What's Up, Doc? The Evolution of Rabbits, Hares and Pikas

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  • Опубліковано 11 жов 2024
  • Please enjoy this examination of the cute, colorful Lagomorphs and their evolutionary history.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 212

  • @dr.polaris6423
    @dr.polaris6423  Рік тому +92

    Shhh, be very, very quiet! I'm covering wabbits. Hahahaha! Sorry for the late post everyone, life got in the way. Hope you enjoy.

    • @greenkoopa
      @greenkoopa Рік тому +2

      Could you cover Rabbids next video?

    • @generaldissatisfaction5397
      @generaldissatisfaction5397 Рік тому +1

      Great choice for a topic. I would love a deep dive into the desmostylians, if you are looking for more impressive extinct beasts to cover.
      Thanks for all your informative videos!

    • @_robustus_
      @_robustus_ Рік тому +1

      I find sources that simply refer to lagomorphs and rodents as glires. The clade gliriforms to me would mean glires + something else, although I can’t seem to find what that would be unless it’s the scandentia due to some need to not classify them as archonta (and also ditch euarchontaglires as well). What’s a nerd to do???

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz Рік тому

      youuuuu pesky Powawis!!!
      🤭🤍

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Рік тому

      I knew you took that left tuwrn at Alburquerque!

  • @ArsonFire00
    @ArsonFire00 Рік тому +220

    One species of Pika not mentioned here is a rare species from Japan, able to generate and discharge an electrical shock. much in the way an electric eel can. Known locally in Japan as the Pika-Chu....

  • @BorderWise12
    @BorderWise12 Рік тому +74

    As someone from NZ, it blows my mind that European rabbits are ENDANGERED in their native ranges. I'm so used to thinking of them as an unstoppable pest species. 🤯
    Thanks for the video, I always did want to know more about how lagomorphs fit into evolutionary history. 😁

    • @colehalford1893
      @colehalford1893 Рік тому +18

      This is similar to a species of Pythons that are becoming extinct in their native homeland of India.

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Рік тому +7

      Also starlings are endangered in Europe, but they were introduced to North America and have become a major invasive pest here, often crowding out native species.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Рік тому +1

      Well, they taste great, so have at 'em. I could stand rabbit everyday.

    • @beastmaster0934
      @beastmaster0934 4 місяці тому +1

      @@colehalford1893
      Yup, the Burmese python, one of the great scourges in Florida, is actually classified as Vulnerable in its native range in India.

    • @saladin6233
      @saladin6233 4 місяці тому

      We’ve got a couple of hundred million they can have from here in Aus, too

  • @rl9217
    @rl9217 Рік тому +15

    10:54
    “And here we see the largest and most impressive member of the family, the aptly named Big Chungus.”
    “That’s not what it’s called.”
    “Well it is now.”

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo Рік тому +64

    I had no idea the European Rabbit was a human-introduced species in the UK! They seem like such a core part of the fauna. I see quite a few of them where I am, so hopefully they are doing okay…

    • @dr.polaris6423
      @dr.polaris6423  Рік тому +35

      I also assumed that they must be doing fine in the wild but studies have shown that their numbers are falling quite rapidly.

    • @theotheseaeagle
      @theotheseaeagle Рік тому +9

      @@dr.polaris6423 their numbers are declining due to myxomatosis a man made disease. They are starting to show an immunity to it now though and are steadily recovering

    • @theaveragecomment1014
      @theaveragecomment1014 Рік тому +1

      @@theotheseaeagle oh thank god

    • @KBird-flylow
      @KBird-flylow Рік тому +1

      ​@@dr.polaris6423 "Bunny Ebola" (rabbit hemorrhagic fever) is doing an unknown amount of damage to the North American lagomorphs. Those of us with pet Bunnies have had to get them vaccinated to fend it off

    • @kakapokid1796
      @kakapokid1796 7 місяців тому

      Although introduced, you could argue argue it was a 'reintroduction' as I believe they were present before the last glaciation period. I expect they didn't arrive sooner due to the heavy forestation of the british Isles combining with the sinking of doggerland.

