@Jack Wilson evolution is gradual... And it never stops....there's never a need it's always a reaction to climate temperature and many other variables over millions of years
Porcupine thing Remoraid is a Remora fish, the one that done a symbiosis commensalism (or even parasitic) with sharks and others. It evolve into Octilerry (which is an octopus) just because the shooting mouth ability. Edit: and suction cups.
Maybe if u put many dogs in a place where its 80% water and 20% sand where the only food source would be fish and wait a couple millions of years or so than you might have a whale like creature (or dolphins)
Nature: **smoking fucktons of weed and is incredibly high** "Okay, what if we took this small, dog-like hoofed mammal..." **hits joint again** _"...and then turned it into an 80-foot obese submarine that screams to navigate?"_
Land Animal ancestors: let’s go on land! [takes generations of hard work to evolve to live on land] Whales: [goes back in the water] Ancestors: excuse me what the feck
I wouldn't take it. I'd just leave it. Though now I wonder that if it was alive. Do you think it would be smart enough to be trained like a dog? Or would it take lots of time to domesticate them into pets.
It is genuinely awesome to think how far mammals came after the dinosaurs, pterosaurs and sea reptiles went extinct. Giants like Paraceratherium (Indricotheres) and Palaeoloxodon Namadicus could surpass the biggest theropods and even rival some sauropods in size, canines and felines the pack-hunting roles of the dromaeosaurs before them, and mammals living in the ocean - the titanic whales and brilliant dolphins - became larger and smarter predators than the sea reptiles ever were. Even the mosasaurs would be shoo'd off by the giant sperm whales or taken down by pods of orcas. The dinosaurs may still be around in the form of birds - and, make no mistake, birds are damn diverse and numerous - but even the largest of them today can't hold a candle to the modern sea giants. Little, dog-sized Pakicetus, which lived only several million years in the wake of the KT extinction, definitely saw to that.
It must be nice to have so much detailed knowledge of a time that not one scientist experienced. They must make many assumptions when putting our prehistoric past together.
@@saturn722 They are not assumptions. There are many stepping stones of intermediate fossils that fill in pieces of a much larger puzzle. And what is so great is that if one is so inclined, they can look up all of this research for themselves.
@@Lemarcus03 Intermediate Fossils you say?? Is that the same as transitional fossils? You know, fossils that show one species morphing into another? There should be trillions! And they should also be quite obvious. I’m 60 years young and have done a little research while looking for the truth. Science now says there was something called the Cambrian Explosion. Fully formed animals as we know them today that appeared at the same time. At least that’s what the fossil record shows. They think it happened about 550 million years ago. I wasn’t there so I can’t say.
@@saturn722 why should there be trillions? Every skeleton does not become a fossil. And species are not morphing. There are incremental changes over generations so all fossils are transitional. If you were to do more than a little research, you can learn how they figured these things out. Because, just as you said, none of us was around. Science is always subject to new data but so, so many successful predictions havw been made of certain intermediate fossils from certain time periods so as to make the Theory of Biological Evolution one of the best documented.
This article is about a marine mammal. For other uses, see Whale (disambiguation). For further information, see Cetacea. Whales are a widely distributed and diverse group of fully aquatic placental marine mammals. They are an informal grouping within the infraorder Cetacea, usually excluding dolphins and porpoises. Whales, dolphins and porpoises belong to the order Cetartiodactyla with even-toed ungulates and their closest living relatives are the hippopotamuses, having diverged about 40 million years ago. The two parvorders of whales, baleen whales (Mysticeti) and toothed whales (Odontoceti), are thought to have split apart around 34 million years ago. The whales comprise eight extant families: Balaenopteridae (the rorquals), Balaenidae (right whales), Cetotheriidae (the pygmy right whale), Eschrichtiidae (the grey whale), Monodontidae (belugas and narwhals), Physeteridae (the sperm whale), Kogiidae (the dwarf and pygmy sperm whale), and Ziphiidae (the beaked whales). Whales Whales are not a taxon, they are an informal grouping of the infraorder Cetacea Southern right whale.jpg Southern right whale Information Classification of Cetacea Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Cetartiodactyla Clade: Cetancodontamorpha Suborder: Whippomorpha Infraorder: Cetacea Families considered whales Parvorder Mysticeti Family Balaenidae Family Balaenopteridae Family Eschrichtiidae Family Cetotheriidae Parvorder Odontoceti (excluding dolphins and porpoises) Family Monodontidae Family Physeteridae Family Kogiidae Family Ziphiidae vte Whales are creatures of the open ocean; they feed, mate, give birth, suckle and raise their young at sea. So extreme is their adaptation to life underwater that they are unable to survive on land. Whales range in size from the 2.6 metres (8.5 ft) and 135 kilograms (298 lb) dwarf sperm whale to the 29.9 metres (98 ft) and 190 metric tons (210 short tons) blue whale, which is the largest creature that has ever lived. The sperm whale is the largest toothed predator on earth. Several species exhibit sexual dimorphism, in that the females are larger than males. Baleen whales have no teeth; instead they have plates of baleen, a fringe-like structure used to expel water while retaining the krill and plankton which they feed on. They use their throat pleats to expand the mouth to take in huge gulps of water. Balaenids have heads that can make up 40% of their body mass to take in water. Toothed whales, on the other hand, have conical teeth adapted to catching fish or squid. Baleen whales have a well developed sense of "smell", whereas toothed whales have well-developed hearing − their hearing, that is adapted for both air and water, is so well developed that some can survive even if they are blind. Some species, such as sperm whales, are well adapted for diving to great depths to catch squid and other favoured prey. Whales have evolved from land-living mammals. As such whales must breathe air regularly, although they can remain submerged under water for long periods of time. Some species such as the sperm whale are able to stay submerged for as much as 90 minutes.[1] They have blowholes (modified nostrils) located on top of their heads, through which air is taken in and expelled. They are warm-blooded, and have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin. With streamlined fusiform bodies and two limbs that are modified into flippers, whales can travel at up to 20 knots, though they are not as flexible or agile as seals. Whales produce a great variety of vocalizations, notably the extended songs of the humpback whale. Although whales are widespread, most species prefer the colder waters of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and migrate to the equator to give birth. Species such as humpbacks and blue whales are capable of travelling thousands of miles without feeding. Males typically mate with multiple females every year, but females only mate every two to three years. Calves are typically born in the spring and summer months and females bear all the responsibility for raising them. Mothers of some species fast and nurse their young for one to two years. Once relentlessly hunted for their products, whales are now protected by international law. The North Atlantic right whales nearly became extinct in the twentieth century, with a population low of 450, and the North Pacific grey whale population is ranked Critically Endangered by the IUCN. Besides whaling, they also face threats from bycatch and marine pollution. The meat, blubber and baleen of whales have traditionally been used by indigenous peoples of the Arctic. Whales have been depicted in various cultures worldwide, notably by the Inuit and the coastal peoples of Vietnam and Ghana, who sometimes hold whale funerals. Whales occasionally feature in literature and film, as in the great white whale of Herman Melville's Moby Dick. Small whales, such as belugas, are sometimes kept in captivity and trained to perform tricks, but breeding success has been poor and the animals often die within a few months of capture. Whale watching has become a form of tourism around the world.
