It’s a mistake to think of all chicken eggs as offspring. Wild chicken reproductive cycles coincide with the reproductive cycles of bamboo, laying all their eggs when food is plentiful. But humans discovered that feeding hens an excess of food year-round resulted in them producing and laying eggs year-round, even though they weren’t fertilized.
@@DLlama Has it occurred to you that they were domesticated from wild fowl and that not all of those fowl have gone extinct? There are also wild dogs, too. Not sure about cows because I think humans hunter their ancestral species to extinction.
Chicken eggs are basically chicken periods. Sorry if that's unappetizing but it's true! I mean technically adult female humans "lay" an egg every 28 +/- days until one gets fertilized...it's just ours are so small they're not noticed.
Actually when he mentioned that it’s possible for tortoises to hunt small animals despite being primarily herbivores, this can occur in other animals as well such as deer, rabbits, chipmunks, and other herbivores. This can be caused by many factors mainly due to lack of protein or lack of food source, sometimes female tortoises will resort to eating insects when they’re pregnant because they require more protein during this time.
Ive seen cows and squirrels both eat birds before. I saw a squirrel grab a bird off the bird feeder and run off with it. And another bird got to close to the cow grazing. It looked at it. Turned it head and ate it.
It's definitely usually a supplementary measure. I have heard that scientists believe that sometimes they just eat what they can find, with no real deficiencies. Who knows.
My grandma had two painted turtles and we fed them insects all the time (mostly flies). They were usually quick to eat them as well. I didn’t know that was unusual.
Sometimes it is a fixation, though, and not necessarily a supplement thing (I couldn't tell you actual percentages or anything). I would liken it to goats that milk themselves, really. Sometimes it's a nutritional or health thing, but sometimes it's a personality thing and/or a fixation. Many mammals self-soothe by self-suckling (I believe some primates do this, actually). It's not too much to think it could be similar for other mammals. Thumb-sucking is a human compulsion that comes to mind.
How does a seal get an eel up its nose? It makes more sense the the eel went up into the seal's nostril. Maybe the seal tried to eat the eel and the eel went up the nostril trying to escape. It may have thought the nostril was a crevice or something it can hide in. Or maybe theres a kind of symbiotic relationship in which the eel cleans parasites off the seal but it got a bit carried away. If anyone else has an explanation on how the seal can purposely get the eel into its nostril, I'd live to hear it.
Perhaps the same way dogs get porcupine quils on their face. They sniff it out of curiosity and the eel gets inside and gets stuck for some reason. Maybe in an attempt to pull it out, the seal pushes it further inside
I had the same ideas , but have no clue which one is true. I'd have to go down the whole "how end seals up with ells in their noses " google search, then 50% lead to copyrighted pictures without any explanation, 30% lead to a warning about unsave sites and within the last 20 % there might be info hidden. Not tonight.....🤷🤦
😂😂😂 it's so obvious that there are so many scenarios more likely than seal snorts eel for kicks. This made me cry with laughter. I can't wait to show my kids and see what they think
No one knows the exact reason it happens, but seals already eat eels as a part of their natural diet. Sometimes a seal will snort it out through its nose after it’s already been eaten, like those kids who shot milk through their nose when they laughed at lunch. The other popular theory is that they accidentally snort it through their nostril while searching for food, and the eel goes deeper into the nose during the struggle to get it out
Koalas have no business surviving as long as they have. Smooth brained, eating food with almost no nutrition and their food of choice has a habit of bursting into literal fireballs because of the flammable gas it releases.
@@LoKi-oc8ksis it?! Nowadays autism is far more common than 30ish years ago. I thought it was a subjective observation but I googled and autistic people multiplied. To put a long story short - autism might be even more common by now. For the suspected reasons, just Google yourself. I don't want to put the blame on a single reason.
@Kingcobra6699 Sorry, both my son and I are on the spectrum, but when I was diagnosed it was in the late 80's. Some numbers just stick with you. You remember a doctor telling your parents something like that.
Dude WATOP has always been the channel that comes on when I am sick. Through every sickness I have gone through over the past 5 years, and I swear it's the only channel I can't catch a bad vibe from
I think part 2 is a good idea, you presented the information from a reptile creator point of view not from a view of a news station. You gave good information without making it over dramatic BUT got the point a cross about being careful around these animals.
Nah, applying my own experience w noodles, it's clear some "clown dolphin" made him laugh right after taking a bite. Were it not for opposable thumbs and boneless noodles, I wouldn't be here to tell my tale!
