Looks like your new to the youtube scene, so i am gonna give you some tips, as i saw a lot of corrected mistakes 1. Slow down, you dont have to talk so fast. 2. If your following a script, then why are you correcting your speech with text's? 3. The corrections are at times too quick, all i see it a blimb of text, in the split second it takes me to notice it, its gone. Need to leave it on screen a while longer. Thats my 2cents and i hope you take what i said onboard as its a really great video and hope you do more than what your currently putting out. Keep up the good work. Cheers,
@Tegu Iguana It's called Animal Origins though. The Beardog wasn't a cross it was the origin of both bears and dogs. Origin (noun) The point at which something comes into existence or from which it derives or is derived.
In medieval Japan tanuki hide was used during the process of hammering gold nuggets into gold leaf. This led to an association between tanuki and wealth, and depictions of tanuki using their "sacks" to literally store and carry around their gold stash. Merchants began to put up tanuki sculptures and paintings in their store fronts, as a sort of way to beckon wealth and prosperity to come to the property. And the bigger the tanuki's man-purse, the more luck and wealth the statue/painting would bring.
I would go even further. The use of the wolf as a pet may have given us the idea to try it with other animal species in the first place. What kind of a push this meant for our civilizational development cannot be estimated at all. Because hey... Where would we have been without our farm animals...?
Not only was this informative, it was also hilarious! I really want to know why raccoon dogs are depicted in Japan as having big televisions now...That's what you were going to say, right?
Among the dogs that can climb, you left out the dingo, which can in fact climb trees. among domestic dogs, there's a breed that was specifically bred to climb cliffs and hunt puffins.
Good information thanks. All I know is I love my dog, my best friend, my listener, never complains, when I arrive home, his so happy to see me! Unconditional love ❤ only from a pet 🐕🐈⬛❣
Foxes are classified as class 5 in cuteness units. Scientists theorize that there could be a class 6, but that would require something cuter than a fox. Such thing is still hypothetical though.
There's actually a lot of extinct dog breeds between then and now. Some of them even recent enough to have pictures; for instance, the Old English bulldog. You can also see in older photos that the dog breeds we have today... Did not always look like that.
@@StonedtotheBones13 The Kennel Club with some of it's Breed Standard committees seemingly comprised of Dr Moreau and his assistants don't help........
@@kinglyzard I feel like even if they made it to our time period they probably would have been hunted to extinction by our ancestors. I mean look what we did to the wolf
Fantastic video about our furry friends (not the human furries.) Can't wait to see a video on the domestication of the dog! Keep up the fantastic work, love the content you put out!
In ancient Ethiopia, dog judges were used. The accused was brought before the dog judge-if the dog smiles and wagged his tail, the defendant was considered not guilty and was set free. If the judge snarled and growled , the defendant was sent for punishment/execution.
@@beastmaster0934 That is connected to the question of whether the dog is a species or a subspecies. The more general question is the relationship of the dingo to fully domesticated dogs and to prehistoric wolves.
The idea the cats outcompeted the borophagine canids ignores that cats arrived in North America at the start of the Middle Miocene, BEFORE the borophagines diversified (which was in the Late Miocene)
I think the reason many people like dogs is how similar they are to us in social structure. I'm a cat person myself, but i love all animals and enjoy the company of three little malformed wolves. They are intelligent and family oriented just as we are. We just fit together well.
weird, just earlier today i was watching the evolution of cats and just now wanted to see the evolution of dogs, didn’t expect you to upload just that today! lol
8:05 Actually, "zorro" it's the spanish translation of "Fox", so a lot of animales are referred under the term "zorros" not only the ones you're mentioning on that part xD
I really enjoyed this I hope you keep doing videos on dogs there’s so much to cover, like how the evolution works with domestic canines and the science behind it 👌
Some recent science has indicated and some theories have come up that the main reason modern humans actually ended up ascendant is because we chose to become allies with the other main predator in our environments as we began to spread out of Africa... in a sense making both of our species a kind of super group amongst our other competitors, so that we in the end got the edge together.
10:00 I had an conversation with a professor of paleontology who said that DNA tests had established the Florida Wolf (extinct in the late 1920s) represented the last population of dire wolves.
