5 Animals That Have Been Reintroduced Into Their Former Ranges
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- Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
- Over the billions of years that there's has been life on this planet, different species have been coming in and out of existence. Many different species go extinct each year and some creatures have been on this planet for millions of years. Through conservation we have been able to save some species from the brink of extinction and in other cases endangered species have been reintroduced into the wild. In this video i will be focusing on these species as i will be going through 5 animals that have been reintroduced into their former ranges.
Eastern quoll donation link:
fnpw.org.au/project/aussie-ar...
Attributions
Smooth snake images:
Paul Ritchie
www.flickr.com/photos/theliza...
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Josep Pascó
www.flickr.com/photos/6549594...
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Dillsoße
Public domain
Eastern quoll images:
sharloch
www.flickr.com/photos/sharloch/
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Victorian National Parks Association
www.flickr.com/photos/vnpafli...
(CC BY 2.0)
Ways
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
(CC BY-SA 3.0)
Nuytsia@Tas
www.flickr.com/photos/nuytsia...
(CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Tasmanian devil images:
Mathias Appel
www.flickr.com/photos/mathias...
(CC BY-NC 2.0)
Zweer de Bruin
www.flickr.com/photos/bzd1/
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Andrew Moor
www.flickr.com/photos/drewott/
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
:/ :\
www.flickr.com/photos/2328332...
(CC BY 2.0)
Vassil
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
(CC0 1.0)
European hamster images:
Sphoo
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
MUSE
www.muse.it/
(CC BY-SA 3.0)
SgH Vienna
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
Rafał Łopucki
www.kul.pl/foto/2/1467_34008.jpg
(CC BY-SA 3.0)
katanski
(CC BY 3.0)
Nene images:
Byron Chin
www.flickr.com/photos/4828265...
(CC BY-NC 2.0)
Josh More
www.flickr.com/photos/guppiecat/
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Jason Crotty
www.flickr.com/photos/4678981...
(CC BY 2.0)
Mike Prince
www.flickr.com/photos/mikepri...
(CC BY 2.0)
Brian Henderson
www.flickr.com/photos/stinken...
(CC BY-NC 2.0)
Muséum de Toulouse
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/en:Mus%...
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
Smooth snake footage:
Nu3a
/ @nu3a
Meneer Spoor
/ @meneerspoor
Hellenic Nature Videos
/ @savvasv7
Hegedüs Attila
/ @godfirka
Towarzystwo Herpetologiczne NATRIX
/ @towarzystwoherpetolog...
Observatorio J87 La Cañada
/ @juanlacruz
Eastern Quoll footage:
Notdunroamin
/ @notdunroamin
ANU TV
/ @anuchannel
Anagoria
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
(CC BY 3.0)
European hamster footage:
France 3 Grand Est
/ @france3grandest
NatureCam Naturfilme
/ @naturecamnaturfilme9676
Enting Films (producer) / Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision
www.openimages.eu/media/171458/
(CC BY-SA 3.0 NL)
Nene footage:
mvrxiru van Ray
/ @marcosvanray
hiperpinguino
/ @hiperpinguino
Frank Vincentz
(CC BY-SA 3.0)
Tasmanian devil footage:
Jiří Bednář
/ @programagor
Mike Prince
www.flickr.com/photos/mikepri...
Pierre Krahn
/ @pierrekrahn
mung0
/ @mung0
Marsupial lion image:
Jose manuel canete
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
Tiger quoll footage:
BLUESHIP
/ @blueship1524
Spotted quoll footage:
quollism
/ @quollism
British snake images:
Thomas Brown
www.flickr.com/people/6304870...
(CC BY 2.0)
Darius Bauzys
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
(CC BY 3.0)
Benny Trapp
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
(CC BY 3.0)
Sand lizard image:
xulescu_g
www.flickr.com/photos/5916144...
(CC BY-SA 2.0)
Canada goose images:
Ron.Beton
www.flickr.com/photos/1903508...
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Denis Fournier
www.flickr.com/photos/heolzo/
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Johannes Liedtke
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
Bryant Olsen
www.flickr.com/photos/bryanto/
(CC BY-NC 2.0)
Thylacine footage:
Philip Andrew
/ @philipandrew1626
I have edited and adapted some of these images cc
If I remember correctly, the Scimitar and Arabian oryx, which hunted to the point of becoming extinct in the wild, were re-introduced into the wild using outdoor enclosures to get them use to the climate before they were eventually released; only a year later, a Scimitar oryx calf was born!