Actually there are 30 extant orders of mammals, Tachyglossa (Echidnas and Fossil Relatives), Platypoda (Platypus and Fossil Relatives), Didelphimorphia (Opossums), Paucituberculata (Shrew Opossums and Fossil Relatives), Microbiotheria (Colocolo and Fossil Relatives), Notoryctemorphia (Marsupial Moles and Fossil Relatives), Dasyuromorphia (Carnivorous Marsupials), Peramelemorphia (Bilby and Bandicoots), Diprotodontia (Diprotodonts), Cingulata (Armadillos and Fossil Relatives), Pilosa (Sloths and Anteaters), Tubulidentata (Aardvark and Fossil Relatives), Macroscelidea (Elephant Shrews and Fossil Relatives), Afrosoricida (Tenrecs, Otter Shrews, and Golden Moles), Hyracoidea (Hyraxes), Proboscidea (Elephants and Fossil Relatives), and Sirenia (Sirenians), Soricomorpha (Shrews, Moles, Desmans, and Solenodons), Chiroptera (Bats), Erinaceomorpha (Hedgehogs, Gymnures, Moonrat, and Fossil Relatives), Pholidota (Pangolins), Carnivora (Carnivorans), Perissodactyla (Odd-Toed Hoofed Mammals), Artiodactyla (Even-Toed Hoofed Mammals), Cetacea (Whales), Lagomorpha (Lagomorphs), Rodentia (Rodents), Scandentia (Treeshrews), Dermoptera (Colugos and Fossil Relatives), and Primata (Primates), these eight orders of placental mammals Soricomorpha, Chiroptera, Erinaceomorpha, Pholidota, Carnivora, Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, and Cetacea are part of the great superorder Laurasiatheria, therefore Artiodactyla and Cetacea are more often treated as separate orders and the orders Soricomorpha and Erinaceomorpha are not closely related and do not form a monophyletic group.
whales also grew huge because there wasn’t anything big to eat them. Once super giant predators like Megalodon and Livyatan went extinct, Whales were basically left to grow uncharted and balloon into the massive creatures they are today.
was genuinely sad when I saw mr. early whale crying at 3 million years ago. but then felt glad again when the earths climate shifted to favour them lol
Fruitarian as a matter of fact they are right before your very eyes. Mutations occur on a regular basis but only some of those pass on. Some not noticeable to the human eye just yet.
Well unfortunately not for your cat and dog lol but many insects like mosquitoes evolved in a matter of few dozens of years and being capable of resisting to certain poisons that we use in agriculture...its won’t be a new specie but it shows very well how natural selection works, and that’s the basis of evolution
Carosello Show yeah that most of the reason why insects with high reproductive rates evolve on a more frequent level. they live shorter faster generations.
@@caroselloshow5615 not only that. Take a good look on the tuatara. They aren't lizards but related to turtles, and are the fastest to evolve, mainly because their genetic sequence.
Well they are in such a small water place to evolve into something closely similar to whales, but theres still a chance to evolve into something aquatic like those manatees or dugongs
That’s nice and all, but what specific microbiological changes occurred during all that time to stimulate that rapid growth in whales? I mean both whales and dolphins actually belong in the same clade (cetacea), but you don’t see an evolutionary growth of dolphins over time. Why not? I ask because I love these marine mammals :)
Well, I asked about microbiological changes not necessarily feeding behaviors because I'm sure the feeding behaviors were influenced by something more intricately genetic, but thanks anyway.