There are a few taxa from Pliocene and Pleistocene North America traditionally assigned to Canis and regarded as being closely related, if not directly ancestral, to Gray Wolf and Coyote. These existed in the same environment as the Dire wolf ancestors after they split from the lineage that leads to the Wolf. So are they indeed part of the lineage that leads to Aencyon? Are they representative of an early (or more) instance of back migration into North America? Some other branch of the family? I can't wait to see if any new study comes out to takle this matter.
I wonder if the different dog breeds will be considered separate species when excavated by paleontologists milleneas later (not neccesarily humans) when they've all gone extinct because of such a wide varitey of morphology?
I really like your amazing channel, but i have a suggestion if i may, a professional microphone would be great idea to make your voice purer without the faint reverb in the background. Thank you.
@6:51 The Japanese, children's "Tanuki Song" - "Tan tan tanuki no kintama wa / Kaze mo nai no ni bura bura" ("Tan- tan- tanuki’s balls / Even without wind [they] swing swing" [first verse]) is (oddly enough) sung to the opening tune of the American Protestant hymn, "Shall We Gather At The River" [ua-cam.com/video/1yKrbaWGhqc/v-deo.html] どういたしまして
Some corrections: The cladogram at :53 is basically upside down. The actual first dichotomy in Carnivora based on traits splits primitive mongooses, skunks, raccoons and civets from all other clade members, starting with the coatimundi. This split occurred in the Jurassic, which is why you find Eupleres and Fossa on Madagascar, before it split from Africa and India. Caniformia and Feliformia are genomic clades, which too often recover untenable results, like nesting bats with horses. Genes do not test fossil taxa. Think of it like this: The first slinky, arboreal carnivores were closer to the the slinky, nocturnal, arboreal marsupials that preceded them, if that helps. Thus canids are not primitive, as your cladogram shows. Carnassial teeth are not universal in the Carnivora (e.g. seals and aardwolves lack them because they lost them). Bears are not related to canids, but arose several times from a variety of ancestors, like wolverines and coatimundis, preceding canids. Finally cats and wolves are highly derived members of Carnivora, are closely related to each other and to hyaenas. All are derived from Protictitherium, Daphoneus and kin. Cladogram at ReptileEvolution dot com.
man that website you mentioned looks more ancient than that jurassic split you mentioned there is no way in god's name i'm trusting a website that looks like it was around before we knew what a chromosome was
Very interesting! Would be good to mention that dogs as a biological species all look the same and still represent about 70% of the dogs in the world (so called village dogs). The typical breeds that most people in the West know were created by humans only in the last 200 years (at least most breeds). So they don’t really represent dogs as a biological species.
Keep exploring at brilliant.org/AnimalOrigins/ . Get started for free, and hurry-the first 200 people get 20% off an annual premium subscription
I skipped right the hell THRU that ad. You might want to put it at the end of the video if you want more views.
Could have better explained how the BearDog was the ancestor to both Bears and Wolves evolving differently due to their environment.
Love to see one about tigers
Looks like your new to the youtube scene, so i am gonna give you some tips, as i saw a lot of corrected mistakes
1. Slow down, you dont have to talk so fast.
2. If your following a script, then why are you correcting your speech with text's?
3. The corrections are at times too quick, all i see it a blimb of text, in the split second it takes me to notice it, its gone. Need to leave it on screen a while longer.
Thats my 2cents and i hope you take what i said onboard as its a really great video and hope you do more than what your currently putting out.
Keep up the good work.
Cheers,
@Tegu Iguana It's called Animal Origins though. The Beardog wasn't a cross it was the origin of both bears and dogs.
Origin (noun)
The point at which something comes into existence or from which it derives or is derived.
"Many dogs are very, very cute."
That has to be my favoruite summary of any video I've seen on UA-cam.
They can be. My Norwegian Elkhound pretending to be a lap robe or a heating pad certainly is.
I had a pet coyote as a kid . We took the pup after her mom was ran over. He was a good boy a bit hyper tho. He died at age 8 from a wild hog attack
😢
In medieval Japan tanuki hide was used during the process of hammering gold nuggets into gold leaf. This led to an association between tanuki and wealth, and depictions of tanuki using their "sacks" to literally store and carry around their gold stash. Merchants began to put up tanuki sculptures and paintings in their store fronts, as a sort of way to beckon wealth and prosperity to come to the property. And the bigger the tanuki's man-purse, the more luck and wealth the statue/painting would bring.
Suddenly Tom Nook makes more sense
I like to think of canids as pretty much our evolutionary co-op player.
shut up
@@friedgreenaliernwomerns2600 smosh :D
@@locomotivefaox dogs are mankinds best friend forever :)
🤙
Tierzoo gang?