Thank god someone thought the same thing as me. 😂 😂😂 I laughed till I cried. Why would a seal snort a dead eel. Funnier still why would those photos make you assume that's what happened 😂😂😂
😂😂😂 the assumption that the seals deliberately snort eels is hilarious. I can't believe every single comment isn't about this. I haven't heard a thing that the Guy said after that I can't stop laughing trying to picture how and why a seal would do that for fun
On the hens...idk, have been on a farm all my life, i grew up being chased by mother hens with their chicks, which seemed to me like at least it was an instinctual thing. We all learned to walk a wide path around a mother hen, duck, etc...with her chicks!
We had a tortoise long ago, and he loved the leftovers of Sunday dinner, that tortoise was definitely an Omnivore. He lived a long time on his human diet.
To whoever reads this: don't feed human food to your tortoise unless a vet advises you to do so! Tortoises can live a long life but that's not an excuse to shorten it or make it painful. They will eat many things - but it doesn't mean it is good for them.
@@jwhite5008agree. That tortoise probably should have outlived their parents and the children of their family. No judgement, because we didn’t know any better back then. Now we have the internet for pet owners. Good call out for the other commenters. 👍
Please never do this in the future! Turtles live 15-25 years, and tortoises are supposed to live between 50-100 years, like humans. Turts and torts are omnivores in the same way lizards are. Plants and bugs 👍
While visiting family in Arizona, we were watching a family of ducks swimming across the lake. Then quite suddenl, one by one the ducklings would disappear. When I asked about it, my uncle explained that there were giant catfish in the lake and would feed on the baby ducklings.
" Tombac being an insecticide was intrinsic part of almost all of the dwellings in our communities.... By first on clean soil tamped well and covered with soft red tan tobacco leaves .then put your skins and stuff you have to have there and we NEVER see any bugs it never happened ..like Tombac works " "Cheif" 1970 SEMINOLE SHAMAN
Yes, to be correct. Most herbivores are actually opportunistic omnivores, meaning that while they won’t go out hunting for meat, if they happen upon a dead corpse, they might just take a bite. Granted those animals that will be more likely to do this are ones that have specific nutritional needs that can be tough to cover on a diet of just plants. For example, deer are a good example of an opportunistic omnivore. The antlers that they grow require a lot of calcium and phosphorus. So you’ll see them eat weird stuff or corpses to get those nutrients
And I' guess especially calcium. The fat in bone marrow ( if there is still some left because many predators go for that at first too) which is needed to absorb certain vitamins like A, D , E, K - I mean herbivores and omnivores could get fat from seeds and nuts , but not the calcium , maybe especially useful before or during pregnancy ? And for omnivores - it's easier to take a more nutricious bite than they'd get out of munching on 10 lbs of grass and leaves, or cover long distances to special eock formations, where they know to find salt and minerals, licking and chewing on said rocks. Just guessing.
There are a few exceptions but they are very rare. Koalas only eat Eucalyptus leaves and a few other leaves. They won't eat ya but they will maul your face off.
My first memory is being attacked by a rooster. At 7 I was dive bombed at the SF Zoo by a literal flock of seagulls who wanted my pink popcorn. I’ve been bitten by two geese, an owl flew into my house terrorizing us all ( and pooping all over our house.) F*CK birds.
What if the seal swallowed an eel whole and then it back tracked up it's throat and ended up in the nasal cavity and it could only get so far out and gets stuck and dies there.
May be gross...and yeah it is! But sounds like a perfectly normal reason. Like many mammal mothers eat the afterbirth and will lick their kittens butt to encourage bowel movement for the first time etc...yuck! Lol
I know this may sound mean but frankly, I feel like we should just let koalas and pandas die out because as of right now they lost to Darwin’s theory of evolution
My mother has a squirrel who attacks birds and eats them frequently.I thought it was cats because I would see pigeon feathers all over the back lawn until I seen the squirrel doing its thing.
I know this is a lot to ask, but can you put all your videos and any future videos into one Playlist? I would love to just be able to go to that Playlist and let it play through all 200+ videos every night.
Animals have an extraordinary ability to know what nutrient they are lacking and then to go after what nutrients they need. So even if it is not an animal that is a usual omnivore, you might find a complete Carnivore going after certain grains or greens. Or an herbivore going after meat.
Okay, I need to know. So- is Steve real? Or is he you? And if he is real, is he a roommate? A brother? A friend? A lover? Idk why, but I'm hoping for the last XD.
