- YASS ANOTHER LONG VIDEO, CANNOT WAIT! I enjoy these videos for over 6 years, but the longer the better. I always wish you guys had longer videos, I'm tired of rewatching old ones. I know I'm not alone.. *WE ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS CHANNEL*
I learned recently that hyaenidae is under the clade Feloidea, which includes viverridae, felidae, and hyaenidae! So technically, hyenas are "cat form".
@My_pfp_beats_all_dog_breeds. the reason that cave lions never adventured on to the arctic is because polar bears ate them all even knowing cave lions where pack hunting animals felids are as bad as canids butt atleast canids have conquered the Artic with polar bears around with felids have never did because they are too slow on the snow to survive
@@mrpeddlethesealion ha ha funny coping whataboutery... No canid could dream of going one-to-one against any bear species, even the largest canid species. Tigers (the largest felids) and lions would lose to only Brown Bears and Polar Bears, they could overpower every other bear species if they tried. And tigers are far heavier and stronger than sloth bears (adult male sloth bears included), they avoid conflict with sloth bears because it's too much of a risk-vs-reward most times, a solitary hunter like the tiger cannot afford to get injured. But make no mistake about it if a tiger is determined enough to kill a sloth bear, you can bet your bottom buck that it's going to end that sloth bear even in a non-ambush situation. And tigers have been documented to prey on Sloth Bears on more than one occasion...
At 03:20, this isn't a cave painting from Homo Habilis 1.8M years ago. The oldest human paintings discovered thus far are found in Indonesia, created by Homo Sapiens 40,000 years ago.
My little house panther enjoyed the footage of the dogs and wolves best. She doesn’t care for sea creatures very much unless they’re in her feeding bowl.
Magnificent video, as usual. Yes, animals that live together as a unit have better chances of survival than those who live solo and it clearly demonstrates that they knew that their is strength in numbers, long before we acknowledge that. All of the creatures demonstrated here, you surprised me with the European jackal. Not once have I ever heard or seen glimpses of it throughout my life learning about the natural world and all of its inhabitants. It really comes to show that nature never ceases to amaze us and we still have much to learn.
There are some dog breed that looks similar like Dingo or Shiba Inu. And ready adoption in their local dog shelter : Carolina dog from USA Pariah dog (Pye dog) from India Telomian (anjing kampung) dog from Malaysia Kintamani dog from Indonesia [fluffy] Formosan Mountain Dog from Taiwan Local Vietnamese Dog breed [round cat face dog]
Slight correction to an otherwise brilliant video as always Tasha, but the Dingo Proof fence was built to protect the South-Eastern parts of Australia, not the South West.
Those two cheetahs trying to take down a wildebeest… I’d never seen cheetahs go after anything larger than an impala! Obviously they usually go for Thomson’s, Grant’s and other gazelle, warthogs, and much smaller ungulates, like dik-dik, duiker, etc. Of course I’m sure they can take the juveniles of just about any herbivore… as long as the adults don’t trample them… but I wonder if they were successful with that wildebeest.
Even the hyenas are ran off by the African wild dogs. I had a Rhodesian Ridgeback and that guy was part African wild dog for sure, absolute machine dog.
Not possible, the African wild dog is in the genus Lycaon and the domestic dog on the genus Canis. This means they are too distantly related to be able to interbreed.
I've always liked the Dhole more than Wolves. They're brave enough to go after tigers & even young elephants. Not even African hunting dogs go after elephants.
Percentage is impressive, but might not tell everything. Energy spent mostly & numbers of individuals involved, to share a catch, all considered, efficiency might suggest otherwise! Anyway, their success there among renowned feline predators means something.
@@duancoviero9759 More or less so. My brothers and me, we get together best and also work together most effectively. But its quite possible to work together pretty well with guys who are not related to me. With women...
So hyenidae is part of feliformia, or the cat-like branch of Order Carnivora. Their dental structure is one of the big indicators that they are closer to cats than dogs. As far as hunting. It makes up a major portion of their diet and has a strange cooperative-competitive flow. As opposed to species like the African Wild Dog who ensure lower ranked members get to eat (i.e. the old and children) their fill, Spotted Hyena cooperatively take down the prey and then competitively attempt to gorge themselves. Provisioning rarely takes place, and this is thought to play a role in why they ween their children for so long (up to a year for lower ranked clan members). I got a lot of this information from Hans Kruuk's 1972 book "The Spotted Hyena." It's an academic book, so it can be a dry read.