Excellent video.
It should be noted that the domestication of dogs was a huge milestone for our species, leading directly to shepherding and farming.
DNA phylogeny suggests we domesticated dogs three separate times in isolated events
@@AL-fl4jk probably because it's a good idea, it's convergent thinking to assume a carnivorous pack animal would make a good hunting partner.
shut up
Before that it led to far more effective hunting. Men and dogs together are formidable.
I would go even further. The use of the wolf as a pet may have given us the idea to try it with other animal species in the first place. What kind of a push this meant for our civilizational development cannot be estimated at all. Because hey... Where would we have been without our farm animals...?
Such a great way to end the video “many dogs are very very cute”
Alternate title: Dog lore
Not only was this informative, it was also hilarious! I really want to know why raccoon dogs are depicted in Japan as having big televisions now...That's what you were going to say, right?
I don't think they would have bleeped television hehe hehe
@@mikeoveli1028 /whoosh
Racoon Dogs, or Tanuki, are in Japanese legend shape shifters.
I'd have like to have heard that part too.
male bits. enough said.
The cutout was hilariously unexpected XD
I wouldn't want to live in a world without dogs
Among the dogs that can climb, you left out the dingo, which can in fact climb trees. among domestic dogs, there's a breed that was specifically bred to climb cliffs and hunt puffins.
Lundehund!
They can but aren't really that good at it, I'm assuming. They have the wrist flexibility but probably lack the claws.
Norwegian Lundehund.
Good information thanks. All I know is I love my dog, my best friend, my listener, never complains, when I arrive home, his so happy to see me! Unconditional love ❤ only from a pet 🐕🐈⬛❣
Laying in bed, with my dog curled up next to me, watching this amazing video!
He's prolly thinking...
"Shall I lick my junk now or in a little while..."
Lol...
As a dog lover i know now why i also love foxes
Foxes are classified as class 5 in cuteness units. Scientists theorize that there could be a class 6, but that would require something cuter than a fox. Such thing is still hypothetical though.
Arctic foxes have been successfully been interbred into being pet dogs. Fun fact.
I’m sitting next to my dog and watching this
Same. My GSD is having a field day barking at all its ancestors.
Was really hoping this video would explain how we went from wolves to an English Bulldog 😂 but still very entertaining
Well, that's pretty obvious: sadism
There's actually a lot of extinct dog breeds between then and now. Some of them even recent enough to have pictures; for instance, the Old English bulldog. You can also see in older photos that the dog breeds we have today... Did not always look like that.
@@StonedtotheBones13 yeah I’ve seen that before and it’s crazy how much they’ve changed from overbreeding
@@ToxicBottledOstrichNostrils it really is. Also extinct breeds blew my mind for some reason
@@StonedtotheBones13 The Kennel Club with some of it's Breed Standard committees seemingly comprised of Dr Moreau and his assistants don't help........
Another great video, kinda wish we still had bear dogs
Uh, no you don't.
They'd be horrendous predators on our livestock, our pets, our kids and us!
These guys ain't Scooby-Doo!
@@kinglyzard I feel like even if they made it to our time period they probably would have been hunted to extinction by our ancestors. I mean look what we did to the wolf
Waheela in Nahanni Valley are bear dogs
Dogs win the world. No question: best thing ever
Fantastic video about our furry friends (not the human furries.) Can't wait to see a video on the domestication of the dog! Keep up the fantastic work, love the content you put out!
As a furry, im gonna make so many pre historic dog furries now
@@tikimillie 😆All the power to ya! Best of luck to ya!
@@tikimillie Hell yeah. Spread more awareness of prehistory!
@@tikimillie hell yeah! you're doing she god's work here, we need more obscure prehistoric furry characters
shut up
Wonderful video. Technical sounding, but only because you included such intricate species detail. I will watch for more of your fine programs.
Scientific conclusion of video: "...many dogs are very, very cute."
I love Bush Dogs. I never knew they existed until recently and they are so awesome.
shut up
In ancient Ethiopia, dog judges were used. The accused was brought before the dog judge-if the dog smiles and wagged his tail, the defendant was considered not guilty and was set free. If the judge snarled and growled , the defendant was sent for punishment/execution.