Humans actually have 2 brains that do the same thing...linked via the lateral line this is what lets us walk and coordinate our limbs. The 2 lobes control opposite sides of the body, and whatever one side does the other instinctivle tries to counter. And that counter creates the motion for walking
Those are parts of 1 brain. Many animals, including humans, have bundles of neurons around the body called ganglia that serve particular purposes. most of your reflexes are controlled by your spinal cord. your stomach has many neurons (more than a cat's brain) that it uses to control the digestive process. your spinal cord also controls much of the walking cycle. Humans have 1 brain but that doesn't mean that processing is done only in the brain. Edit: Grammar
Wait a minute! Very close to the house where I used to live there is a lake, and one day I saw a turtle in the water eating a small fish, so if fish is considered meat I would guess they could probably digest it.
The koala + leaf thing is a gross misunderstanding. First, koalas have been recorded eating... other types of leaves, fruit (especially apples, they seemingly Love apples (yes I know apples are not native to Australia)), insects (particularly termites), and a small handful of other things. However Eucalyptus is toxic, while koalas are resistant to that toxin they are not immune to it, so they normally eat just the tips of most leaves because the toxin flows into the leaves and up the leaves form the base to the tips in response to stress like being eaten, branches getting broken, and so on. So leaves without branches are 'unsafe' because they don't know how toxic they may have become, and it is very likely that any toxins in the remaining stems and leaves have saturated out the full leaf. Just the amount that they normally eat leaves them in an intoxicated state on a regular basis, so taking a higher dose is a risk. Humans eat lots of toxic foods too, imagine being offered pureed fugu, that your coworker made (not a professional trained in handling toxic pufferfish). It is probably edible, but are you going to trust it?
So thats what happened to the 5th ninja turtle. If only he masterd his training he would of been the strongest. Sometimes two heads are not better than one. Lol
@@raven4k998 I was surprised Ditto's rescuers could even ALLOW both heads to eat. Not a lot of two-headed animals actually have complete connected digestive tracts for both heads; some don't have a throat in the extra head and some have a short esophagus that has a dead-end before it connects with the stomach. Ditto is a lucky turtle if both heads can eat and feed the stomach properly, as if a two-headed animal with a false throat manages to eat with both heads, the food can pack into the dead-end and rot, making the animal sick and killing it even if both heads get along swimmingly.
It's VERY common for an herbivore to have an urge for a straight shot of protein and they will eat an animal. Deer, elk and moose will eat birds. Cows, goats and horses will be opertunistic if seeing a bird within reach. It's not common but very normal.
I'm about halfway through and I havent seen feral cat examples. I've had to rescue several with so much curiosity, they ended up with plastic jars on their heads. My conclusion would be from searching for food in a neighborhood garbage can.
There was a snake in my granddaughter’s pond. They got it out but in the process accidentally killed it. She realized that one of her fish were gone, so they cut the snake open and the fish was still alive!!! It’s doing fine now.
regarding that stuck lion cub with the dead buffalo.. pretty sure it wasn't stuck inside.. but between the hind legs.. Oh and herbivores aren't always completely herbivore instead and can and will occasionally eat another animal... Horses have eaten birds before.....
My friend had a softshelled turtle bite his nip while swimming he immediately thought that it was the guy's dog who owns the pond he caught the turtle and it was the largest softshell turtle I have seen in person and I used to catch turtles for fun
Silver springs reptile show in the 80s the very end of it( mind u this guys been in the pond the entire hour) he reaches down with both hands and pulls up an ANCIENT ALLIGATOR SNAPPING TURTLE and it( usually) bites a branch( as a reflex) and man this thing must've been well over 200lbs and they weren't sure of its age bcuz the story went that they caught it as a baby when making the park..the park was developed in the 1950s...this was like 1986! Truly amazing. They think bcuz they provided protection plus a steady food source..it had nothing to do but thrive.. so cool
We have a park here in s. Florida where they live. We camped there overnight w girl scouts( it also had semi rigid(semi permanent?) Tents. Peeing in the dark in the middle of the night was quite scary with that noise😂 still chills my blood❤😅
Fresh laid chicken eggs don’t start to grow an embryo until the male fertilizes the eggs…. So…. The harmed eggs are just plain whites and yolk, there’s no offspring to harm or eat. Once the egg is fertilized by the rooster, the embryo feeds on the yolk to grow. So no, it’s not weird for the chicken to eat the egg.