Hyenas hunt in the exact same way as social canids like wolves and african wild dogs. They use their greater stamina to tire the prey and subdue it after the chase, even though the hyenas are willing to attack if the target refuses to run. And hyenas are not related to canids, they are evolutionarily closer to mongooses and fossas. The thing about hyenas is that they evolved in a similar way to canids and even more so because they faced the same problem. The ancestor of hyenas looked more like a african civet. And canines have such a simple anatomy that it is not very difficult to find prehistoric creatures that are almost identical to dogs, and some recent extinct ones, such as the thylacine, show how convergence evolution makes animals look alike. Even canines themselves imitate each other.
I know hippos are extremely dangerous, but are they really considered "predators" biologically speaking? I thought that was only used for carnivores or omnivores that hunt.
orca are dolphins and not whales so while it is understandable why they were thought to be whales because just look at them. i guess but i guess in orcas case it body is like that because of it being really helpful to get food.
dog family? Wikipedia tells us: "Order: Carnivora Suborder: Feliformia Family: Felidae Subfamily: Felinae" The whole video is as unscientific as this statement. Thumb down.
- YASS ANOTHER LONG VIDEO, CANNOT WAIT! I enjoy these videos for over 6 years, but the longer the better. I always wish you guys had longer videos, I'm tired of rewatching old ones. I know I'm not alone.. *WE ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS CHANNEL*
I thought dragonflies had a higher catch rate percentage than 85%
Animal not insect
lol insects are animals I think your thinking of the word mammal
I'm pretty sure bed bugs are the world's most successful predator
@@BoolahBoosh aight
@@elviebyers2145Insects are Animals. 🙄
Dragonfly is like "Okay just ignore me pretty Amazon Lady!".
I learned recently that hyaenidae is under the clade Feloidea, which includes viverridae, felidae, and hyaenidae! So technically, hyenas are "cat form".
@My_pfp_beats_all_dog_breeds. no felid would go toe to toe ever with any bear for that matter
@My_pfp_beats_all_dog_breeds. the reason that cave lions never adventured on to the arctic is because polar bears ate them all
even knowing cave lions where pack hunting animals
felids are as bad as canids butt atleast canids have conquered the Artic with polar bears around with felids have never did because they are too slow on the snow to survive
@My_pfp_beats_all_dog_breeds. A siberian tiger would get destroyed even by a sloth bear
@My_pfp_beats_all_dog_breeds. Sloth bear victims just like all tigers in general
@@mrpeddlethesealion ha ha funny coping whataboutery...
No canid could dream of going one-to-one against any bear species, even the largest canid species. Tigers (the largest felids) and lions would lose to only Brown Bears and Polar Bears, they could overpower every other bear species if they tried.
And tigers are far heavier and stronger than sloth bears (adult male sloth bears included), they avoid conflict with sloth bears because it's too much of a risk-vs-reward most times, a solitary hunter like the tiger cannot afford to get injured. But make no mistake about it if a tiger is determined enough to kill a sloth bear, you can bet your bottom buck that it's going to end that sloth bear even in a non-ambush situation. And tigers have been documented to prey on Sloth Bears on more than one occasion...
This channel helps ease with stress! Thanks again Animal Logic with another awesome video
Where do the vintage footage clips come from? Love the touch they add.
I want a second nature episode about animal shells!
Tasha may be my favorite presenter on this channel, and that's saying a lot.
SIMP
At 03:20, this isn't a cave painting from Homo Habilis 1.8M years ago. The oldest human paintings discovered thus far are found in Indonesia, created by Homo Sapiens 40,000 years ago.
It seemed almost racist the way it was edited 🤔
I just came from part 1,this is awesome 😎
Super glad u talked about the killer whale aka the Wolves of the Sea 🌊
My little house panther enjoyed the footage of the dogs and wolves best. She doesn’t care for sea creatures very much unless they’re in her feeding bowl.
Magnificent video, as usual. Yes, animals that live together as a unit have better chances of survival than those who live solo and it clearly demonstrates that they knew that their is strength in numbers, long before we acknowledge that. All of the creatures demonstrated here, you surprised me with the European jackal. Not once have I ever heard or seen glimpses of it throughout my life learning about the natural world and all of its inhabitants. It really comes to show that nature never ceases to amaze us and we still have much to learn.