As usual, amazing work!! I watch your vids every morning to help get my day started (so ngl I miss the little intro song) and I've learned so much. I didn't know what a quoll was until today, but they are precious and I hope they're able to thrive in the future. I hope you and your pup have a lovely day!
I also miss the intro
The American Bison aka Buffalo was the biggest one i believe here in the us . in 1889 there was 541 now theres over 30,000 in yellowstone national park.
Believe it or not, in the winter if they leave the Yellowstone National Park, they are shot and the meat goes to the persons who shoot them.
Those buffalo if im not wrong are not pure bison but mixed with farm cattle
@@rolfsmithe6790 yes but some herds have a very low % of cow dna. I learned about that new info recently.
European Bison, thanks to Polish ecologists, the spiecies returned from extinction in the wild. At the beggining of XX century, possibly only a dozen were alive in captivity, basicly sealing their fate as extinct, yet thanks to preservation and very hard work of Polish and Belarussian ecologists, spiecies slowly begane to reproduce and was reitrosuced to it's old habitats. Currently there is over 7500 European bisons with over half of them roaming free in a wild.
didnt know that we have bisons in europe lol
@@coalcupcake4659 see? That's why i said nearly extinct, some people don't even realise they exist xD
You should look into Gray Wolfs. They were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park in 1995 and their numbers are increasing quickly. They are a keystone species. Before they were reintroduced the Elk population was skyrocketing causing a lot of issues for many species. The wolfs keep the elk numbers in check, and do a lot of other good. The ranchers in the area are not happy having wolfs, but the reintroduction has gone really well.
I don't want to be that guy, but... wolves. I came to the comments section to mention this, but your summary is excellent. Just sime more interesting tidbits: Less elk means more berries means more bears. Also, fewer coyotes, more foxes, and fewer hares. The true impact will be felt decades from now. Fewer elk, more beavers. More beavers? Dams will re-establish the ecosystem closer to what it had been prior to the lupine extirpation.
And if any taxonomist is out there reading this: these are not GRAY wolves. They are GREY wolves. The wolves were reitroduced to Yellowstone from Canada. Maple syrup blooded poutine lovin' hockey wolves are GREY. Those wolves believe that universal veterinary care is a birthright. They take their shoes off before coming into your home, and they say sorry before, during, and after they've killed their prey. They say that Yellowstone is 8,983 km², not 3468 sq mi. Their name stems from their colour, not color. At least they do agree that when it comes to their weight and height, it's lbs and feet/inches, not kg and cm. So they do have some shared DNA with the American GRAY wolf. These are scientific facts. And if you don't agree, I'm sorry.
It's always a glimmer of hope when a species nearly wiped out is brought back to its honeland
Not many people I’ve seen do this, you’re doing something great! I think you should make a video about insects, like endangered insects. They need some attention too!
What about the black footed ferret? That should of been on the list.
Wood ducks were nearly wiped out by the market hunting industry. Then a group of hunters banded together and protected them. Now they’re everywhere. Good video as always
The Nene I seen them on the volcano top in Maui I love them I seen, Last week the Yurok tribe reintroduced some Condors here in Northern California
New video idea: 5 animals that have expanded their range. Examples: Coyote, Virginia Opossum, Nine banded armadillo, red fox, and House Mouse.
Musk ox and woods bison have been reintroduced into Alaska. The bison were only released in 2015 (I think) but the musk ox were reintroduced some 20 years ago and have prospered. They were extinct in Alaska and had to be imported from Greenland.
I love your videos I learn so much about animals
Nice videó and there are many more example:Mhor gazelle, roufus hare wallaby, european bison, hungarian meadow viper, red Wolf, mexican wolf, kakapó, takahe, Dávid deer, alagoas curassow, golden lion tamarin, persian fallow deer, parma wallaby, black footed ferret, peregrine falcon in America, bald eagle, californian kondor, guam King fisher, guam rail, hawaian crow, iberian lynx, wyoming toad, prewalski horse, similar horned oryx, arabian oryx, european barybary macaques, large blue in british isles , musk ox, eagle and reindeer and great bustards in british isles, south chinese tiger, laysan duck, pygmy boar, addax etc...
Please bring back the old intro song 🥺🥺
Awesome video tsuki
i work at mt rothwell and the quolls are doin great and the population is growing so much
Great video as always.
thank you i appreciate the support :)
wow weird not seeing the intro, but welcomed surprised. i would like to know how arnie is doing though..
