bird act)
“Two can play that game”
Wish there was an owl nearby to kill and eat that intruding parasitic ruthless cowbird
great plot for anime
@@hiverchaud That owl would probably also eat the chicks without hesitation, considering how many times the bird stabbed them, they were all likely seriously injured/dead by then.
Dad had some unpaid gambling debts, he was warned but was time to take action.
WONDERING WHY THE LEAVES WERE ALL WILTED. DEAD TREE?
When the detectives arrived they noticed over 30 stab wounds,the victims new there killer it had to be personal
Classic Overkill next on...
welcome to the world of nature.it happens everyday in everybodys back yard.but were usually too busy to notice it happening.
Uh, applying human morality to birds is just ridiculous.
So if humans can have emotions, then no other species can? You are ridiculous!! Educate yourself. I'm not saying that the parents will fight over which kid does the dishes, but my God...they grieve just as anyone does.
Amy
Emotions aren't morality. Grieving also isnt morality. Noone said anything about either.
You just went on a psycho tangent that had nothing to do with the post.
@@shanec7756 Lmao this post kinda made me feel bad for Amy
@@AmyCCloverlanez she is 100% right!!!
Mahtlactli Coatl yup, you cant put human emotions on to animals. Animals are instinct driven. People are not.
IF YOU SEEN THIS BIRD, PLEASE CALL 1-800-WTF-BIRD!!! You can choose to remain anonymous.
😂🤣😂🤣 good 1
A DAMN GOOD ONE🤣🤣...how did you think if that!
@@hearingeyes9129 lol. Just came to me. 😆
@@jdizzy5076 👍👍
When the reward gets to 5 worms, I’m calling.
There is a reason why birds like robins and sparrows commonly lay 3 eggs at a time, there is also a reason why these birds are known to lay up to two clutches within a single year as well. The mortality rate of small songbirds is crazy.
They also have 2 worry about the common 🏠.......... 🐱
Some songbirds will lay many more eggs too. Bluetits will lay up to 12 eggs to try and account for the mortality rate, in the nests I've seen with 10-12 eggs hatched, usually 6-8 chicks survive long enough to be fledglings, then they're in even more danger after leaving the nest while they hop around for a few more days, predators like domestic cats or hawks is a big reason.
Also speaking of chick mortality rate, it reminded me of the last bluetit nest I watched where 5 died out of the 12 total chicks but the mom didn't/couldn't remove the last 4 chicks that died. So the other 7 were just sitting in the nest next to or on top of the dead chicks, looked horrible especially since two of those chicks had almost all of their feathers when they had died, so probably 13-14 days old and were pretty big in the nest. Looked gross and depressing at the same time.
I have always wondered why parents are so quick to run off and abandon their babies? Some may stay and defend them for a second but they ultimately flee and just leave the babies.
Most of these birds aren't equipped to win fights with similar or larger sized birds. Ultimately it's a matter of it being easier to simply abandon a nest and work on the next clutch of eggs than it is to get yourself killed defending one. This is why a lot of birds will mate multiple times in a season and why they tend to mature so quickly. It's to make up for their atrocious mortality rates.
@@piranhaplantX
I wasnt really referring to birds specifically. I was meaning animals in general. All different species of animals. There are some animals that will defend their young for a bit but if things get a little rough, they will quickly abandon them then try to return later to see if the babies survived. I always thought that instinctively, a mother would fight to the death for her babies but that's not the case at all for the most part. Most animals arent really willing to die for their babies. I have see some (octopus) that will give their last to their babies, but thats not many. I guess in nature, their instinct to survive overpowers their maternal instinct
Once upon a time people used to have enough kids that they worried about them less as the mentality was that some would make but were now in a coddled age of 1 or 2 children and overly protective parenting
@@ebonimom6964 естественный отбор в действии - закрепил ту модель поведения родителей, которая обеспечивает статистически большую вероятность продолжения рода.