7:56 those dingo puppies was so cute.
They do look like shiba inus
There are some dog breed that looks similar like Dingo or Shiba Inu. And ready adoption in their local dog shelter :
Carolina dog from USA
Pariah dog (Pye dog) from India
Telomian (anjing kampung) dog from Malaysia
Kintamani dog from Indonesia [fluffy]
Formosan Mountain Dog from Taiwan
Local Vietnamese Dog breed [round cat face dog]
@@user-10021 Bush doge
Yep.
I think I've caught a case of "cute aggression".
Must squish-
Slight correction to an otherwise brilliant video as always Tasha, but the Dingo Proof fence was built to protect the South-Eastern parts of Australia, not the South West.
Great video! I'm excited for longer content and I would love to see a video about narwhals❤
My 6-year-old daughter Juliet really really wants a video about grumpy black rain frogs. She says "I love your videos!"💘💝💖💗💓💞💕💟❣❤🔥❤🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤🤍♥
Cooperation is king. It is our special skill, and why we reign supreme, despite being small, slow, and weak.
I think a deep dive into just how the pack communicates non verbally and sounds they all make.
United we stand, divided we fall ... Animal world, human world., no difference.
No difference, and no doubt. Unity is what humans need, yet division continues to live on unfortunately.
- 5:13 Is it just me or did anyone else jump a bit when that beast looked like it was taking a chunk outta our friend Tasha!? 😵💫😳😲
I thought dragonflies had a 95% success rate when hunting
AWD are the best land predator. Seahorses and dragonfies are far superior hunters tho
What about interspecies hunting, like a coyote and a badger?
- *Who else is super excited for a longer video!?!*
👇🏽
Those two cheetahs trying to take down a wildebeest… I’d never seen cheetahs go after anything larger than an impala! Obviously they usually go for Thomson’s, Grant’s and other gazelle, warthogs, and much smaller ungulates, like dik-dik, duiker, etc. Of course I’m sure they can take the juveniles of just about any herbivore… as long as the adults don’t trample them… but I wonder if they were successful with that wildebeest.
Those hogs are fkn HUGE!
Wonder if a tiger cub raised by a lion pride would learn to hunt cooperatively
Even the hyenas are ran off by the African wild dogs. I had a Rhodesian Ridgeback and that guy was part African wild dog for sure, absolute machine dog.
Not possible, the African wild dog is in the genus Lycaon and the domestic dog on the genus Canis. This means they are too distantly related to be able to interbreed.
Dogs and wild dogs can't interbreed. The Ridgeback has genes from precolonial domesticated dogs.
Way to rain on his parade with your science, dudes
@@sagenod440 I think it's cool his dogs are related to pre contact African dogs. Like imagine having a dog that's part dingo
We have video of our local par of barred owls hunting squirrels together!
social jumping as the viable survival meta for sure.
Kipling wrote about red dogs, as a nightmare type animal.
I've always liked the Dhole more than Wolves. They're brave enough to go after tigers & even young elephants. Not even African hunting dogs go after elephants.
Wow, i didn't think training dogs would take 135,000 years 😮
"IN THEIR OWN TRACK"
"CAME THE WOLFPACK"
Seahorses have a higher success rate when hunting, don't they? 🤔 Would love to see animalogic do a video on seahorses.
The definition of GANG GANG. 😅
How much more or less efficient is a baleen whale at hunting krill? or are they not considered predators?
Percentage is impressive, but might not tell everything. Energy spent mostly & numbers of individuals involved, to share a catch, all considered, efficiency might suggest otherwise! Anyway, their success there among renowned feline predators means something.
Im curious, how do you acquire your animal clips? Do you have to get the rights to each one? Thanks!
The most auccessful pack hunters ever... Homo sapiens, the ape that became a wolf.
5:16 can anybody explain how boas can act as pack hunters? I mean how do they share their food?
Wait those dingos are the ones ee we keep as dogs. Since we don't their breed we just call them mongrels
And here I thought the most effective pack hunters were humans.
That's hard to say, humans we usually just try to dominate one another. Your close family are your pack who cooperate.