Scientifically speaking many dogs are very cute
Would be interesting to see evolution of Horses, Deer or Bears next that would be a very interesting
Just type In evolution of Bears you can find a bunch of good stuff on them and horses as well. Follow Sci-show I think they did one on horses
shut up
I know that I just want to see his spin on it
Please do evolution of Buffalo, Bison, and other cattle genus
Yes. Bovids are super underrated and looked over because of the cow being bred over millennia to be docile.
Please upvote this guy.
OMG YYYYYEEEEEAAAAHHHHH DOGS!!!! Can't wait
shut up
@@friedgreenaliernwomerns2600 what's your problem man? Chill
Now I want to see the Evolution of seals and otters
I'd just like to see real proof of evolution in any thing. But they can't prove evolution....
I would have liked a mention of the controversy around the dingo, but I suppose that must wait for the other video you mentioned.
Is it about whether or not the dingo is it’s own species or not?
@@beastmaster0934 That is connected to the question of whether the dog is a species or a subspecies. The more general question is the relationship of the dingo to fully domesticated dogs and to prehistoric wolves.
shut up
The idea the cats outcompeted the borophagine canids ignores that cats arrived in North America at the start of the Middle Miocene, BEFORE the borophagines diversified (which was in the Late Miocene)
shut up
Great and interesting with a hint of entertaining! Thank you for your hard work.
I think the reason many people like dogs is how similar they are to us in social structure. I'm a cat person myself, but i love all animals and enjoy the company of three little malformed wolves. They are intelligent and family oriented just as we are. We just fit together well.
@emptyglass7867 I have one, he is my little baby.
weird, just earlier today i was watching the evolution of cats and just now wanted to see the evolution of dogs, didn’t expect you to upload just that today! lol
well done as always !!
shut up
Give a Round of Applaus for this 👏👏👏
A round of paws
8:05 Actually, "zorro" it's the spanish translation of "Fox", so a lot of animales are referred under the term "zorros" not only the ones you're mentioning on that part xD
So that’s why the hero of early California got his name
@@jamessparkman6604 Yes mi amigo
I was hoping for a joke about Zorro but close enough
@@Rainok I'm sorry, I'll try next time if the moment is the correct one
I really enjoyed this I hope you keep doing videos on dogs there’s so much to cover, like how the evolution works with domestic canines and the science behind it 👌
"Many dogs are very very cute" - yall got a citation for that????????
Very interested in an originals of the dogs video.
My favourite family of mammals, hands down.
I like primates myself but these guys are pretty cool
Primates are awesome. I love the capuchins and lemurs. 🥰
shut up
Aw yeah Dog Lore
Anyone know if the closing music is from a song or something that’s only for here?
I think that last bit you said was the most relevant and important piece of information, dogs are indeed very cute
Ah, so its Tanuki, thats reponsible for that one joke:
"Two Tanuki enter a bar, and leave with your wife"... or something.
Some recent science has indicated and some theories have come up that the main reason modern humans actually ended up ascendant is because we chose to become allies with the other main predator in our environments as we began to spread out of Africa... in a sense making both of our species a kind of super group amongst our other competitors, so that we in the end got the edge together.
10:00 I had an conversation with a professor of paleontology who said that DNA tests had established the Florida Wolf (extinct in the late 1920s) represented the last population of dire wolves.
There are a few taxa from Pliocene and Pleistocene North America traditionally assigned to Canis and regarded as being closely related, if not directly ancestral, to Gray Wolf and Coyote. These existed in the same environment as the Dire wolf ancestors after they split from the lineage that leads to the Wolf.
So are they indeed part of the lineage that leads to Aencyon? Are they representative of an early (or more) instance of back migration into North America? Some other branch of the family?
I can't wait to see if any new study comes out to takle this matter.
shut up
6:55 lol :D
They all are “good boy”! 🐶🐕🐩😊
Yessss!!! Canid evolution! Thank you!
shut up
My brain doesn't comprehend how wolves just eventually turned into pugs.
Human induced selection + environment pressures = massive variations of phenotypes
Still crazy though 😂
That’s very in-depth video 😮😮 good job 👍
I wonder if the different dog breeds will be considered separate species when excavated by paleontologists milleneas later (not neccesarily humans) when they've all gone extinct because of such a wide varitey of morphology?
Nah, the information presently isn't going to dissappear. They will know, we will find a way for information to last forever.
@@Abdullah-uv2pv Don't be too certain about that. Nothing lasts forever.