I agree, but how do you know what I know or do not know? Humbly speaking, you can't just pass judgment (or imply it) based on what someone else says or addresses. I did do some research though on the evolutionary history of whales and dolphins and found that both odontocetes (cetaceans with sharp teeth) and mysticetes (cetaceans with baleen plates for teeth) diverged from their common ancestor about 35 million years ago. Now, what is interesting is that this recent common ancestor had sharp teeth, meaning that the baleen plate teeth in some whales (like the blue whale) is a derived trait, which is really intersting to me. My question was asking about the microbiological and genetic changes that occurred to develop these traits in whales, traits like baleen plates and enormous size, etc., that are not found in a cetacean like the dolphin. I just wonder what genetic changes could have taken place in the DNA of that common ancestor to produce an animal that once had sharp teeth to one that now has bristle-like teeth. How can these changes just completely "revamp" the teeth composition and growth capacities of whales to make the magnificent blue whales that we see and observe today? Such information is a bit more complex/difficult to come by, but it would definitely make the cetacean evolution line seem more complete. Simply put, all of this has got to be more than just "method of feeding." Thanks for reading! :)
Ok, I read a scientific article discussing how mysticetes transitioned from teeth to baleen over time. The paper provided phylogeny, fossil, and gene analyses of different mysticete species and more info that goes too in depth for me. Anyways, what was most interesting to me was that there were some mysticetes that had both teeth and baleen present at one time in the whale phylogeny. The paper explained how some genes of several whale species exhibited frameshifts and stop codons in the genes AMBN and ENAM, which both code for proteins necessary for tooth mineralization/development. These mutations would gradually lead to the loss of teeth in the whale species line that would explain why mysticete whales of today only have baleen and filter-feed. The proteins would no longer be made, leading to the loss of teeth and the whale species' increased reliance on baleen to obtain food. Why these specific mutations occurred at the time that they did is not really clarified by the paper, but it does provide several hypotheses about the change in whale species' behavior and feeding habits that helped usher these traits down the whale phylogeny. Either way, many researchers disagree over these. So you are right. How baleen was developed in whales to replace teeth is a matter of debate. Either I'll have to do more research or just somethings can't be entirely explained or understood. And all of this is just scratching the surface because it only covers teeth. How whales grew to their enormous sizes, how their oral cavities expanded greatly to accommodate baleen, how skull shape and structures were morphed to be the way they are today, it's all too complex and requires more understanding than I think I can handle. Thanks for sparking this research interest in me, though. :) Any of your thoughts? Article: Deméré, T. A., McGowen, M. R., Berta, A., & Gatesy, J. (2008). Morphological and molecular evidence for a stepwise evolutionary transition from teeth to baleen in mysticete whales. Systematic Biology, 57(1), 15-37.
Greenalien22 well damn you answered yourself lol. But to explain why this mutations occurred you should always look at the changes that occurred in their habitat. If the habitat of the ancestor of whales didn’t have a huge presence of water the animals with the mutations that can give different types of limbs that were adaptable to water would never occurred, and we wouldn’t have whales but different animals. Its always because a change in the environment that can be caused by the slow movement of the tectonics that causes a change in the climate or by many other factors. But surely this animals didn’t change but they were selected becoming better adaptable to their new environment
Evolution is not science. It is a conspiracy. Please answer this: What came first? The heart or the bloodvessel? Also: Law of biogenisis: only life can create life. How does that work in the evolution theory?
@@kdkdt7959 1. A common misconception, Evolution is not Conspiracy (unless you want to force everybody to thinking that it is, which is not). It ain't a religion, it ain't a belief, it's not made by atheists because Darwin was a devout Catholic when he studied it. 2. Well, actually. It were blood first, then blood vessels, then the heart. So I guess, it's the blood vessels... 3. Evolution does not explain the origin of life, that's Abiogenesis. Evolution only explains the diversity of species and how animals developed extraordinary traits over time. That's it If you want to deny Evolution, well it's best of you to deny reality instead...
Teacher: Did any body learn any thing about whales? Me: I did Teacher: What Did You Learn? Me: Whales were dogs 50 million years ago and I even tested it with my dog He’s uh.. Sleeping in the ocean.
It's funny how people say like "Does anyone believe these lies?" But at the same time they believe in a God who came out of nowhere and made everything perfect.
I remember basilosaurus was thought to be a mososaur because of its name "saurus" and their teeth. Now they are in fact giant toothed whales of the late eocene.
“If you put a whales blood vessels in a line it could stretch from Pluto to the sun and back over 2 and 1/2 times!” *Ferb I know what we’re gonna do today*
Wait, why did they get the bright idea to start swimming? And how would they evolve into whales over that long, wouldn't they drown when they had 4 legs or something from exhaustion? What'd they eat, why didn't they go on land? I'm so confused, why didn't I ever pay attention in science class ;;
The "Pre-Whales" as I like to call them, didn't really swim well during their early days. They only go to the water for a short time, and go back into eating fish. But, as they began to do the same thing over and over again, they got used to swimming more and more until they got used to the water. They also still breathe, but I think they can hold it for a long period of time. Oh and also, the reason why they had to swim is either because of predators and/or to avoid competition with other animals Their food mainly consisted on fish, but then turned to feeding krill on most whales, but some still did eat other animals like squid, fish, etc. Also, did you watch the video?
It depends though, scientists wouldn't know for sure if they can't get larger than 109 feet. Anything is technically possible in Nature, animals are different from humans and can get abnormally larger than their maximum size. Yes, we can get abnormalities in our growth. But we have a different body and structure compared to animals. Again, it depends.
Whale : eats more and grows larger Human : eats more, being unhealthy and die... How does they grow that much...how their digestive system evolves... Then will humans grow bigger if they eat much??
Wait, so that dog became a giant whale when it went into the ocean?
Lemme go grab my cat.
It's not a dog.
@@olenaa.9503 r/whoosh
@Jack Wilson evolution is gradual... And it never stops....there's never a need it's always a reaction to climate temperature and many other variables over millions of years
@Jack Wilson Evolution is a law, an observable fact. People who deny it are just plain stupid.
@Jack Wilson No, it's both a law and a theory, it's a fact, if you see "so many holes" in it, then you should study it more I think.
Whales really said:
“Reject modernity, Embrace Tradition”
Ansestors: take millions of years evolving out of water
Whale: jumps inside the water again
Ansestors: years of academy training wasted
I understood that reference
I seen that reference before, where was it from?
Toy Story!
Return fish, fish together Stronk
*emotional damage
The whale's ancestor took summer vacation on a whale new level
Quite literally 😂
LoL
looooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool
*whale new level
But the blue Whale has a very long bigger and bigger!
Pokemon Earth:
Dog evolves to Seal,
Seal evolves to Dolphin,
Dolphin evolves to Whale.
and whale evolves to Amy Schumer
could you list which pokemon evolve like that? because i don't recall any
@@wilsonseto1 Remoraid (A frog thing) to Octillery (Octopus)
oh that was actually a fish
Porcupine thing Remoraid is a Remora fish, the one that done a symbiosis commensalism (or even parasitic) with sharks and others. It evolve into Octilerry (which is an octopus) just because the shooting mouth ability.
Edit: and suction cups.
'' Whale took all of that effort and throw it out of the window ''
Why can't my classes be like this
Not self liked comment right?