I have a dancing frog that only dances when me and him are alone. He also somehow knows when I'm secretly recording him.
least schizo youtube commenter
Does he sing?
@@billdorthegreat265 Actually he does but only the song " Hello my baby "!
@@ABIGD0G Lame ass. Anyway very cute
Hello my honey... Hello my baby... Hello my ragtime gal🤣
I can't imagine anything more chilling than coming home to find a python in the process of summoning an even larger lizard from its mouth.
Beavers falling trees on themselves doesn't surprise me. Human loggers with years of experience do it too. Trees are unpredictable.
Facts
Yes I have, part of the tree anyway. That was the day I came very close to death
It’s a mistake to think of all chicken eggs as offspring. Wild chicken reproductive cycles coincide with the reproductive cycles of bamboo, laying all their eggs when food is plentiful. But humans discovered that feeding hens an excess of food year-round resulted in them producing and laying eggs year-round, even though they weren’t fertilized.
Thank you! I knew if this was a "thing" now, it had to be a result of some interference. Most likely suspects as usual.
"Wild" chickens? What is a wild chicken? They are domesticated animals. Might as well be talking about wild cows or wild dogs 😂
@@DLlama Wild chickens are definitely a thing, even chickens that are able to fly.
@@DLlama Has it occurred to you that they were domesticated from wild fowl and that not all of those fowl have gone extinct? There are also wild dogs, too. Not sure about cows because I think humans hunter their ancestral species to extinction.
Chicken eggs are basically chicken periods. Sorry if that's unappetizing but it's true! I mean technically adult female humans "lay" an egg every 28 +/- days until one gets fertilized...it's just ours are so small they're not noticed.
Predator finding two headed prey is like kids opening a candy bar that has two candies inside
I bet u it's a similar feeling
eee
Though they can't digest the quills 22:05
moar like cracking an egg and grtting a double yolker 😂😂😂😂
Like a Twix?
Actually when he mentioned that it’s possible for tortoises to hunt small animals despite being primarily herbivores, this can occur in other animals as well such as deer, rabbits, chipmunks, and other herbivores. This can be caused by many factors mainly due to lack of protein or lack of food source, sometimes female tortoises will resort to eating insects when they’re pregnant because they require more protein during this time.
Ive seen cows and squirrels both eat birds before. I saw a squirrel grab a bird off the bird feeder and run off with it. And another bird got to close to the cow grazing. It looked at it. Turned it head and ate it.
It's definitely usually a supplementary measure. I have heard that scientists believe that sometimes they just eat what they can find, with no real deficiencies. Who knows.
Tortoises heads like a foot with two toes.
My grandma had two painted turtles and we fed them insects all the time (mostly flies). They were usually quick to eat them as well. I didn’t know that was unusual.
@@brianfitch5469it could be both defending their feeding source.
Hens are actually very protective mother's. Chickens also eat the eggs when they need calcium. Guve them oyster shell, they'll stop.
Its a breed thing too the breeds used for commercial laying have had that mostly bred out of them the last thing an egg farm wants is broody hens
Sometimes it is a fixation, though, and not necessarily a supplement thing (I couldn't tell you actual percentages or anything).
I would liken it to goats that milk themselves, really. Sometimes it's a nutritional or health thing, but sometimes it's a personality thing and/or a fixation. Many mammals self-soothe by self-suckling (I believe some primates do this, actually). It's not too much to think it could be similar for other mammals. Thumb-sucking is a human compulsion that comes to mind.
Not really, broody hens. Yes. But not all hens care about their eggs or chicks. Only when they're broody.
@@aftersexhighfives I've raised different kinds of chickens over the last 35 or so years, all of them are protective over their chicks
@@cindys6775 lies. Only broody hens. If they're not broody they do not care.
You forget the behavior of humans when eating ice cream, soup, Popsicles and drinking hot coffee.
How does a seal get an eel up its nose? It makes more sense the the eel went up into the seal's nostril. Maybe the seal tried to eat the eel and the eel went up the nostril trying to escape. It may have thought the nostril was a crevice or something it can hide in.
Or maybe theres a kind of symbiotic relationship in which the eel cleans parasites off the seal but it got a bit carried away.
If anyone else has an explanation on how the seal can purposely get the eel into its nostril, I'd live to hear it.