  • @MuffinHop
    @MuffinHop Рік тому +21

    Thank you, finally someone making a detailed video on lagomorphs. I’ve been waiting for a video like this for so long.

  • @greenkoopa
    @greenkoopa Рік тому +48

    I love UA-cam. Film criticism, gaming history, space science and military history.
    You're a very welcome and important part of my info intake. Thank you Dr Polaris 🐢

  • @cgyoboi
    @cgyoboi Рік тому +7

    Always a good day when our favorite polar bear doctor uploads

  • @arnaldorentes5371
    @arnaldorentes5371 Рік тому +14

    Que linda surpresa! Fecho perfeito, para um domingo de sol. Saudações do Brasil e GRATO, Professor!

  • @Sirdilophosaurusthethird2.0
    @Sirdilophosaurusthethird2.0 Рік тому +57

    W h a t s u p d o c

  • @randombunnyflop641
    @randombunnyflop641 Рік тому +3

    Thanks you for this! I always like to know more about lagomorphs. It's harder find some evolution info about smaller creatures than some big ones, so happy to see this episode. (Also, loved that Watership down got mentioned.)

  • @vladimirlagos2688
    @vladimirlagos2688 Рік тому +16

    It is heartbreaking to learn that even the quintessential fast breeder of lore is not being able to keep up their numbers against our destructive actions.

  • @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster
    @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster Рік тому +4

    That Condylarth video sounds really amazing.
    I do hope you address one thing, that being why in certain cases polyphyletic groups when they are redefined remain in a more natural form while other groups are just completely abandoned.

  • @theglanconer6463
    @theglanconer6463 Рік тому +3

    Enjoyed this one very much. Finally some (palaeontological) love for the Lagomorphs. Thank you !

  • @colehalford1893
    @colehalford1893 Рік тому +2

    That’s cool. Never knew this about Rabbits. Thanks Dr. Polaris. Also, I still love your intro song 🎵. Could easily listen to it for 5 minutes

    • @pokeylope6108
      @pokeylope6108 Рік тому

      Intro before the polar bear with hat? Or the song that plays for.the first 2 minutes? If the second it's from world of warcraft, Wrath of the Lich King Expansion. The zone is Sholazar Basin. It's a lush tropical crater/Basin on a continent(Northrend) that is mostly an icy wasteland. So it's super out of place and was a beautiful surprise when walking into it for the first time. There is a Boreal forest called Grizzly Hills and a grassy Fjord area, but not tropical lol.

  • @0MetallicaManX0
    @0MetallicaManX0 Рік тому +1

    This is easily the most adorable episode yet! :P

  • @DanytalyJosephine
    @DanytalyJosephine Рік тому +1

    Love the watership down reference art the end!

  • @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster
    @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster Рік тому +15

    I love the title
    It's interesting how they were able to coexist with rodents but Multiberculates couldn't

    • @dr.polaris6423
      @dr.polaris6423  Рік тому +7

      Yeah the ecological relationship between Rodents and Multituberculates is still not well understood, with the decline of the former beginning before Glires started diversifying in the Late Paleocene. Perhaps Multies couldn’t adapt as well to larger mammalian predators or ecological changes? We still don’t really know.

    • @aceundead4750
      @aceundead4750 Рік тому +5

      ​@@dr.polaris6423 one might say they were ratted out. Im now thinking of a multituberculate saying "i smell a rat" while in a mafia style meeting

  • @Galaxia7
    @Galaxia7 Рік тому +2

    14:16 so that's what we see all around our neighborhood in the summer, cottontails!
    There's so many of them and they just chill in the grass of people's front yard. Until they see us/dogs and then they run away so fast! So cute. ❤

  • @brianedwards7142
    @brianedwards7142 Рік тому +5

    In the beginning all the animals looked the same but Frith went round giving them individual characteristics. When he came to El'ahrairah he hid in a hole so that only his back and hindquarters were visible so Frith gave him long legs to run and long ears to hear his many enemies and a cottontail and said that henceforth El'ahrairah's children would dig in the ground to hide from their enemies.
    El'ahrairah means "prince with a thousand enemies".