Not Justin.Y's Clone stfu lame ass dude
@@whereareyounow6310 what's your problem
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
No?
Ancestors: WE'VE MADE IT TO LAND
Whales: [goes back into water]
Ancestors: Am I a joke to you?
Whales: yes
becomes the current biggest living organism on earth like a boss
You copied a comment that was 5 months ago
I came in the comments specifically for this
Copied
*after seeing the video*
*Me :*
*well...then l am gonna make a* *new kind of whale* *smirking at my dog *
Dog: NANI !!!!!?????
Maybe if u put many dogs in a place where its 80% water and 20% sand where the only food source would be fish and wait a couple millions of years or so than you might have a whale like creature (or dolphins)
@@0000-q3g whales are hippos.
Oh Yeah yeah They already exist: Pinnipeds. They’re in the same suborder as dogs, bears and Mustelids called Caniformia
Mohamed Ahmed ..and pigs. All three can be traced back to Andrewsarchus
Whales had legs
**Faints**
looked like a rat dog
@@TheMoon-nr5cv rat dog....rat dog 🎶 ...haha...if u ever see the series u will kno
coke 4 omh
what if whales re evolved legs and they literally ate everyting
What do See
Just imagine how terrifying it would be if whales loved to eat humans!
well they'd have to get on land first and if they could, they'd be small in size
U got 10 seconds to escape from the mouth haha
wilsonseto1 I'm not talking about when people are on land. I maen when we are at sea.
It woudn't be scary cause they can't move on land
BADU GM because people are only ever on land and don't ever go on sea for any reason at all???
And humans almost wiped out them..... for lamp fuel....
@Trey King dude no
And as it turns out, we had another, less bloody alternative.
A fairly inaccurate dinosaur picture and took there vomit and used it in perfume
Omg
I knew IT whales are giant rats wait wath
mom : drink your milk to be big and strong.
me : I am taking the path of whale, gonna go eat krill and live in the ocean
@Bhavik Patel 😫
underrated is a good thing though.
This is tooo underrated
Yes! Grow chonk, become whale.
And you evolving
Throw some horses to the ocean and wait 50 million years later to see that it will become backboned gigantic octopuses xD
JK
lmao that made me choke on my water
Oh........ Well........ I pressed read more after i actually did it..... R.I.P horses
Wouldn’t that be a seahorse? Lol
Danis Raditya lol but you need evolution to do that, and evolution is factually unsupported and false, so that’s impossible.
@@Wow-gd3vc r/wooosh
0:39: "They traded in their 4 legs for flippers"...did they have a receipt?
No
Rayyan Zahferan r/wooosh
Maybe
@@itsjynx6975 not how you use a woosh but ok
Yes, their hip bones
*After 450 years, Doraemon will exist*
Lmao
I really loves doraemon
Justine De Leon great humor bro :D
Wt lmao
jack meHoff
Stupid
Nature: **smoking fucktons of weed and is incredibly high** "Okay, what if we took this small, dog-like hoofed mammal..."
**hits joint again** _"...and then turned it into an 80-foot obese submarine that screams to navigate?"_
I love this
*so whales were basically dogs*
Lol, by your insider's logic, you too.
*so my pet dog is going to be whale?*
Patrick Dan siajaj
“Good boy, now you’re gonna have sex with a whale!”
@Altair i agree
*"The sun is a deadly laser"*
"nOt AnYmOrE tHeRe'S a BlAnKeT"
“Taste the sun”
*was
yellow vegtables search for «history of the world, i guess»
*snow ball earth*
Land Animal ancestors: let’s go on land!
[takes generations of hard work to evolve to live on land]
Whales: [goes back in the water]
Ancestors: excuse me what the feck
Or maybe
Ancestor: am I a joke to you?!
*TRIGGERED*
@Jakjak orcas dont have ballains
Pakicetus: I'm tired of being a dog! I'm turning back into a fish!
Whale: And that's how I got here.
Pakacetus are evolved from India
Throw a bear into the ocean and it becomes a
*Sea Bear* it’s a spongebob joke
Wow...
Water bear (not to be confused with Tartigrade)
LOL! I remember that episode!
Just don’t wear your sombrero in a goofy fashion!
Squidward did not enjoy that joke 😂😍
Nature logic:little dog evolves into whale
A huge dangerous dinosaur evolves into cute humming bird or any bird
TheStopMotionMania
Its actually true
Birds are dinosaurs
no,a scary dinosaur that can kill you literally becomes a chicken
Dinosaurs still exist; they're called cassowaries.
technically tiny dog like deer evolves into whale
Imagine you’re at a pet store and you see a earless dog and you ask
“What is that?”
*”it’s a whale”*
“Whale okay, I’ll take it.”
I wouldn't take it. I'd just leave it. Though now I wonder that if it was alive. Do you think it would be smart enough to be trained like a dog? Or would it take lots of time to domesticate them into pets.
Ancestors: we did it! We
finally came to land!!
Whale: *Happily Jumps Back In The Water*
Anecestors: Am I joke to you?????
Pauline Ravi stolen comment
@@retsreinyrelgeinthrelaveri1456 u never know maybe the other person could have stolen it too
“All can u eat buffet”
🐋🐳🐋🐳🐋🐳
“Has a belly button Size of a plate”
🐳🐋🐳🐋🐳🐋🐳🐋🐳🐋🐳
i'm a whale
Ok
Sounds like americans
@@gtx-808 woooosh
I
Hope
That
Everyone
Who
Reads
This
Comment
Will
Have
A
Good
Day!
My day has been atrocious, and I think it all started going down hill after I read this comment
@@petercarioscia9189 just shut the fu#k up for god sake 😡😠😡😠
Dont worry jullus and crew you have the best comment hope you have a nice day too ^^
I’m not really having a good day. But after reading this comment, I feel better. Thank you
Thanks for your pray!!
I hope you also have beautiful life
....but it's night
Because they drink a lot of milk.
HE NEEDS SOME MILK
NO IT'S MALK NOT MILK!1!!!1!11!!!
no because there might be a mysterious animal larger than that.......................i think the bloop?!
sand castle no it’s MULK
No they drink a lot of cum.