@@ebonimom6964 It is actually most of nature that will fight for the child it's just that a majority usually doesn't have to fight or don't have a birthing cycle/ dwelling that makes it easy to fight. Snakes after laying eggs still need to hunt and eat and can't stay near the eggs 24/7. A lot of insects will either have the children in a colony that's naturally defended or even carry the little guys until they hatch. Most birds and fish run on auto pilot so their ways are usually harsh but every other animal family usually has their shit together.
Hell if there was a mammal or reptile equivalent of a cuckoo it would more than likely go extinct since mammals have the capacity for cruelty and retaliation. Birds however smart they may be are still pretty dumb hence the term bird brain.
The Cowbird is a brood parasite and eliminated the young so it could lay eggs in the nest with the eggs of the other nesting bird. When the chicks are gone from the nest, the female parent of the dead chicks will lay another clutch.
Another clutch? How? And why?
So your saying the cowgirl tricks another man into raising his young? Lol sounds familiar.
@@Boris_Chang Normally cowbirds find a nest with a few eggs in it and then the cowbird lays an egg in the nest. Sometimes the parent will accept the egg and raise the parasite. Other times the nesting birds abandon the nest completely or build another nest on top of the parasitized nest. Sometimes the parents remove the cowbird egg and raise their offspring from the eggs in the nest.
It has been my experience that when birds have the young or eggs removed from a nest that the pair will raise another clutch in the same nest. I have personally witnessed this a number of times. This usually occurs if it is early in the breeding season. It does not happen with every nest . I disagree with you because I have seen evidence that birds will raise a second brood in nests that have had the young or eggs removed; the parents did not abandon the nest.
@@Boris_Chang 1. I never typed anything about revenge; someone else posted that idea. Do not reply to me about such a statement. 2. I never posted that the brood parasite returned to the nest that she previously parasitized. Do not reply to me about such a statement. 3. It is apparent that the bird did kill the young and remove the young from the nest. This aggression commonly occurs among various species of birds. These birds do this to expropriate the nest to lay their eggs and raise their young. The Chestnut Sparrow ( 𝑷𝒂𝒔𝒔𝒆𝒓 𝒆𝒎𝒊𝒏𝒊𝒃𝒆𝒚) does not even build a nest; this species removes the young or eggs and usurps the nest of another species. 4. I have already given you examples of nesting pairs that have lost a brood and raised another brood in the very same nest. 5. I have also witnessed birds attempt to take over the nest of birds of the same species. 6. I have observed house finches take over the nest of a breeding pair of barn swallows and after the finches left the barn swallows returned to the nest they built and raised two broods.
Sorry if I upset anyone.
I have seen several bird nest attacks and I had no idea that birds were that brutal towards each other.
They are. Ravens attack and eat bald eagle eggs and even eat the developing chicks inside. 😱😰 🥚
Oh yes, house/english sparrows, along with european starlings, have been known to fight purple martins over nest sites. A purple martin will defend their eggs/hatchlings to the death, but if they do die defending or are not around, a sparrow will kill their babies to claim the nest site for themselves. In this case, the cowbird is sending a message to the parents, raise my baby or I'll continue to kill yours.
I'm sure extraterrestrials observe Humans and ask the same.
No apparent reason? Those little fricks are going to be competition for food later. Best get rid of them now
Wrong.
Too simplistic.
@@helenaville5939 Maybe you could explain it better?
The chicks might grow and do the same thing to the chicks of the attacking bird.
Francis de Xavier Maurinus ok ok so the same way the chicks could attack the other birds chicks when they grow up is the same way that IF you had a child he/she could murder someone else’s children
And because that person probably thinks of your child as a threat would you like it if they killed your child ?
Happened this weekend outside our balcony door. Mother robin coming back to missing nestlings and despatched dead ones was upsetting. But it's nature. Not our battle to wage or get involved in.
0:33 Eating one of their poops was his last memory with his babies...
Westsider95 He was going to regurgitate it at far away from the nest later. Look it up.