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Рік тому +2

      That reminds me of how the Bible's ✝ literal reading has God 🤖 creating humans with the masculine personality for both sexes, but then deciding on making women later for... reasons.

    • @iapetusmccool
      @iapetusmccool Рік тому +3

      _All the world shall be your enemy, Prince With A Thousand Enemies, and when they catch you they shall kill you . But first they must catch you._

    • @AnnaMarianne
      @AnnaMarianne 6 місяців тому

      ​@@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_CyavanaNo... In Genesis, God creates first Adam, and after succesfully making Adam realize that he is lonely on his own, God creates Eve as well. As was God's intention all along, but He wanted Adam to want a mate before introducing him to one.
      Sometimes people get confused by the way Biblical narration first mentions a topic in brief, and then later returns to it in more detail. They imagine it's two different events, when it's one event told two times over.

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana 6 місяців тому

      The Bible ✝ begins with God creating unnamed humans.
      Then a second event has Adam and Eve being created.
      The events are incompatible with each other anyway.
      @@AnnaMarianne

  • @jaredthehawk3870
    @jaredthehawk3870 Рік тому +4

    In the United States cottontails have adapted surprisingly well to urban and suburban environments and are an incredibly common site. Also of note is the Jimmy Carter killer rabbit incident where a swimming swamp rabbit tried to forcibly board the former president's canoe to attack him.

  • @chiaroscuroamore
    @chiaroscuroamore Рік тому +2

    Lagomorphs are fascinating!!

  • @klasa3gplaterka5
    @klasa3gplaterka5 Рік тому +1

    You are one of the best paleo enthusiast on the yt. Thank You kindly for yet another fascinating episode

  • @grecomnn
    @grecomnn Рік тому +1

    Oh wow, the condylarths! Looking forward to it

  • @GreasusGoldtooth
    @GreasusGoldtooth Рік тому +16

    This was a fascinating video. I hope you'll consider making videos on smaller animals again in the future. The evolutionary history of foxes and mustelids is pretty interesting.

  • @Venator1230
    @Venator1230 Рік тому +2

    Fascinating, this makes me appreciate my chinchillas all the more.

  • @aldenconsolver3428
    @aldenconsolver3428 Рік тому +2

    Thank you doctor. I did not know that the Lagomorphs had so many species or had numerous species in trouble. These are pivotal species, if you want wolves and foxes and raptors then you have to protect the rabbits. At least out here in the upper Midwest of the USA the rabbits are doing pretty well for now. But it is time to keep watch.

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe8345 Рік тому +4

    Love it, thanks Doctor P

  • @ekszentrik
    @ekszentrik Рік тому +8

    Just a short amusing/saddening story from my childhood: there was a pen of rabbits in our neighbourhood, seemingly emotionally "neglecting" them (it didn't belong to an obvious owner, if it was attached to a house we would have thought differently). So we broke in and saved a big black rabbit. Then we just dumped the rabbit, kinda, in a little patch of greenery in front of one our buildings. The rabbit stayed there, confused.
    When we came back a day later, the rabbit was half-eaten. We speculated a weasel or even a fox must have gotten it.
    So stupid.

  • @YaBoiDREX
    @YaBoiDREX Рік тому +1

    I never knew Hares and Rabbits where different. Thought they were too names for the same thing. Great video!

  • @kennyhagan5781
    @kennyhagan5781 Рік тому +2

    2023 is the year of the black rabbit in Asian astrology. I am surprised that more videos relevant to rabbits are not to be found. I think that it is a fascinating subject, but then again, I like rabbits.

  • @darrenheideman2546
    @darrenheideman2546 Рік тому +2

    When I saw this, I wondered if this was planned for the Year of the Rabbit.

  • @ZaedaXobu
    @ZaedaXobu Рік тому +1

    I have 3 swamp rabbits that live in the woods behind my house. I see them almost every morning and evening nibbling on the grass in my backyard. They're so used to me and my dog coming out they barely stop their munching lol. I can even greet and chat with them while the dog does his business.