0:13 "Let's rewind the clock back 50 million years"
Dolphins: "Why am I still here?"
Whales are nowadays flying.
Airbus Beluga
Thanks for 139 likes and 6 comments
did someone say my name?
I've never seen those before, they're so cool!!
shampa mallick.banik baby beluga baby beluga! Swimming in deep blue...sky 😂
Thank you for 47 likes and 3 comments
shampa mallick.banik lol
Wales Are Now...
A Country
Jammy Jammz lol
Jammy Jammz lol hahahahahahaha
soon wales will become a city...
WALES IS MY CITY
@@galaxydiamond6758 whales is actually a state in australia
New south whales
Whales? You mean Thanos fish.
not funny
@@Lady_Odi Man, it's a good thing you died in Infinity War, no one misses you.
well... i don't think so but hé each to their own right?
@@aburameshino77 I'm well aware. It seems you pseudo-intellectual internet neophytes are not capable of processing jokes.
Lol
Its amazing that science can tell us what happened million of years with accuracy.
But can't tell us the weather tomorrow.....
Its not 100% accurate tbh
Accurate?. No. This is just Darwinian theory. No proof, and nonsense
Science gives us the best explanation available for our time, when new information comes, we throw away the previous explanation
damn too many low iq people, anything more complicated than "my sky daddy did it", y'all go full retard..
You sure that a whale's blood vessel can stretch from the Sun to Pluto and back?
THE DISTANCE: 1,181,258,4960 km
Jackmatica you mean 11,812,584,960 Km
We have a lot of capillaries
Jackmatica
Yeah impossible. It takes a craft that’s traveling millions of miles a day 9 years to get to Pluto
our s can go 2 times around the equator and half
@JuicyWatermelone u make me feel as if i have a worm in my body now.
3:00 . lucky for them, otherwise they will extinct. you know, human will kill anything that threat them
You mean just like any dominate predator does to succeed lol. Moron that's how survival works don't cry over facts.
*_THEY WILL EXTINCT_*
@@roadsigncheems1566 XD
AnYtHiNg ThAt ThReAt ThEm
Eat*
Evolution can you give me lungs for land?
To live on Land?
Yeeeees to live on land...
Actually goes back to water *like a boss*
*WHALE TIME*
Tiktaalik: we made it to land
Cetaceans: i’m going to end this man’s whole career
What’s that about Tiktok?
I love whales 🐋 it’s definitely my spirit animal
Rimsha Khalid because you have big mouth?
Rimsha Khalid nice. Mine too
Mine is a Honey badger because I don't give a shit.
You can eat 2 tons of food?
i am one
So making the blood vessel in a blue whale in a straight line can basically travel the earth several times over.
It would cover the earth like 1k times
Pakicetus was like
*“Screw Weight Watchers!! I’m joining Whale Watchers!!”*
It is genuinely awesome to think how far mammals came after the dinosaurs, pterosaurs and sea reptiles went extinct. Giants like Paraceratherium (Indricotheres) and Palaeoloxodon Namadicus could surpass the biggest theropods and even rival some sauropods in size, canines and felines the pack-hunting roles of the dromaeosaurs before them, and mammals living in the ocean - the titanic whales and brilliant dolphins - became larger and smarter predators than the sea reptiles ever were. Even the mosasaurs would be shoo'd off by the giant sperm whales or taken down by pods of orcas.
The dinosaurs may still be around in the form of birds - and, make no mistake, birds are damn diverse and numerous - but even the largest of them today can't hold a candle to the modern sea giants. Little, dog-sized Pakicetus, which lived only several million years in the wake of the KT extinction, definitely saw to that.
It must be nice to have so much detailed knowledge of a time that not one scientist experienced. They must make many assumptions when putting our prehistoric past together.
@@saturn722 They are not assumptions. There are many stepping stones of intermediate fossils that fill in pieces of a much larger puzzle. And what is so great is that if one is so inclined, they can look up all of this research for themselves.
@@Lemarcus03 Intermediate Fossils you say?? Is that the same as transitional fossils? You know, fossils that show one species morphing into another? There should be trillions! And they should also be quite obvious. I’m 60 years young and have done a little research while looking for the truth. Science now says there was something called the Cambrian Explosion. Fully formed animals as we know them today that appeared at the same time. At least that’s what the fossil record shows. They think it happened about 550 million years ago. I wasn’t there so I can’t say.
@@saturn722 why should there be trillions? Every skeleton does not become a fossil. And species are not morphing. There are incremental changes over generations so all fossils are transitional. If you were to do more than a little research, you can learn how they figured these things out. Because, just as you said, none of us was around. Science is always subject to new data but so, so many successful predictions havw been made of certain intermediate fossils from certain time periods so as to make the Theory of Biological Evolution one of the best documented.
just so you know dromaeosaurs were not pack hunters
This comment section is irritating
?
@@slut_destroyer6919 what can you say about that, God?
@@slut_destroyer6919 lol
@Ben bruh what? Ok
finally someone said it
Imagine being at Taco Bell and seeing a giant whale with legs walking by and thinking it was normal
Whales are my favorite hoofed mammal.
“YEEES we are finally evolving! Let’s get out of here!!”
Whale: *Haha water go Splish”
WE LOVE WHALES XD
This article is about a marine mammal. For other uses, see Whale (disambiguation).
For further information, see Cetacea.
Whales are a widely distributed and diverse group of fully aquatic placental marine mammals. They are an informal grouping within the infraorder Cetacea, usually excluding dolphins and porpoises. Whales, dolphins and porpoises belong to the order Cetartiodactyla with even-toed ungulates and their closest living relatives are the hippopotamuses, having diverged about 40 million years ago. The two parvorders of whales, baleen whales (Mysticeti) and toothed whales (Odontoceti), are thought to have split apart around 34 million years ago. The whales comprise eight extant families: Balaenopteridae (the rorquals), Balaenidae (right whales), Cetotheriidae (the pygmy right whale), Eschrichtiidae (the grey whale), Monodontidae (belugas and narwhals), Physeteridae (the sperm whale), Kogiidae (the dwarf and pygmy sperm whale), and Ziphiidae (the beaked whales).