Perhaps the same way dogs get porcupine quils on their face. They sniff it out of curiosity and the eel gets inside and gets stuck for some reason. Maybe in an attempt to pull it out, the seal pushes it further inside
I had the same ideas , but have no clue which one is true. I'd have to go down the whole "how end seals up with ells in their noses " google search, then 50% lead to copyrighted pictures without any explanation, 30% lead to a warning about unsave sites and within the last 20 % there might be info hidden. Not tonight.....🤷🤦
😂😂😂 it's so obvious that there are so many scenarios more likely than seal snorts eel for kicks. This made me cry with laughter. I can't wait to show my kids and see what they think
Aren't there eels that hide inside the butts of sea cucumbers? It's probably what happened here lol
No one knows the exact reason it happens, but seals already eat eels as a part of their natural diet. Sometimes a seal will snort it out through its nose after it’s already been eaten, like those kids who shot milk through their nose when they laughed at lunch. The other popular theory is that they accidentally snort it through their nostril while searching for food, and the eel goes deeper into the nose during the struggle to get it out
Koalas have no business surviving as long as they have.
Smooth brained, eating food with almost no nutrition and their food of choice has a habit of bursting into literal fireballs because of the flammable gas it releases.
Dont most of them have gonorrhea as well.
That's why koalas are referred to as "Drop Bears". Cuddly looking, psychotic, freaks of nature.
@@williambonilla4092 I thought the creator Ozzy Man was the only one who called them that😂
I was in Florida on a boat. I saw a brown pelican dive in the water. There was a huge splash. It got eaten by a shark.
I believe it. Was probably a bull shark. They're found in canals with things like tires and license plates in their tummy( like a garbage truck shark)
@@cmaden78technically that is a tiger shark that is garbage truck of the Ocean.
1 in 1000 hatchlings, that's insanely common
It's the same rate for being on the autism spectrum.
@@LoKi-oc8ksis it?!
Nowadays autism is far more common than 30ish years ago. I thought it was a subjective observation but I googled and autistic people multiplied.
To put a long story short - autism might be even more common by now.
For the suspected reasons, just Google yourself. I don't want to put the blame on a single reason.
@Kingcobra6699 Sorry, both my son and I are on the spectrum, but when I was diagnosed it was in the late 80's. Some numbers just stick with you. You remember a doctor telling your parents something like that.
Nah not that comman btw
@Fanoffadedplayz We freak out over lots of things that affect less people.
Dude WATOP has always been the channel that comes on when I am sick. Through every sickness I have gone through over the past 5 years, and I swear it's the only channel I can't catch a bad vibe from
So the eel-in-the-nose thing is basically a tik tok challenge for teenage seals
Snort it!
Snort it!
Snort it!
I think part 2 is a good idea, you presented the information from a reptile creator point of view not from a view of a news station. You gave good information without making it over dramatic BUT got the point a cross about being careful around these animals.
Hens are actually pretty good mothers. I heard of a hen who pecked at a snake approaching her chicks until it slithered away
chickens will fuck up smaller snakes for sure
@@jahosaphet05they will eat them as well.
My mom had free range chickens when I was growing up. I can attest this is true.
Are we sure the eel didn't decide the nostril was a good hiding place and then died?
Nah, applying my own experience w noodles, it's clear some "clown dolphin" made him laugh right after taking a bite.
Were it not for opposable thumbs and boneless noodles, I wouldn't be here to tell my tale!
Thank god someone thought the same thing as me. 😂 😂😂 I laughed till I cried. Why would a seal snort a dead eel. Funnier still why would those photos make you assume that's what happened 😂😂😂
That or the seal thinks he's some kind of aquatic Ozzy Osborne.
I thought the eels were climbing into the seals' noses on their own, presumably mistaking them for holes they could hide in.
I think you're right
😂😂😂 the assumption that the seals deliberately snort eels is hilarious. I can't believe every single comment isn't about this. I haven't heard a thing that the Guy said after that I can't stop laughing trying to picture how and why a seal would do that for fun
I mean, to be fair, it IS a hole they can hide in...to some degree. 😂
This was definitely interesting. Got a nice hour long treat today. Thank you for the video.
Thanks for sharing these wonderful pictures and videos of different animals 😊
On the hens...idk, have been on a farm all my life, i grew up being chased by mother hens with their chicks, which seemed to me like at least it was an instinctual thing. We all learned to walk a wide path around a mother hen, duck, etc...with her chicks!
This video is FULL of misinformation... its FOS
Seeing those dogs impaled by porcupine quills was so sad. Poor puppies.
YES! FIRST COMMENT! Time for a Watop Marathon :)
It's official your #1 for this video by 1min. Congratulations
30:35 Alot of people decided to call the horse juan
This video gets a 10/10
This better not be clickbait- me at the beginning of the video
When the McDonald’s milkshake gives you brain freeze do you stop drinking it? Nope.