    • @AlbertaGeek
      @AlbertaGeek Рік тому

      "'Mornin', Sam."
      "'Mornin', Ralph."

  • @erichtomanek4739
    @erichtomanek4739 Рік тому +2

    Just wait for the Rabbucks!

  • @mikeyb4610
    @mikeyb4610 Рік тому +1

    Great presentation…I’ve learned more about these amazing mammals in less than 20 minutes than a whole series of National Geographic!…I’m now enlightened, educated and eager to learn more from Dr. Polaris…. Thank you for creating & sharing 🐇#Lagomorpha

  • @Rosie--
    @Rosie-- Рік тому +1

    Yesss!! I dont think theres much media explaning the evolution of rabbits, this is exciting. Btw i love your content polaris ty for what you do :]

  • @aceundead4750
    @aceundead4750 Рік тому +2

    Smoked rabbit oddly enough tastes like smoked squirrel, at least where i live. There's issues to eating either though; rabbit'll make ya jumpy while squirrel will make you nuts.

    • @HogBurger
      @HogBurger Рік тому

      Clever joke. Take my like!

  • @dynojackal1911
    @dynojackal1911 Рік тому +1

    This video's got me thinking about Dougal Dixon's "After Man" and its rabbucks, and also its predator rats.
    A return to your Alter-Earth series videos, please.

  • @RafaCB0987
    @RafaCB0987 Рік тому +1

    And all are really cute, love them!

  • @iksarguards
    @iksarguards Рік тому +1

    Answering a lot of questions RE Lagomorphs and Rodents that I've carried around with me for years. Nuralagus is fossil record evidence of Big Chungus

  • @The_PokeSaurus
    @The_PokeSaurus Рік тому +1

    "If they catch you they will kill you, but first they must catch you."

  • @justskip4595
    @justskip4595 Рік тому +2

    European rabbit is called Kaniini in Finnish and for years when I was child I was very used when in English people referred to dogs as Canines. Still to this day I always think of rabbits first when I hear that.

  • @brianedwards7142
    @brianedwards7142 Рік тому +16

    As an Aussie vegan I like the idea of shipping our rabbits back to Europe alive. It's been a fantasy of mine for years.

    • @pptemplar5840
      @pptemplar5840 Рік тому

      well, to be fair, even if you shipped them out as long as you had a few breeding pair the population would just explode again.
      Aussie having a reputation for everything alive being dangerous, and then being overrun by a small prey mammal going extinct in other parts of the world would probably be funny if you could ignore the damage.

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 Рік тому +4

      @@pptemplar5840 People always say that but our largest "native" land predator is a small dog, sure, dangerous especially in numbers but hardly a tiger or a bear.
      Crocs and sharks you can avoid by staying out of the water but other parts of the world have those too. A Brown Snake isn't much worse than a cottonmouth and redback spiders share a recent common ancestor with black widows.
      It's the heat and the dry that'll kill you.
      Rabbits are sensitive to heat but underground it's the same comfy temperature all the time.
      As cats and foxes have decimated the small native animals rabbits have replaced them in the diet of the Wedge Tailed Eagle becoming a staple.

    • @pptemplar5840
      @pptemplar5840 Рік тому

      @@brianedwards7142 Yeah, it's just the public perception combined with island ecosystem, at first I was confused by the idea because "Well, Australia has a lot of snakes." but rabbits are quick and snakes have low metabolism so it would take a TON of snakes to actually keep the rabbit population in check, so maybe an absence of large/medium land predators is enough for rabbits to get out of control. I'm sure birds prey on them but I don't really know much about austrailian birds, only one I can think of off the top of my head is the Budgie and that's clearly not going to help.

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 Рік тому +1

      @@pptemplar5840 lol. Budgies can bite hard!

  • @seeleunit2000
    @seeleunit2000 Місяць тому

    Now this was fascinating. Plus, I was looking for some information on the evolution of Rabbits

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex Рік тому +1

    One of the terrible things I heard was that a Kent farmer found his rabbits were dying at an especially high-rate. DEFRA (Department for Farming...) discovered that it was from a very virulent form of myxomatosis. This news spread and many farmers turned up requesting that they'd get one of the rabbits to help it spread further and faster through the UK. (I think I heard this on a BBC podcast)

  • @patriciareid437
    @patriciareid437 Рік тому

    It's great fun to watch the pikas on Pike's peak in Colorado.