This is normal in nature. It's called eliminating the competition.
That humans call that be racist.
No this is called cruelty nd those babies could be saved if this man / woman who recorded this saved them
@@aishthapa4111 I don't think that this is a hand held camera recording........!
@@aishthapa4111 Umm...That bird deserves to die and there's no competition. This is just straight up murder. If I was around, and saw that. I'd grab a bb gun and shoot the bird. There was no sense in that birds murder.
@@TimPrime1 their no IF in life😁😁
Perfecto vídeo. I want see more...
As bad as it sounds and I'm sure I'm not the only one who'd like this to happen but I'd like to see this happen to a brood parasite.
Yes
This creator is using a part of an old film.the cowbird’s chick was thrown out of the nest. This is normal cowbird behavior when their young dies in a nest.
“Murdered” is so wrong in so many ways.
The reason? Possibly because that might be a species of bird that take over another bird species’ nest, rather than build their own.
Bird species are mean competitors.
There's always a reason in nature maybe competition for food or this type of bird is somehow threatened by the other species.
Thank you for showing.
Now it will lay it's own eggs in the nest.
Nothing wrong with it.
What will actually happen is that the killer bird leave then the dad bird will come back then find them dead under the nest then the mom will come back then reveal that she is too stupid to look under to check if her babies are there when she can't find them. The same person who recorded this video also recorded that.
This is nature. Survival of the fittest. Just like rival lion clans killing the others cubs. Male bears kill young cubs so its bloodline has a better chance. So on and so on. Nature is beautiful but not to be mistaken for a perfect fairytale.
Just only stupidly?
What a cruel attacking
I was expecting at the end of the video you show the baby birds parent coming and see their reaction.
Now you know the difference between human and animals. Sadly some humans are like animals.
Was this bird Gang related???
hahaaaa when it flipped that one chick in the air, it was like, "hey where'd it go?"
I bet momma bird told all the other birds that, THIER DAD AIN'T SHIT!!!! 😉 That Baby Bird Drama. 😆
Very nice video!!!
Em i the only one that enjoys these videos?
The video maker: I'll record it but I wont give any more details because I have a family.
Mafia bird: that's what I expect.
Fleeing bird: I'm a bit afraid but I can't stay silent.
NBC Dateline: Murder Mystery episode.
“Are your children well behaved? Or do they need a few light slams?”
Mrs doubtfire.
That’s a cowbird emptying the nest as revenge for her parasitic egg having being removed..when she puts her next egg in that nest the host will keep it out of fear..evolution right before your eyes
I jus saw that on wikipedia , thats amazing
HAHAHAHA. Sorry but true. You're too funny. These cowbirds will never "evolve" into a raven or blue jay unless intelligent designers, humans, get involved. No bird has ever been proven to by chance change into anything else other than to their own kind of...bird. Mathematics, the only none bias and none prejudice science, proves evolution false, not only millions (which is enough), but trillions of times over the point where Probability becomes impossible, a fantasy. You are too funny.
the other birds aren't going to keep a cowbird egg out of fear. How would they even know this was revenge for that act? It's more likely that the cowbird laid parasite eggs in multiple nests and now she is wiping out competition to her other chicks, which are currently being fed by less scrupulous parents. She also probably gets another chance to parasitise this breeding pair if they go make another nest and try to lay eggs again. She gets another attempt. And finally, by having less birds who can successfully identidy parasite eggs and remove them, by stopping them from having chicks, she increases her and her offspring's chances of laying parasite eggs undetected. None of these thing will be consciously thought out by the cowbird, just instinctual
Birds aren’t known for their logical reasoning.
Evolution is a lie.
This comforts me a lot
As Scipion3 said, chick opens mouth hugely, expecting food, then in total terror realizes it IS the food. Watch 2:48-2:50 in slow motion; in two seconds one specific chick, in open-beak horror, has Inquisitionish torture before falling to hopeless doom on the ground. Lots of lessons here for us.
Lots of lessons how to play with little pink monsters, yes.