Whales
Whales are not a taxon, they are an informal grouping of the infraorder Cetacea
Southern right whale.jpg
Southern right whale
Information
Classification of
Cetacea
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Cetartiodactyla
Clade: Cetancodontamorpha
Suborder: Whippomorpha
Infraorder: Cetacea
Families considered whales
Parvorder Mysticeti
Family Balaenidae
Family Balaenopteridae
Family Eschrichtiidae
Family Cetotheriidae
Parvorder Odontoceti (excluding dolphins and porpoises)
Family Monodontidae
Family Physeteridae
Family Kogiidae
Family Ziphiidae
vte
Whales are creatures of the open ocean; they feed, mate, give birth, suckle and raise their young at sea. So extreme is their adaptation to life underwater that they are unable to survive on land. Whales range in size from the 2.6 metres (8.5 ft) and 135 kilograms (298 lb) dwarf sperm whale to the 29.9 metres (98 ft) and 190 metric tons (210 short tons) blue whale, which is the largest creature that has ever lived. The sperm whale is the largest toothed predator on earth. Several species exhibit sexual dimorphism, in that the females are larger than males. Baleen whales have no teeth; instead they have plates of baleen, a fringe-like structure used to expel water while retaining the krill and plankton which they feed on. They use their throat pleats to expand the mouth to take in huge gulps of water. Balaenids have heads that can make up 40% of their body mass to take in water. Toothed whales, on the other hand, have conical teeth adapted to catching fish or squid. Baleen whales have a well developed sense of "smell", whereas toothed whales have well-developed hearing − their hearing, that is adapted for both air and water, is so well developed that some can survive even if they are blind. Some species, such as sperm whales, are well adapted for diving to great depths to catch squid and other favoured prey.
Whales have evolved from land-living mammals. As such whales must breathe air regularly, although they can remain submerged under water for long periods of time. Some species such as the sperm whale are able to stay submerged for as much as 90 minutes.[1] They have blowholes (modified nostrils) located on top of their heads, through which air is taken in and expelled. They are warm-blooded, and have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin. With streamlined fusiform bodies and two limbs that are modified into flippers, whales can travel at up to 20 knots, though they are not as flexible or agile as seals. Whales produce a great variety of vocalizations, notably the extended songs of the humpback whale. Although whales are widespread, most species prefer the colder waters of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and migrate to the equator to give birth. Species such as humpbacks and blue whales are capable of travelling thousands of miles without feeding. Males typically mate with multiple females every year, but females only mate every two to three years. Calves are typically born in the spring and summer months and females bear all the responsibility for raising them. Mothers of some species fast and nurse their young for one to two years.
Once relentlessly hunted for their products, whales are now protected by international law. The North Atlantic right whales nearly became extinct in the twentieth century, with a population low of 450, and the North Pacific grey whale population is ranked Critically Endangered by the IUCN. Besides whaling, they also face threats from bycatch and marine pollution. The meat, blubber and baleen of whales have traditionally been used by indigenous peoples of the Arctic. Whales have been depicted in various cultures worldwide, notably by the Inuit and the coastal peoples of Vietnam and Ghana, who sometimes hold whale funerals. Whales occasionally feature in literature and film, as in the great white whale of Herman Melville's Moby Dick. Small whales, such as belugas, are sometimes kept in captivity and trained to perform tricks, but breeding success has been poor and the animals often die within a few months of capture. Whale watching has become a form of tourism around the world.
Actually there are 30 extant orders of mammals, Tachyglossa (Echidnas and Fossil Relatives), Platypoda (Platypus and Fossil Relatives), Didelphimorphia (Opossums), Paucituberculata (Shrew Opossums and Fossil Relatives), Microbiotheria (Colocolo and Fossil Relatives), Notoryctemorphia (Marsupial Moles and Fossil Relatives), Dasyuromorphia (Carnivorous Marsupials), Peramelemorphia (Bilby and Bandicoots), Diprotodontia (Diprotodonts), Cingulata (Armadillos and Fossil Relatives), Pilosa (Sloths and Anteaters), Tubulidentata (Aardvark and Fossil Relatives), Macroscelidea (Elephant Shrews and Fossil Relatives), Afrosoricida (Tenrecs, Otter Shrews, and Golden Moles), Hyracoidea (Hyraxes), Proboscidea (Elephants and Fossil Relatives), and Sirenia (Sirenians), Soricomorpha (Shrews, Moles, Desmans, and Solenodons), Chiroptera (Bats), Erinaceomorpha (Hedgehogs, Gymnures, Moonrat, and Fossil Relatives), Pholidota (Pangolins), Carnivora (Carnivorans), Perissodactyla (Odd-Toed Hoofed Mammals), Artiodactyla (Even-Toed Hoofed Mammals), Cetacea (Whales), Lagomorpha (Lagomorphs), Rodentia (Rodents), Scandentia (Treeshrews), Dermoptera (Colugos and Fossil Relatives), and Primata (Primates), these eight orders of placental mammals Soricomorpha, Chiroptera, Erinaceomorpha, Pholidota, Carnivora, Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, and Cetacea are part of the great superorder Laurasiatheria, therefore Artiodactyla and Cetacea are more often treated as separate orders and the orders Soricomorpha and Erinaceomorpha are not closely related and do not form a monophyletic group.
Life: (Originates in ocean)
Okay guys, after millions of years we finally-
Whales: *YEET*
*pakicetus be like :- AIGHT ! IMMA BOUT TO HEAD OUT*
Last time I was this late Whales were already a country.
Size doesn’t matter
Right? 😅
*gf leaves*
Babe?