  • @laurachapple6795
    @laurachapple6795 Рік тому

    This video unlocked a memory of reading about pikas in 'Owl' magazine when I was very young. I was vaguely aware that they were a thing but I had no idea they were related to rabbits.

  • @zandergonzalez5190
    @zandergonzalez5190 Рік тому +2

    Ehh munches* what’s up dr Polaris

  • @BrokenBluebird6
    @BrokenBluebird6 Рік тому +1

    So far a great vid.
    I do have an off topic question though, why is there a video about Toucan Sam in the "Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Life" playlist? 😅

  • @anotherwesley7661
    @anotherwesley7661 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for making this! I've always been a little miffed by the lack of good scientific material on lagomorphs available; it's quite sad! I suspect that the idea of rabbits being common and ubiquitous has led to them being a little bit ignored as a serious and interesting topic, to the point where really crucial basic information about them is relatively unknown (like the fact that the European rabbit is endangered in its original range, or the fact that North American cottontails are a completely separate species from their burrowing European cousins, etc.). This was such a cool dive into paleo rabbits and their ancestors; it's amazing how those rare South East Asian rabbits look so ancient and basal, like they're living fossils. Sad we don't have capybara-sized island bunnies anymore, but I suppose the capybara itself is a pretty good substitute even if its a rodent. I hope this video finds many people and sparks more in-depth interest, if only selfishly so I can learn more. :) Best wishes and regards from the land of the smallest and very endangered Colombia Basin Pygmy Rabbit! (...poor little guys have really been hit hard lately in recent years because of increased fires).

  • @gabrielecavaleri7525
    @gabrielecavaleri7525 Рік тому +2

    If I remember correctly the Sardinian Pika survived even longer until the 18th century on a small island not far of the coast of Sardinia

  • @ZemplinTemplar
    @ZemplinTemplar 14 днів тому

    Pikas are so cute. :-) I'm almost disappointed they don't occur in Europe, only in Asia and North America. Hares are an old favourite of mine. They're very underrated fauna.

  • @sagittariusneptune9330
    @sagittariusneptune9330 Рік тому +1

    Good video for the year of the rabbit.

  • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
    @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Рік тому

    🥰😍😍😍🥰
    I love waste basket 🗑 taxons. They are so derpy and adorable.

  • @pokeylope6108
    @pokeylope6108 Рік тому

    Nice choice of Sholazar Basin music from World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King :)

  • @Kitsaplorax
    @Kitsaplorax Рік тому

    I'm looking forward to your waste basket category video.

  • @tinygrim
    @tinygrim Рік тому +1

    👍👍 favorite animal.... Thank you 💗 incredible animals. 😊

  • @gravel9270
    @gravel9270 Рік тому +1

    Nuralagus is basically a real life Big Chungus.

  • @t-r-e-x452
    @t-r-e-x452 Рік тому

    ok with the first half of the title I have to ask this: Top 10 favorite bugs bunny cartoons. And I mean classics from the 40s, 50s, & 60s. If you can't list 10, list any. For me, the top two are the one where bugs impersonates leopold (that's the one where I imitated being a conductor from) From Heir to Hare (no matter how many times I watch this one it always makes me laugh XD)

  • @cro-magnoncarol4017
    @cro-magnoncarol4017 Рік тому +2

    I'm surprised you didn't bring up the fact our Domestic Rabbits are just a sub population of European Rabbits making them the most successful & widespread living species of lagomorph.

  • @jredmane
    @jredmane Рік тому +1

    Mimotona is so cute!

  • @VegetaRabbit
    @VegetaRabbit Рік тому

    In my state, we are trying to revive a population of one of the cutest rabbits. The last male purebred Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit, found only in the Columbia Basin of Washington state, died in 2006, at the Oregon Zoo in Portland. The last purebred female died in 2008. A crossbreeding program conducted by the Oregon Zoo, Washington State University, and Northwest Trek is attempting to preserve the genetic line by breeding surviving females with the Idaho pygmy rabbit and reintroducing them into the basin.