I can't handle this much detail
I really like your amazing channel, but i have a suggestion if i may, a professional microphone would be great idea to make your voice purer without the faint reverb in the background. Thank you.
Favourite subject ever
@6:51 The Japanese, children's "Tanuki Song" - "Tan tan tanuki no kintama wa / Kaze mo nai no ni bura bura" ("Tan- tan- tanuki’s balls / Even without wind [they] swing swing" [first verse]) is (oddly enough) sung to the opening tune of the American Protestant hymn, "Shall We Gather At The River" [ua-cam.com/video/1yKrbaWGhqc/v-deo.html] どういたしまして
I always forget the wholesome scientific naming of domestic dogs
Dogs are human's best friends
Great video thank you. Extremely informative
You missed the oppurtunity to title this video scientifically correct: The Evolution of a gud boi, yes a very gud boi!
Otherwise splendid video!
Real cool thanks G
Nice documentary
Really interesting overview of dags and the closest relatives of dags
The fox is like a perfect representation of both cat and dog.
Great video of the Evolution of dog!!
What about the Dingo?
Dawgs left in the wild and then diverged
So finally, "who let the dogs out" mystery is solved 🤣🤣
Great video!
Very good video short sweet and to the point thanx
If you're going to put a note up in the corner, please leave it there long enough for us to read.
Dogs are mankinds best friend forever :)
"domesticated dag" - Animal orgin.
POG
I love all the animals 😎👍
Can you make a evolution video about parrots
It’s interesting how the snouts got longer!
shut up
Borzois have a thing or two to say about that ;)
@@wilczus222 🤣💜
Nice work 👏👏👏👏
6:55 - lol
6:52 😂
Some corrections: The cladogram at :53 is basically upside down. The actual first dichotomy in Carnivora based on traits splits primitive mongooses, skunks, raccoons and civets from all other clade members, starting with the coatimundi. This split occurred in the Jurassic, which is why you find Eupleres and Fossa on Madagascar, before it split from Africa and India. Caniformia and Feliformia are genomic clades, which too often recover untenable results, like nesting bats with horses. Genes do not test fossil taxa. Think of it like this: The first slinky, arboreal carnivores were closer to the the slinky, nocturnal, arboreal marsupials that preceded them, if that helps. Thus canids are not primitive, as your cladogram shows. Carnassial teeth are not universal in the Carnivora (e.g. seals and aardwolves lack them because they lost them). Bears are not related to canids, but arose several times from a variety of ancestors, like wolverines and coatimundis, preceding canids. Finally cats and wolves are highly derived members of Carnivora, are closely related to each other and to hyaenas. All are derived from Protictitherium, Daphoneus and kin. Cladogram at ReptileEvolution dot com.
@@sqrt2295 you're speaking from opinion. Come back with a competing cladogram.
man that website you mentioned looks more ancient than that jurassic split you mentioned
there is no way in god's name i'm trusting a website that looks like it was around before we knew what a chromosome was
@@milkiboreasu never trust. test.
more visuals of the family tree and who and who are more closely related pls
Are asking about the phylogeny at 0:54? Ask away...
will you make an evolution of birds video? I love your videos.
yet again, the most important question: can i pet that dawg? if no, are you absolutely sure? if so, well what if i do anyway?
why no mention of Dingo's & NGSD's ??
dogs are kool have had a few miss them all ✌️
So they been cute ever since 😊
Finally!
there is a video issue at 6:57 when you start referring to Japan :)
The mention of Arctic Fox makes me think that they were once Alopex Lagopex before being relisted as Vulpis Lagopex.
Very interesting! Would be good to mention that dogs as a biological species all look the same and still represent about 70% of the dogs in the world (so called village dogs). The typical breeds that most people in the West know were created by humans only in the last 200 years (at least most breeds). So they don’t really represent dogs as a biological species.
Nice, that tanuki bod caught me out of guard
love my dog
So what I'm hearing is the dire wolf is still closer to dogs than the gray fox is to either. Interesting!
Must go back in time and pet a Hesperocyon! 🐶😍
Try a Norwegian Elkhound.
dogs are awesome.
started reading the comments sorted by newest first
oops
but at least we can be sure this video really upset the creationists, oh boy.
0:29 what are those animals name?
"whos a good boy?? yes you are!!" :D
Learning is about interest and application. Other people's desires are a distraction. Pick up what you want.
What da dog doin?
This is what the dogs are truly doing