Also, one meat peep is clearly excited about flying at 02:06
The Dad needs to grow some balls and come back!
Explanation: Killing in nature is necessary to- Eliminate any food competition that is not his/her bloodline. Birds will steal a nest if there's an opportunity to. Because building a nest is a lot of work, and would rather steal it than build it themselves. What you see in this video is very normal and happens in nature everyday and in all species including humans.
Super satisfying to watch.
Can someone please tell me what two species these are?
And that is how you make scrambled eggs
Yup that’s how birds eat
Lol
Where is this and why are you not doing anything about it. And just filming.
I cant stop watching these videos!😂
That is a brown-headed cowbird attacking the nest. This bird does not raise its own chicks. Instead, it lays its eggs in the nests of certain other birds, which are then raised by the other parents. It usually will lay its eggs with other eggs but because these were already hatched, it killed them first, then appears to lay its eggs when it sat in the nest after the carnage. Or it came back to do so.
They don't lay right after they kill chicks, if a nesting attempt fails, as seen here, the nest is instantly abandoned and a new nest is built(not by the cowbird of course) elsewhere.at this time the cowbird will target the nest to lay her eggs at the same time the host female begins to lay her eggs.if she laid her eggs in the same nest that she killed chicks they wouldn't get incubated and perish.
G M...I know Cuckoo birds do that same exact thing.
"and if you got enemies, ya son got enemies, that Bird Town energy...buckaw!!!"
“Buckaw” 😂🤣🤣🤣🤣👍
Cowbirds often respond against hosts that eject their egg by destroying the hosts eggs/chicks, hoping that the experience inflicted on the host parents deters them from ejecting future parasitic eggs laid by the cowbird
Sure. Birds are fully capable of logical reasoning.
Popeye's warned Church's one too many times.
so they hired kfc to step in
Haha..
Because she wants the nest. Because there will be more resources/food for her babies. It’s just harsh nature. Sucks but that’s just the way it is.
Nature is and has never been cruel. It's totally impartial is what it is.
Three reasons I can think of as for ‘why’
1)less competition for food
2)Food (it could’ve come back, but unlikely)
3)The nest
4) sadistic
it's been pointed out by multiple commenters that the bird that attacked the nest is a female cowbird. Cowbirds destroy the eggs and young of other nests, then lay their own egg in it. They will watch over the cowbird chick for a time. If the egg is removed or the cowbird chick dies, they will do what happened in this video in retaliation.
That´s what I like and what I want to see! Nice work, please more of that brutal attacks with no survivers! 👌👍
He kills and tosses them out, then tries out the nest and says " ah, it's not cozy enough after all" takes a piss in it, and flies off to go chill somewhere else 😂
Savage as fuck. 😂
I searched across this because yesterday on 4th of July I had a water bottle and threw it in the air hoping it would land
It hit a birds nest causing 2 new borns to fall out,1 ran away and the other the broke it's neck but still was twitching until a crow got hold of it,mom must of been so clueless
not just bird, sometimes human kill child too, others or their own.
Tadahhhh...My lovely... A newly renovated apartment .. I found just for you....
😂😂
Did the birds survive?!?
Peridot Is Dorito Head In a way they are fertilizer for that tree now they will be a permanent part of the trees life.
Daddy believes in safety 1st
I wonder if a parent bird, especially the father, had been around what would have happened. How violent would it have gotten?
The father fled when the attacker arrived. You've got the answer
Who said that all birds are innocent ?
Dickens Bob No one
It wanted the nest there's your reason... I wouldn't be surprised if there was a new clutch of eggs in this nest within a day or two.
Why? Cuz that bird felt like chomping on something. Pest control at its finest
He observado en otros vídeos q las aves matan los polluelos para quedarse con el Nido....gracias por compartir
También he observado lo mismo
Looks like the murderer want to use that nest. 👹
Nice, i like it.
They were clearly asking for it.
Clearly.
The bird probably wanted the nest for herself.