  • @tyrannotherium7873
    @tyrannotherium7873 Рік тому +1

    I’m thinking that, even though I’m not an artist, I should make a rabbit that’s the size of a cow kind of like one of those future animal documentaries like the future is wild. I don’t know what it would be called. The cow rabbit or something

  • @luutas
    @luutas Рік тому

    I was asking myself where did I know his voice from... It's just Ross Geller, from Friends 😂

  • @rumbleroller2154
    @rumbleroller2154 Рік тому +1

    (11:06) So THATS where Big Chungus comes from... :3

  • @Sazoji
    @Sazoji Рік тому

    pika are pretty big in the US, as/bigger than a guinea pig, they're more vocal and social than the wild rabbits

  • @dinohall2595
    @dinohall2595 Рік тому

    A video on rabbits in the Chinese Year of the Rabbit. How appropriate.

  • @costrio
    @costrio Рік тому

    I wonder if the large, hare type of ears could pick up the sound of a hawk's feathers before it dives and give it an early warning system.

  • @NodokenStar-k917
    @NodokenStar-k917 Рік тому +1

    All the world will be your enemy, prince with a thousand enemies. And whenever they catch you, they will kill you. But first, they must catch you. Digger, listener, runner. Prince with a swift warning. Be cunning, be full of tricks and your people will never be destroyed
    - Lord Frith, Watership Down

  • @universodolucas6023
    @universodolucas6023 Рік тому +3

    I have 3 of them

  • @godzillaprime2
    @godzillaprime2 Рік тому +1

    Love the title

  • @hailgiratinathetruegod7564
    @hailgiratinathetruegod7564 Рік тому

    I remeber reading that Lagomorphs possibily evolving first on India as it was still a isolated island hontinent, and later spreading to the asian mainland

  • @takenname8053
    @takenname8053 Рік тому +1

    Crazy to think an invasive species is endangered at there native range

  • @oatcakebabydaddy-dx4lw
    @oatcakebabydaddy-dx4lw Рік тому

    This guy is really cool.

  • @cro-magnoncarol4017
    @cro-magnoncarol4017 Рік тому +1

    To be fair, "Hare" refers to all members of the genus Lepus while "Rabbit" refers to all genera outside of that genus. So by all taxonomic rules Hares are a type of Rabbit.

    • @cro-magnoncarol4017
      @cro-magnoncarol4017 Рік тому

      @@indyreno2933 But does that really make a Hare any less of a Rabbit? For example, both Humans & Chimps are part of the tribe Hominini does that make us any less Apes? Not really

    • @HogBurger
      @HogBurger Рік тому +1

      @@cro-magnoncarol4017 ignore this Indy Reno guy. I’ve seen them on lots of animal related videos, usually spreading outdated or outright false information.

    • @HogBurger
      @HogBurger Рік тому

      @@indyreno2933 Lots of the stuff I’ve seen you churn out is false.

  • @mistingwolf
    @mistingwolf Рік тому

    "Wastebasket nightmare" animal g roup? I am intrigued!

  • @johnkelly7757
    @johnkelly7757 Рік тому

    Fascinating video.

  • @RedKoopaPlumber
    @RedKoopaPlumber Рік тому +1

    Really Love the video learned some new stuff! My family has several pet rabbits and found extinct lagomorphs interesting! I hope no more meet the same fate since fatal disease RDVH2 is decimating populations of wild and domestic lagomorphs in Eurasia and Australia for decadea and recently spread to North America a few years ago. We lost 2 buns to it. :(
    The pygmy rabbit alone has lost almost 50% of their populations in most areas since 2020 from the disease.
    Pikas, hares and other lagomorphs are all effected by it.