Funtime_Swagbear yea
Funtime_Swagbear no it doesnt in our species
😂😂😂
Its all about the pleasure
Ymoux that has nothing to do with the height of a animal
WHO WANTS TO LIVE IN THE OCEAN WITH ME??!
me
{ 리사 }Lisa me
Never
Me Lisa San lol
Nah im good
whales also grew huge because there wasn’t anything big to eat them. Once super giant predators like Megalodon and Livyatan went extinct, Whales were basically left to grow uncharted and balloon into the massive creatures they are today.
stop hunting whales you monsters, they near to extinct.
Their no where near extinct their doing better then ever
abdinoor ahmed yes, because every poacher of whales are watching this and spent time scrolling through the comments to look for this
@@blackhole28 aka Anus...
@@blackhole28 your butt is?
@ERIXUP Japanese you fucktard
You can too. Just grow lmao.
was genuinely sad when I saw mr. early whale crying at 3 million years ago. but then felt glad again when the earths climate shifted to favour them lol
*"all you can eat buffet"*
I'm just going to steal the time stone and-
Wish evolution takes only few years, like i wanna witness my cat and dog evolve
Fruitarian as a matter of fact they are right before your very eyes. Mutations occur on a regular basis but only some of those pass on. Some not noticeable to the human eye just yet.
Well unfortunately not for your cat and dog lol but many insects like mosquitoes evolved in a matter of few dozens of years and being capable of resisting to certain poisons that we use in agriculture...its won’t be a new specie but it shows very well how natural selection works, and that’s the basis of evolution
Carosello Show yeah that most of the reason why insects with high reproductive rates evolve on a more frequent level. they live shorter faster generations.
Fruitarian just own a pokemon. Problem solved! Lol
@@caroselloshow5615 not only that. Take a good look on the tuatara. They aren't lizards but related to turtles, and are the fastest to evolve, mainly because their genetic sequence.
After thousands of years, funny we're still human.
@Roger Alaniz and during the biology one as well
this makes me think if hippos would evolve or not
Well they are in such a small water place to evolve into something closely similar to whales, but theres still a chance to evolve into something aquatic like those manatees or dugongs
They won't because they mostly live in swamp and has adapted the environment
Fun fact: brachiosauruses didn’t have long necks. Archeologists put too many spine bones together lol.
I'm pretty sure that's not true.
The narrator's voice is amazing
That’s nice and all, but what specific microbiological changes occurred during all that time to stimulate that rapid growth in whales? I mean both whales and dolphins actually belong in the same clade (cetacea), but you don’t see an evolutionary growth of dolphins over time. Why not?
I ask because I love these marine mammals :)
Well, I asked about microbiological changes not necessarily feeding behaviors because I'm sure the feeding behaviors were influenced by something more intricately genetic, but thanks anyway.
I agree, but how do you know what I know or do not know? Humbly speaking, you can't just pass judgment (or imply it) based on what someone else says or addresses.
I did do some research though on the evolutionary history of whales and dolphins and found that both odontocetes (cetaceans with sharp teeth) and mysticetes (cetaceans with baleen plates for teeth) diverged from their common ancestor about 35 million years ago. Now, what is interesting is that this recent common ancestor had sharp teeth, meaning that the baleen plate teeth in some whales (like the blue whale) is a derived trait, which is really intersting to me.
My question was asking about the microbiological and genetic changes that occurred to develop these traits in whales, traits like baleen plates and enormous size, etc., that are not found in a cetacean like the dolphin. I just wonder what genetic changes could have taken place in the DNA of that common ancestor to produce an animal that once had sharp teeth to one that now has bristle-like teeth. How can these changes just completely "revamp" the teeth composition and growth capacities of whales to make the magnificent blue whales that we see and observe today? Such information is a bit more complex/difficult to come by, but it would definitely make the cetacean evolution line seem more complete.
Simply put, all of this has got to be more than just "method of feeding."
Thanks for reading! :)
Ok, I read a scientific article discussing how mysticetes transitioned from teeth to baleen over time. The paper provided phylogeny, fossil, and gene analyses of different mysticete species and more info that goes too in depth for me. Anyways, what was most interesting to me was that there were some mysticetes that had both teeth and baleen present at one time in the whale phylogeny. The paper explained how some genes of several whale species exhibited frameshifts and stop codons in the genes AMBN and ENAM, which both code for proteins necessary for tooth mineralization/development. These mutations would gradually lead to the loss of teeth in the whale species line that would explain why mysticete whales of today only have baleen and filter-feed. The proteins would no longer be made, leading to the loss of teeth and the whale species' increased reliance on baleen to obtain food.
Why these specific mutations occurred at the time that they did is not really clarified by the paper, but it does provide several hypotheses about the change in whale species' behavior and feeding habits that helped usher these traits down the whale phylogeny. Either way, many researchers disagree over these. So you are right. How baleen was developed in whales to replace teeth is a matter of debate. Either I'll have to do more research or just somethings can't be entirely explained or understood. And all of this is just scratching the surface because it only covers teeth. How whales grew to their enormous sizes, how their oral cavities expanded greatly to accommodate baleen, how skull shape and structures were morphed to be the way they are today, it's all too complex and requires more understanding than I think I can handle.
Thanks for sparking this research interest in me, though. :) Any of your thoughts?
Article:
Deméré, T. A., McGowen, M. R., Berta, A., & Gatesy, J. (2008). Morphological and molecular evidence for a stepwise evolutionary transition from teeth to baleen in mysticete whales. Systematic Biology, 57(1), 15-37.
Greenalien22 well damn you answered yourself lol. But to explain why this mutations occurred you should always look at the changes that occurred in their habitat. If the habitat of the ancestor of whales didn’t have a huge presence of water the animals with the mutations that can give different types of limbs that were adaptable to water would never occurred, and we wouldn’t have whales but different animals. Its always because a change in the environment that can be caused by the slow movement of the tectonics that causes a change in the climate or by many other factors. But surely this animals didn’t change but they were selected becoming better adaptable to their new environment
dolphins don't filter feed.
Im currently studying on whales.
50-55 millon years in the past the first ancestor was called a _mesonyx_
cute
Mesonychid right!
Mesonychid a dogratwhale
Evolution is not science. It is a conspiracy.