We had a tortoise long ago, and he loved the leftovers of Sunday dinner, that tortoise was definitely an Omnivore. He lived a long time on his human diet.
To whoever reads this: don't feed human food to your tortoise unless a vet advises you to do so!
Tortoises can live a long life but that's not an excuse to shorten it or make it painful.
They will eat many things - but it doesn't mean it is good for them.
@@jwhite5008agree. That tortoise probably should have outlived their parents and the children of their family. No judgement, because we didn’t know any better back then. Now we have the internet for pet owners. Good call out for the other commenters. 👍
Please never do this in the future! Turtles live 15-25 years, and tortoises are supposed to live between 50-100 years, like humans. Turts and torts are omnivores in the same way lizards are. Plants and bugs 👍
They never said how old the tortoise was. Yall are just assuming.
While visiting family in Arizona, we were watching a family of ducks swimming across the lake. Then quite suddenl, one by one the ducklings would disappear. When I asked about it, my uncle explained that there were giant catfish in the lake and would feed on the baby ducklings.
Hahaha I had the same idea and ran to my fone.. Damn it...
Love your content...love your "voices"
That whale gon become a weapon by the austrailians
" Tombac being an insecticide was intrinsic part of almost all of the dwellings in our communities.... By first on clean soil tamped well and covered with soft red tan tobacco leaves .then put your skins and stuff you have to have there and we NEVER see any bugs it never happened ..like Tombac works "
"Cheif" 1970
SEMINOLE SHAMAN
All herbivores will at times eat other animals. It's not so much about the meat, but about the bones and the minerals, especially in the blood.
Yes, to be correct. Most herbivores are actually opportunistic omnivores, meaning that while they won’t go out hunting for meat, if they happen upon a dead corpse, they might just take a bite. Granted those animals that will be more likely to do this are ones that have specific nutritional needs that can be tough to cover on a diet of just plants. For example, deer are a good example of an opportunistic omnivore. The antlers that they grow require a lot of calcium and phosphorus. So you’ll see them eat weird stuff or corpses to get those nutrients
And I' guess especially calcium.
The fat in bone marrow ( if there is still some left because many predators go for that at first too) which is needed to absorb certain vitamins like A, D , E, K - I mean herbivores and omnivores could get fat from seeds and nuts , but not the calcium , maybe especially useful before or during pregnancy ?
And for omnivores - it's easier to take a more nutricious bite than they'd get out of munching on 10 lbs of grass and leaves, or cover long distances to special eock formations, where they know to find salt and minerals, licking and chewing on said rocks.
Just guessing.
There are a few exceptions but they are very rare. Koalas only eat Eucalyptus leaves and a few other leaves. They won't eat ya but they will maul your face off.
I once saw a squirrel take a tiny kitten up a tree...poor kitty mewed until it just didn't anymore. Lol blew my mind
Thank you so much for the video. I really enjoyed it to the max.❤
Steve ran away! Lol
My first memory is being attacked by a rooster. At 7 I was dive bombed at the SF Zoo by a literal flock of seagulls who wanted my pink popcorn. I’ve been bitten by two geese, an owl flew into my house terrorizing us all ( and pooping all over our house.) F*CK birds.
They should do one where it’s the 10 dumbest things humans do.
Female chickens who can't each other are called lebihens. Lol
😂😅😊❤
What if the seal swallowed an eel whole and then it back tracked up it's throat and ended up in the nasal cavity and it could only get so far out and gets stuck and dies there.
You forgot the most interesting and disgusting fact about koalas. They feed they’re young their poop so the babies are able to digest the eucalyptus!
Or that they pee on themselves due to STDs they universally have.
May be gross...and yeah it is! But sounds like a perfectly normal reason. Like many mammal mothers eat the afterbirth and will lick their kittens butt to encourage bowel movement for the first time etc...yuck! Lol
Who doesn't feed their kids their crap?!
I know this may sound mean but frankly, I feel like we should just let koalas and pandas die out because as of right now they lost to Darwin’s theory of evolution
My mother has a squirrel who attacks birds and eats them frequently.I thought it was cats because I would see pigeon feathers all over the back lawn until I seen the squirrel doing its thing.
Ive seen a squirrel grab a bird from the bird feeder. Ive also seen a cow eat one as well.