Where the Red kite had once been common throughout Britain ,by 1932 only two pairs of Red kites were left nesting in a secluded valley in Wales; due to careful conservation work there are now an estimated 300 breading pairs with at least 200 that have spread nextdoor to England
🏴👍
Cats must stay inside,
Yes
Or if you want them to go outside train them to walk on a leash.
Greate job keep it up😃
Thank you i appreciate it and will do :)
Could include wild boar, which were accidentally reintroduced to the UK
Love your videos man!! Maybe you could try a video about the craziest or strangest ways people have tried to get ride of invasive animals, I feel likle that would be pretty cool
i had a pet hampster as a kid, i called him john wilson after the fisherman. i was a weird kid.. nothings changed
The aspic Macaw is also trying to make a comeback in Brazil
a farmer said that he wanted to show his children a hamster in the field in the future (a farmer from a village where the Polish demand rewards farmers if the hamster causes them a lot of damage)
Great video
Also there's the avian condor at a point there were only 23 left because there was a massive wildfire that burn a forest that most of the avian condor lived but thanks to conservation there a now there's 300 still not good but this number could grow.
*Californian condor
Though it’s native to more than California; at the absolute minimum it’s native to much of western North America, and considering humans were likely the biggest factor in the megafaunal extinctions that restricted it to western North America when it was much more widespread before, it should really be considered as native throughout most of the continent.
@@bkjeong4302 but the avian condor is a real and its also endangered
good job tsuki
The European hamster isn't the same species that are kept in pet stores. That's the Syrian hamster. Believe it or not, ALL the hamsters that are in pet stores are descended from a single mama hamster and her babies. Supposedly people have been back and try to find them in the wild and they're not found there anymore for whatever reason so what we have is a severely inbred population. Here's hoping some are found in the wild and their wild genetics are brought over and lessens the genetic bottleneck in the domestic hamster population.
I hope eventually you can add the California Condor to the list. It has a historical region from the west coast all the way to the east coast. They’re thought to be extinct on the east coast but I was scrolling through Facebook the other day and someone had claimed to see one and then I looked up pics on condors and Florida and I did find a picture of one in the Everglades. So they’re definitely here and NOT extinct on the east coast. I think they’d be such a cool animal to cover. Massive massive birds that sound just like dinosaurs.
You’re the best.
Im not sure if you did a vid yet on this but maybe 5 endangered keystone animals
Been huge success in the US for both Bighorn Sheep and Mountain Goats, in fact in a couple places Mountain Goats have over populated after being introduced.
Arnie’s well wishes keep me going
Very informative video as always 👍! The item I'd like to know more about is the judgement laid against France over the hamsters endangerment which led to their making efforts to improve its survival. That may seem trivial to most but it's not a situation one hears of often if at all . A legal system defending the right of a wild species to live , to survive . It's the type of change we need the world over at this time in order to correct the mess we've made of our shared home ( shared not just with other people but with all life in general) . I highly commend and thank all the efforts of every researcher or private citizen scientist worldwide who devotes considerable time and resources to saving any and all native species. I'm not saying a simple court case eclipses those good works but what I'm attempting to say is that such a case is decided in favor of those wild native animals before a judge it says the dire situation of that species is reaching a much wider and more general audience. The more people who know and care the better the chances are for that or any species' survival.
Thank you if you've made it this far through my muddled pre- coffee thoughts .
Loved the video and this channel !
The Australians have had to teach Quolls not to attack cane toads after they were decimated.
Bolson tortoises, aplomado falcons, Siamese crocodiles 🤙🏼
You should make a video about the simandoa cave roach. It's a roach species that went extinct in the wild but thanks to people who keep insects they are now kept as pets
If you keep a roach as a pet, I'm sorry, you and I will never be friends. Don't care how close minded and ignorant that makes me. I've made my choice. And I'm ok with it.
@@mitchchartrand :(
video idea: endangered animals that are also invasive
I know that hippos are one of them
You could cover the Asiatic Lion in your next video, since they are a subspecies of lion that recovered from the brink
What I’ve gathered from this video: People need to keep their damn cats inside.
For the most part yes, although there are areas where wild cats are native.
Yes. and as much as people think they're helping, there should be hefty fines for leaving cat food out for the strays. I know people that live in Hawaii that do this. I was surprised to learn that you could even get cat food there
Yes couldn't said it better
@@rinraiden7025 True, this is what is happening to the Scottish Wildcat.
Very informative and hopeful. Check out the Key deer on the lower Florida Keys. Threatened. Humans cars and predators...