@@duancoviero9759 More or less so. My brothers and me, we get together best and also work together most effectively. But its quite possible to work together pretty well with guys who are not related to me. With women...
It's nice to be a full minute and a half in before you tell us this is part 2 of something.
For sure more content to go back to you can always learn something new with this channel !
dragonflies and about half a dozen wild cat species want a word with you.
such an excellent channel ^^
and we must know this. we have also used this trade. (far out in our past)
"how dumb I am to answer it in the first minute of reading the thumbnail".
Tell that to tigers, bears, eagles, and sharks
Where is the first part of this video?
Dragonfly: am I a joke to you?
Bat-eared Fox = furry baby yoda, lolz...
PS: I kinda miss "Just Kidding" as 2nd Nature's narrator...
But what about the hyena Could you explain how they hunt and how come they’re not related to dogs ?
So hyenidae is part of feliformia, or the cat-like branch of Order Carnivora. Their dental structure is one of the big indicators that they are closer to cats than dogs. As far as hunting. It makes up a major portion of their diet and has a strange cooperative-competitive flow. As opposed to species like the African Wild Dog who ensure lower ranked members get to eat (i.e. the old and children) their fill, Spotted Hyena cooperatively take down the prey and then competitively attempt to gorge themselves. Provisioning rarely takes place, and this is thought to play a role in why they ween their children for so long (up to a year for lower ranked clan members).
I got a lot of this information from Hans Kruuk's 1972 book "The Spotted Hyena." It's an academic book, so it can be a dry read.
Hyenas hunt in the exact same way as social canids like wolves and african wild dogs. They use their greater stamina to tire the prey and subdue it after the chase, even though the hyenas are willing to attack if the target refuses to run.
And hyenas are not related to canids, they are evolutionarily closer to mongooses and fossas. The thing about hyenas is that they evolved in a similar way to canids and even more so because they faced the same problem. The ancestor of hyenas looked more like a african civet. And canines have such a simple anatomy that it is not very difficult to find prehistoric creatures that are almost identical to dogs, and some recent extinct ones, such as the thylacine, show how convergence evolution makes animals look alike. Even canines themselves imitate each other.
lol oh man some of the clip voiceovers were hilarious. "THAR SHE BLOWS!" and the last one was just great, that would be my luck.
Second nature, let's gooooo!
I know hippos are extremely dangerous, but are they really considered "predators" biologically speaking? I thought that was only used for carnivores or omnivores that hunt.
Goated Video Cheetahs are my favorite animals
Wait.... what did you show a hippopotamus as an example of a predator???
Someone watches Lost... based on that thumbnail title.
Go for Aardvark!
she normaly talk about plant, but now she talk about animal thats new 😮😮
12:27 I mean also... y"know.. European grey wolves.
Was that fact about cheetahs being more dog than cat true? If it is, then my whole life has been a lie.
Cheetahs are cats, their closest cousins are pumas or mountain lions.
orca are dolphins and not whales so while it is understandable why they were thought to be whales because just look at them. i guess but i guess in orcas case it body is like that because of it being really helpful to get food.
Humans did this against wooly mammoths😂
Sea horses have a higher catch rate
Animal is more cooperative than my colleague... 🙄🙄🙄
Orcas are just unfair to the rest of the ocean ecosystem
Grasshopper mouse has a 100% success rate.
Plant domestication please 🥺
So cheaters are more dog than cat and hyenas are more cat than dog
yo . if you're reading this . i love you ❤
tbh. I find it very misleading to interpret the grey wolf as a purely North American species.
What i learn there ain't no ones in the wild💀💀 just like kids now and days
Nobody:
Pawns: "Wolves Hunt in PACKS."
Why do so many animal ancestries originate in Asia? Hmmm....
It's the largest continent, Asian animals often won out in biotic interchanges. I the same way introduced species often wreck island ecosystems
2 mill
cool
lol boas
Where is that idiotic clip from, about cheetahs descending from dogs?
From an old documentary. From a time when it was believed that cheetahs were dogs due to their adaptive similarities in running.
shouldn't orca be in this list ?????
Orcas are in this video!
The previous second nature presenter was better in all ways. you should really bring her back.
dog family? Wikipedia tells us: "Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Felinae"
The whole video is as unscientific as this statement. Thumb down.