30:24 OMG 😳 NO freaking way that is *JUAN*
This video is the best keep up the good work these animals are those the best keep up the good work animals and keep up the good work video
I know this is a lot to ask, but can you put all your videos and any future videos into one Playlist?
I would love to just be able to go to that Playlist and let it play through all 200+ videos every night.
You can make your own playlist with the videos.
Animals have an extraordinary ability to know what nutrient they are lacking and then to go after what nutrients they need. So even if it is not an animal that is a usual omnivore, you might find a complete Carnivore going after certain grains or greens. Or an herbivore going after meat.
Like deer that hunt down, stomp on and eat chicks/small birds for the calcium.
so that's why no such thing as "lazy beaver"
I think the eel is trying to find a hole to hide in. The closest hole is the seals nose.
We should get that two-headed turtle to run for Congress. Double the speaking time, but still one vote😂
Fun fact. I found a 2 headed turtle and gave it to the Virginia Living Museum. It lived for like 2 years
Okay, I need to know. So- is Steve real? Or is he you?
And if he is real, is he a roommate? A brother? A friend? A lover?
Idk why, but I'm hoping for the last XD.
CGI.. people have to blink.
@@maurafisher4407 I noticed that after asking this Steve seems to have disappeared
my cat dances when I pet her
I hope Big Oz teeth come back soon, he looked like he was sad or in pain from it.
There are snapping turtles in the state of Michigan that can actually bite off wooden handles of shovels!
Humans actually have 2 brains that do the same thing...linked via the lateral line this is what lets us walk and coordinate our limbs. The 2 lobes control opposite sides of the body, and whatever one side does the other instinctivle tries to counter. And that counter creates the motion for walking
Those are parts of 1 brain. Many animals, including humans, have bundles of neurons around the body called ganglia that serve particular purposes. most of your reflexes are controlled by your spinal cord. your stomach has many neurons (more than a cat's brain) that it uses to control the digestive process. your spinal cord also controls much of the walking cycle. Humans have 1 brain but that doesn't mean that processing is done only in the brain.
Edit: Grammar
*instinctively
I have 2 heads. Only one brain though. Guess I'm not truly human after all.
Are dicephalic turtles really that common? .1% of all live hatches? That sounds profoundly high
Wait a minute! Very close to the house where I used to live there is a lake, and one day I saw a turtle in the water eating a small fish, so if fish is considered meat I would guess they could probably digest it.
The koala + leaf thing is a gross misunderstanding.
First, koalas have been recorded eating... other types of leaves, fruit (especially apples, they seemingly Love apples (yes I know apples are not native to Australia)), insects (particularly termites), and a small handful of other things.
However Eucalyptus is toxic, while koalas are resistant to that toxin they are not immune to it, so they normally eat just the tips of most leaves because the toxin flows into the leaves and up the leaves form the base to the tips in response to stress like being eaten, branches getting broken, and so on. So leaves without branches are 'unsafe' because they don't know how toxic they may have become, and it is very likely that any toxins in the remaining stems and leaves have saturated out the full leaf. Just the amount that they normally eat leaves them in an intoxicated state on a regular basis, so taking a higher dose is a risk.
Humans eat lots of toxic foods too, imagine being offered pureed fugu, that your coworker made (not a professional trained in handling toxic pufferfish). It is probably edible, but are you going to trust it?
its the Eel that's trying to get in the Seal's nose, not d other way around.
He had something important to say
That freaking made me laugh so hard. That rooster.
I feel like the 2 head anamals for me this is my opinion they are a very special breed❤
Sick you guys are really top!
Very interesting and fascinating facts and story 😁
The lizard was really trying to reach them about their car's extended warrenty
Wouldnt have it any other way. She Definitely earned all dat shit! ✍️🏾💪🏾💯🔥🔥
Of course there are animals with 2 heads that work together. Humans are still animals, and Abby and Brittany work together very well.
So thats what happened to the 5th ninja turtle. If only he masterd his training he would of been the strongest. Sometimes two heads are not better than one. Lol
shame those turtles haven't figured out they are feeding the same body so fighting it pointless for them to do as it simply wastes energy nothing more
@@raven4k998 I was surprised Ditto's rescuers could even ALLOW both heads to eat. Not a lot of two-headed animals actually have complete connected digestive tracts for both heads; some don't have a throat in the extra head and some have a short esophagus that has a dead-end before it connects with the stomach. Ditto is a lucky turtle if both heads can eat and feed the stomach properly, as if a two-headed animal with a false throat manages to eat with both heads, the food can pack into the dead-end and rot, making the animal sick and killing it even if both heads get along swimmingly.