    • @jonnygonehawking380
      @jonnygonehawking380 Рік тому +1

      RHDV2 pretty much wiped out the jackrabbits in the mojave desert a couple of years ago

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Рік тому

    Very good, thank you.
    Here's a random thought: We know Thylacines must be extinct as rabbits would likely make ideal prey - why haven't they 'bounced back' when Australia and Tasmania have such a rabbit problem?

  • @Vadjong
    @Vadjong Рік тому

    You need 'Watership Down' in your life. I will pray you'll find your burrow safely.

  • @TheFoshaMan
    @TheFoshaMan Рік тому +1

    16:05 And the smaller... AMONGUS?!?!?!? 😧😧

  • @tyto5146
    @tyto5146 Рік тому

    aye lets go watership down art at the end

  • @vigorelliinstitute879
    @vigorelliinstitute879 Рік тому

    Rabbits say Pikachu when they sneeze

  • @edwinreveron870
    @edwinreveron870 Рік тому

    Please make a video of Panthera Shawi, and their evolution into common leopards, Mosbach lions, today's lions, cave lions, American lions, and jaguars..

  • @jakejake708
    @jakejake708 Рік тому

    What's up with yard grass? How'd it come to be?

  • @firstcynic92
    @firstcynic92 Рік тому

    I know you couldn't go through all the extant species, but it's too bad you didn't mention either Jackalopes or the European Horned Hare. On the other hand, I'm glad you didn't discuss roof rabbits.

  • @nowistime8070
    @nowistime8070 Рік тому

    what's up with that squirrels man package at the start of video ?

  • @sciencegeekgrandpa8
    @sciencegeekgrandpa8 Рік тому

    Wonderful! Speaking of glires that don't hibernate, are there enough fossils of voles to trace their evolution?

  • @madsgrams2069
    @madsgrams2069 Рік тому +3

    "-Duck season! -Wabbit season!" Fun fact: Bugs Bunny was actually a gray hare, not a rabbit at all, another proof that Elmer was a very bad hunter. 😂😂😂

    • @Solomon0424
      @Solomon0424 Рік тому

      There is no proof that Bugs was a hare.

    • @madsgrams2069
      @madsgrams2069 Рік тому

      @@Solomon0424 Except for all the hare puns in the titles of the various episodes, as well as in many of the episodes themselves. There's also the way he was drawn...

  • @DraptorRonin
    @DraptorRonin Рік тому

    Maybe one day, in the far, far future, when the Age of Man had long since passed, Rabbucks will roam the land…

  • @artiefufkin88
    @artiefufkin88 Рік тому +1

    That was great. Please do rodents soon! Your channel is awesome!

  • @kennethmullen-qe9hg
    @kennethmullen-qe9hg Рік тому

    And OMG! The volcano and pygmy rabbits are so adorable, I want to squeeze their cute little cheeks! I want one! Of each! Lol!
    Also you forgot to mention the very rare, I believe down to just one as most have been killed and mounted, their taxidermied spiked heads usually found in bars or man-caves: The jackalopes! LmMFaO!!! ;) :P :o)

  • @edwinreveron870
    @edwinreveron870 Рік тому

    Can you please make a video of the evolution of Panthera palaeosinensis, into Panthera blytheae, snow leopards, Panthera zdanskyi, and tigers...

  • @shibolinemress8913
    @shibolinemress8913 10 місяців тому

    18:07 Is that the Black Rabbit of Inlé from Watership Down?

  • @mev4968
    @mev4968 5 місяців тому

    Where were the sources for the video? I really liked it and want to do more research

  • @elizabethpruett2642
    @elizabethpruett2642 Рік тому

    4:54 omg it looks like a dog and a squirrel had babies

  • @NorthRainProductions
    @NorthRainProductions Рік тому

    Cottontails are mighty tasty
    Jackie's... theyre ok

  • @barbararice6650
    @barbararice6650 Рік тому +2

    Didn't Frith come up with rabbits to give foxes something to do 😑

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 Рік тому

    I'm curious about a snipet that another channel mentioned that North America has primates and they died out, could you or have you discussed this before? That has perplexed me since South America has them and there's no record of them in the USA/North America section.

  • @erinaltstadt4234
    @erinaltstadt4234 Рік тому

    Thank you