I have an idea animal misconceptions for a different style of video
Like other geese, nene can be pugnacious. I encountered some in a London park. Fortunately, they were behind a fence, so I escaped with no injuries after being properly told off in goose fashion. 😂😂😂
The problem with people that have pets in areas that have fragile animal populations. Keep a close eye on your pets, don’t release them in wild habitats (especially 🐇 you have them spay and neutered). No exotic animals introduced in areas that they are not native. It’s because of human careless these animals are in danger and destroy their homes. But humans can also help bring the populations back up again as long as they are committed to it.
Don't repeat what European colonialists did to tons of their colonies by introducing tons of animals they thought would belong well in that colony only to end up destroying the local native animal habitat in those colonies
Unfortunately scientists predict that my favourite Animal(Cricetus Cricetus) will go extinct around 2050 and I don't see much hope, unless there is more awareness in the Population. Here in Germany most measures to protect this and other farmland species are done voluntary. There are some laws and a few years ago an industrial project was stopped because they live there. Hopefully the latest decisions of the court, can really help. Zones at the edges of fields that are not harvested really help them, and the farmers get money for that . Hopefully they can be safed but a lot more needs to happen. Industrial agriculture is the main problem for them. They are already rare here or even locally excinct. Maybe it is already to late. Greetings from Germany.
The Texas Horned Lizard was nearly extinct in the wild. Captive breeding programs have resulted in the reintroduction of this reptile in the Hill Country of Texas.
Yui can maic a vidio of invesive soesis in Romeinia
I can't believe this channel hasn't grown faster. Good quality, accurate, and very good output. Exaggerated inaccurate piles of refuse get tons of subs. It's a joy watching things about Animals that don't insult my intelligence.
European bison should been on the list
I remember seeing a
Tasmanian Devil in a zoo when I was like 9. I’d never even seen a picture of a real one and only knew about them from the Looney Tunes character. I was just confused as to why they looked like small bears.
2:04 60 each year or 60 in total?
The european is in the netherlands called korenwolf
You should do invasive species of Germany
I don't see why there isn't more disease amongst hamsters in the pet trade as most if not all the hamsters in the US are a product of a pair of Syrian Hamsters. That can't be healthy yet there are millions of these little guys through out the US.
Why are cats and dogs allowed on hawaii?
🎉😁🦁 What about the Indian Northern Lions should be Reintroduced in Southern Europe, and Caucasus. They have existed there Many years ago in the Late Holocene, Ancient Historical Era, and the Middle Ages of Bulgaria.
*protec teh hampters*
Black footed ferret
Red wolf
Przewalski’s horse
California condor
Arabian oryx
European bison
Elk in the eastern US
They're called Canada Geese. Canadian Geese have passports
Oh for g's sake it's Canada goose
Please make No Zoo Will Take This Animal, Here's Why
Iist of animals
Blobfish 0:01
Great white shark 0:49
Asian Unicorn 1:22
Narwhals 1:57
Swallows 2:33
Mountain Gorillas 3:02
Giant Squid 3:47
Javan Rhino 4:32
Indri 5:04
Pink Fairy Armadillo 5:34
Giraffe Weevil 6:04
Mariana Snailfish 6:33
Dumbo Octopus 6:57
Blue Whales 7:40
Fish update
I thought that the tiger quoll was as big as a ferret
I wish Asiatic Cheetah from Iran and Asiatic Lion from India can exchange for reintroduce.
Aren't they only like 200-100 asiatic cheetahs left?
Tasmanian Devil & European Hamster 5:20
Reintroduction of Cheetahs in India, please make a video
make a video about dinosaur who are cannibal
Eastern USA Turkey
Why don’t we do that to all countries who aren’t trying to conserve their endangered species?!
Hampter
They look like knockoff thylacoleos
Nvm
Invasions species of UK part 2
Took long enough
california condors and the hawaiian 'alala
5560
Asiatic lion 🦁
gingamingayo
Outdoor/stray/feral cats are the worst of any invasive animal. Here in the US we should have bounties on them, $5 a cat
Native American here... I'd say Humans way worse than cats. Just saying.
Your vocal inflection when you end your sentences is simultaneously the most annoying and most relaxing thing lol.
Why not bring the grizzly bears back to Santa Monica now that I'd pay to watch!!
Why did Europeans bring foxes with them oh yh hunting
Reintroduce animals in Myanmar Burma
First
nice one :)
There's no such thing as a "Canadian" goose. It's a "Canada" goose, regardless of the context, that is what the animal is called. I suppose any goose that lives in Canada could be considered a Canadian goose just the same as any goose south of the border could be an American goose, however regardless of which side of the border it's on, it is a Canada goose.