Please answer this:
What came first? The heart or the bloodvessel?
Also:
Law of biogenisis: only life can create life. How does that work in the evolution theory?
@@kdkdt7959
1. A common misconception, Evolution is not Conspiracy (unless you want to force everybody to thinking that it is, which is not). It ain't a religion, it ain't a belief, it's not made by atheists because Darwin was a devout Catholic when he studied it.
2. Well, actually. It were blood first, then blood vessels, then the heart. So I guess, it's the blood vessels...
3. Evolution does not explain the origin of life, that's Abiogenesis. Evolution only explains the diversity of species and how animals developed extraordinary traits over time. That's it
If you want to deny Evolution, well it's best of you to deny reality instead...
Mum: [throws newborn child into water]
50 million years later
Mermaids : *exist*
I'm still waiting like a little kid to tell this to my biology teacher, when he says stuff like this topic 😂
Teacher: Did any body learn any thing about whales?
Me: I did
Teacher: What Did You Learn?
Me: Whales were dogs 50 million years ago and I even tested it with my dog He’s uh.. Sleeping in the ocean.
Yes,😂😂😂
I mean you didn’t learn much if you think they were “dogs”
secretsilver r/whoosh
Me:*sees video*
Me:*Casually looking at my dog*
Dog:Dont u dare think about it!
Underrated comment
It's funny how people say like "Does anyone believe these lies?" But at the same time they believe in a God who came out of nowhere and made everything perfect.
@Ryan Roshan amen
Oh, the irony. It hurts
A few classes about entropy would be helpful to these people
1:03
the huge blue whale: kid, one day you'll look like me.
1:06
the dog whale: omg. what.
Lol😂😂😂😂
Pakicetus, the first ancestral whale originated in Pakistan.
Whale evolution is just another hoax
maxmud xareed So you hope :)
I remember basilosaurus was thought to be a mososaur because of its name "saurus" and their teeth. Now they are in fact giant toothed whales of the late eocene.
金魚ZeZeKingyo They could've renamed it to Basilichthys but I think it was too late
Indohyus is first.
The Pakicetus is also the ancestor of Hippos. In other words, hippos and whales are related.
Ansestors: take millions of years evolving out of water
Whale: this is boring, i am going back..
Ansestors: "am i a joke to u"?
What if... SHARKS HAD LEGS?!? That would be too scary... Wait if sharks ever had legs, wouldn’t they look like dinosaurs?
Whales are among the most beautiful creations on this planet. It is our job to protect them and not further pollute the oceans.
I love how the land mammal went back in evolution
A dog jumped into the sea and evolved into whale after a few million years.🥱
Spiderman is real.
It wasn’t a fog and it slowly evolved to become more and more aquatic, until it was fully Aquatic. Do you think?
Bro evolution is a myth
@@Bajannubian095 Just because you can't comprehend what evolution is doesn't automatically make it false
*RELIGIOUS PEOPLE HAS LEFT THE CHAT*
You can believe in God and still believe in evolution.
I mean I'm a Christian and we still believe in animal evolutions
“If you put a whales blood vessels in a line it could stretch from Pluto to the sun and back over 2 and 1/2 times!”
*Ferb I know what we’re gonna do today*
It’s actually phineas who would say that
@@barbragogo4503 I know
@@barbragogo4503 I said “Ferb, I know what to do today”.
Oh
@@barbragogo4503 bruh
humans had wings next video....btw loved the animation👌
Here in the great ol’ Newfoundland we have all you can see ocean sights we got humpbacks, cod, icebergs, the titanic, you name it!
Wow whales are so cool!
How to own a whale
First step: throw youre dog to the ocean
Second:wait for less than a billion years
Third:there you have a whale
Elliza Sparkles *your -spell check
There is a difference between “you’re” and “your”.
Then u die less than a billion years
For a second I thought it said
“How whales use to have legs”
0:18
every sea creatures: wait where is the whale?!
1:33. *It kinda looks like a dolphin....*
Dolpins and whales are in the same group
Amazing job... I’m speechless so simple yet so effective
Watching how whales became the biggest animals, what a time to be alive
Other animals:lets go on land
Whales:sorry what? I wasn’t listening
Once a pakicetus now a whale. What an amazing transformation!
If one day my dog jumps into the ocean and never returns, then I know why thanks to this cut
0:40 *So you just throw a dog in the water and it turns into a whale?*
its a process that took 10million years :x...
First Whales: Why do i look like a dog?
Nowaday Whales: TAKE THAT U 4 LEGGED DOG WHALE
So this explains a lot why whales and dolphins are friendly to us
I wanna pet a wale now!
Wait, why did they get the bright idea to start swimming? And how would they evolve into whales over that long, wouldn't they drown when they had 4 legs or something from exhaustion? What'd they eat, why didn't they go on land?
I'm so confused, why didn't I ever pay attention in science class ;;
Hhh don't worry about that it's just another hoax from science
@@ahmedboutaraa8771 Alright XD
The "Pre-Whales" as I like to call them, didn't really swim well during their early days. They only go to the water for a short time, and go back into eating fish. But, as they began to do the same thing over and over again, they got used to swimming more and more until they got used to the water. They also still breathe, but I think they can hold it for a long period of time.
Oh and also, the reason why they had to swim is either because of predators and/or to avoid competition with other animals
Their food mainly consisted on fish, but then turned to feeding krill on most whales, but some still did eat other animals like squid, fish, etc.
Also, did you watch the video?
How to have a whales pet ;
1. put your dog to underwater
2. Wait for a thousand year to evolved
It depends though, scientists wouldn't know for sure if they can't get larger than 109 feet.
Anything is technically possible in Nature, animals are different from humans and can get abnormally larger than their maximum size. Yes, we can get abnormalities in our growth. But we have a different body and structure compared to animals.
Again, it depends.
Imagine not following your ancestors and become the biggest animal we ever found
Yesss whale buddies
Whale : eats more and grows larger
Human : eats more, being unhealthy and die...
How does they grow that much...how their digestive system evolves... Then will humans grow bigger if they eat much??