@@QuantumWaltz considering they die in the wild that's not a big deal for them to both have that one🤣
THE THUMBNAIL 😭😭😭😭
Holy moly it's the purple lizard from the hit game Kaiju Paradise!!
It’s called nightcrawler
@@nightcrawler5214 Yeah ik abt that but I just like to call them purple lizard
Oh ok
I've watched almost every video on this channel lol
Amazing story and facts 😁
that turtle looks like tamayaki&chamayaki from garten of banban
It's VERY common for an herbivore to have an urge for a straight shot of protein and they will eat an animal. Deer, elk and moose will eat birds. Cows, goats and horses will be opertunistic if seeing a bird within reach. It's not common but very normal.
I'm about halfway through and I havent seen feral cat examples. I've had to rescue several with so much curiosity, they ended up with plastic jars on their heads. My conclusion would be from searching for food in a neighborhood garbage can.
There was a snake in my granddaughter’s pond. They got it out but in the process accidentally killed it. She realized that one of her fish were gone, so they cut the snake open and the fish was still alive!!! It’s doing fine now.
A very fascinating story and facts 😁
Objection: The ancient Greeks saw many species now extinct. A bird-croc symbiote is plausible.
The chick looks so offended that a turtle was gonna eat them😭😭 18:52
regarding that stuck lion cub with the dead buffalo.. pretty sure it wasn't stuck inside.. but between the hind legs..
Oh and herbivores aren't always completely herbivore instead and can and will occasionally eat another animal... Horses have eaten birds before.....
In Uganda when a hen start eating it's egg the Bic is cut off halfway so that it stops the habit and it works.. 😂😂
That was a Hawk, not a Buzzard
So. I have a question
What to doo if my parrot starts to get agressive and tries to hurt me if i get closer to him
Perfect video
Very interesting facts and event and more 😮
2:30 the big mystery behind eel spawning
My friend had a softshelled turtle bite his nip while swimming he immediately thought that it was the guy's dog who owns the pond he caught the turtle and it was the largest softshell turtle I have seen in person and I used to catch turtles for fun
Silver springs reptile show in the 80s the very end of it( mind u this guys been in the pond the entire hour) he reaches down with both hands and pulls up an ANCIENT ALLIGATOR SNAPPING TURTLE and it( usually) bites a branch( as a reflex) and man this thing must've been well over 200lbs and they weren't sure of its age bcuz the story went that they caught it as a baby when making the park..the park was developed in the 1950s...this was like 1986! Truly amazing. They think bcuz they provided protection plus a steady food source..it had nothing to do but thrive.. so cool
There are a few pairs of conjoined twins (human) who are astoundingly cooperative. Another good reason for a big brain. Bigger than a turtle, anyhow.
Honestly, what is going on with the eels in the nose? Wtf
I t s only the " punk" seals.lmfao they had Depeche mode and the cure posters in their grassy lil rooms😂
Gonna have to Google "how a head dies"
Casually showing babies getting eaten and deleted lol
Watop is amazing on god!!
I'm glad Australia has 60 less crocodiles.
I like peacock sounds. I wonder why people find them so unpleasant and scary. It's kind of sad sounding, but I wouldn’t call it unpleasant
We have a park here in s. Florida where they live. We camped there overnight w girl scouts( it also had semi rigid(semi permanent?) Tents. Peeing in the dark in the middle of the night was quite scary with that noise😂 still chills my blood❤😅
I like it too. I've wondered why so many people seem to hate them.
In intrested in a sunglow or blizzard bull what are the cost on both?
Pigs' diet changed over time because of humans.
Interesting facts and event 😊
Very interesting and scary and creepy
they are animals after all ... as a species .... stupitity gets to be weedwd out .
humans on the otherhand ....
I know it's not nice, but there is something to be said for natural selection 😂
Naberius, Cerberus, Asmodeus, Valak and Bune
What about man? One always trying to talk the other into trouble 😂
Fresh laid chicken eggs don’t start to grow an embryo until the male fertilizes the eggs….
So…. The harmed eggs are just plain whites and yolk, there’s no offspring to harm or eat.
Once the egg is fertilized by the rooster, the embryo feeds on the yolk to grow. So no, it’s not weird for the chicken to eat the egg.
What? Or are you joking? Hens' eggs are fertilized via a sex act executed before the eggs exist. NOT after the eggs are laid!
the turtle that attacked Darwin XD