Should've got ADT Security!!
Why... why must I laugh...
Amazing, Gr8 entertainment
He told them to keep the noise down but they didnt listen. This is what happens to noisy neighbors. Take away that birds sleep, he will take away your nest. Charge it to the game...
If the bird could talk it was probably seeking revenge to attack like that. No hunger. That looked like rage killing bird style.
That pair of birds likely ejected the cowbird's egg from the nest. So this cowbird cleared the nest as both a threat and to force them to lay another clutch. At Which point she will try to drop an egg in their nest again. The goal being to get them to spend energy raising the cowbird chick, who will hog a lot of the food and attention.
looks like a homicidal maniac got reincarnated into a bird 🤣
Homicide only applies to humans
Excellent 👍
I wish I could legally do this with my neighbours kids...man that would be fun....LMFAO
Why didn't the daddy stay and defend the nest? and can a chick possibly survive such an ordeal?
I love how the bird kept dunking the chick into the nest multiple times like it was baptising it.
my cat did this once to a nest of robins - :( i was soooo upset with her - she was so proud of herself too - i ran out to stop her but it was too late - i cried - they were so little - one was still alive - i put it back in the nest and buried the others . nature is cruel.
your cat does it all the time, stupid
Are you forbidden to eat?
Thats a loan shark.. never pay up i'll get your family...@¥#£#¥
The angry bird went Postal, LOL❗❗❗❗❗❗❗❗❗❗❗
That must be Father's Ex Wife mad because she wants to keep the House
Wow brutal! Anyone know what kind of bird the attacker was?
Cowbird, a brood parasite which is why the lil bastard killed the chicks lol.
about 80 times bites I count
Very inefficient killer...
Can you tell us about the final fate of theses babies? Did you offer to help them after they were thrown out of nest?
They are dead, the next video on the channel shows their funny and ugly corpses on the earth.
survival chicken nuggets
What happen next? Please update
Mandy Simsong It was already updated a long time ago. Here you go!
m.ua-cam.com/video/u0FyywNNsdU/v-deo.html
If you want to know if there is/was a new video uploaded in the UA-cam channel, then check on the UA-cam channel by visiting it.
The entire chain of events was in a playlist. Look into the description section of the video and play the whole story from the beginning.
He was just playing with them, lol.
01:35 - one of baby dinos decided that it is too boring and left
02:17 - time to learn how to fly, cute one!
02:31 - cowbird helps tired baby snack to return back to the nest
02:48 - time for the last exciting adventure! Wish our little heroes luck!
One day i will play with baby birds too. They are insanely yummy and playful.
TovKafur Dino’s?
@@whintx76 Don't they look like tiny pink dinos?
I believe the cowbird wouldn't have done this if she had already successfully snuck an egg into another bird's nest. I think she killed the brood to get the robin to lay a second clutch and then slip her own into the new clutch.
The story would've been different if those birds had guns just sayin
Where's the money, Lebowski!?!?!?
I love this vídeo
WHY?
@@jaadea Because playing with baby dinos is fun, lol. Don't you want to throw some little pink fucks in air to see them open their beaks in awe? They are born to fly, after all. To fly and to be food or toy.
@@TovKafur are you push dolls?
@@jaadea Weird question tbh. What do you mean?
@@TovKafur are you always on drug ?
Nice...
eliminating food competition
Or so female would mate again. Juvenile males will do this to their own breed so the female will be prepared to make another nest...hence be willing to mate again
@@xxx.118 Ravens and crows occasionally hunt for some fun, but do so only if they can get food by other means.
That WAS disturbing!!! Momma eating babies poop?!! I guess I shouldn't complain...they warned me!
lifeless, emptied, saddening,....
satisfying..
Is that a cowbird? If a cowbird lays an egg in a nest and the parents push it out sometimes the cowbird will come back and kill all of the nestlings
Lol mug shot 😂🤣😅
And I thought mockingbirds were mean. This bird is nuts.