Why Elephants DON’T Think You’re Cute

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 100

  • @syx3s
    @syx3s Год назад +56

    i really have all of the best hopes for this kid. he's awesome. whether he keeps doing what he's doing or whatever he chooses to do, that's one clever dude.

    • @sifuculreif6448
      @sifuculreif6448 Год назад

      An Elephaant Never Forgets: Myth. This particular myth is based on the observation that Elephants are very good at finding groundwater in a drought. Where do you usually find near-surface groundwater? Usually in a recently dried lakebed.

    • @0x2A_
      @0x2A_ Год назад +6

      @@sifuculreif6448 It is a myth that they never forget, but fact they do have good long term memories.

    • @tonyfro23
      @tonyfro23 Год назад +4

      Could not AGREE more. Whenever in doubt I hire SMART clever people (smart and clever don't always go hand in hand). This young man is both along with verbose and intellectual. He's destined for future success

    • @rachidvanheyningen
      @rachidvanheyningen Год назад +6

      His analogies are, other than hilarious, actually incredibly smart sometimes lol

  • @zebedeemadness2672
    @zebedeemadness2672 Год назад +23

    13:00 Yes, Elephants have very good memories, lots of info is past though families via the matriarchs, they learn where food and water is available, they remember relatives they haven't seen in years, even people that has helped them, and the ones that did them wrong etc.

  • @SparkimusPrime
    @SparkimusPrime Год назад +27

    Elephants have a large olfactory lobe, meaning they are more likely to encode information from their sense of smell. The hippocampus is also highly developed, which contributes to elephants‘ excellent memory. Elephants can remember an experience from when they were a baby throughout their whole life. They have some of the largest brains, so their cerebral cortex is also really large. (Elephants have 251B neurons, while humans have 86B.)
    Elephants form strong bonds with their herd and can recognize their family members after decades of separation. After being shown bones and tusks from deceased elephants, elephants reacted strongest to those from a member of their herd. Suggesting they recognized and remembered family members even years after they had passed.
    Elephants excel in long-term memory, but their short-memory is less notable.
    So yes, they do actually have great memories. Especially ones tied to survival, which is probably why they’re on that kinda time with humans. I feel them lol

  • @34ten65
    @34ten65 Год назад +1

    he got it from cornhub kids "if you don't know now you know" -Biggy Smalls

  • @DraconicHero
    @DraconicHero Год назад +6

    I recommend the "what wild animals do for fun" video he did. its a little more on the wholesome side which might be a bit of tone shift from his usual videos, but just as educational.

  • @SparkimusPrime
    @SparkimusPrime Год назад +28

    I love elephants unconditionally 🐘🖤

    • @ThePittsburghToddy
      @ThePittsburghToddy Год назад +2

      Yep!🖖🏼

    • @zonesupreme4438
      @zonesupreme4438 Год назад +1

      Dogs love unconditinally witch makes them vulnerable to being taken advantage of

    • @SparkimusPrime
      @SparkimusPrime Год назад +3

      @@zonesupreme4438 Humans are the most sinister about taking advantage of other humans, and every thing else. Also, for humans, unconditionally loving something at the end of the day is just respecting it for what it is, and if you think that wild animals are your friends before they’re animals, that’s not respect. That’s just ignorance. And not all dogs love unconditionally. There is some dependence on their conditions. I know I went off on a tangent there in the middle lol sorry

    • @chasesmith9681
      @chasesmith9681 Год назад

      They don't feel the same about you😂

    • @Hexavolt
      @Hexavolt Год назад

      But isn't it needing to BE AN ELEPHANT a condition?

  • @lbow09
    @lbow09 Год назад +6

    I watched about 15 wild turkeys line up and then jump over a water hose, one by one. I'm guessing they thought it was a snake. It was amusing.

  • @Vaporvision
    @Vaporvision Год назад +3

    I've been watching these each night before I go to bed. Honestly really loving seeing you react to and learn about these

  • @cherylhurst7093
    @cherylhurst7093 Год назад +6

    My mother used to live in the Smokey Mountains in North Carolina and they had wild turkeys and other wildlife come to visit from time to time. The wild turkeys were huge like 4 feet tall with the neck making them up to 6 ft. Crazy. Loving these reactions. Not sure how people could think an animal/bird could eject its spine and not die even if it wasn't fully ejected. People will believe stupid stuff.

  • @Gomorragh
    @Gomorragh Год назад +1

    rutting season, bestthing to learn about since you have mentioned living near bears and moose in past video's ...

  • @LeviVanSluijs
    @LeviVanSluijs Год назад +3

    Elephants do have a long memory and are known to go to old skeletons from group members and touch the bones kinda like humans going to a graveyard

  • @Ivan-Hernandez
    @Ivan-Hernandez Год назад

    Back at it with the Cash-Geo vids!

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    I know when one is dying, the others stand around until it dies and mourn.

  • @tracyallshouse2730
    @tracyallshouse2730 Год назад

    I'm absolutely loving the casual geographic ‼️❤

  • @mogwiawolf4354
    @mogwiawolf4354 Год назад +2

    you should get his book cause i believe you need it

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад +1

    I got attacked by a momma bird when me and a friend took a nest.

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад +1

    It is hard to get the real facts anymore unless you see it yourself.

  • @Zankaroo
    @Zankaroo Год назад +1

    If you think about how smart elephants are, you can see how they get annoyed with humans taking pictures and being in their face all the time making noise pointing and touching.

  • @getshwifty3101
    @getshwifty3101 Год назад +8

    "And elephants finding us cute, is like us finding Ted Bundy cute."
    Me: I mean.....he had a 50+ body count. The ladies OBVIOUSLY thought he was cute lmao

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 Год назад +1

      I mean, they didn't know he had THAT kind of body count at the time so they get a pass.

  • @jacksmith-vs4ct
    @jacksmith-vs4ct Год назад

    no you right on that last part haha.

  • @ninajones1175
    @ninajones1175 Год назад

    We have alot of wild turkey here. Super smart. My best friend has a bunch near her house on the lake and her husband has been feeding them for years so they come at dinner time and roam in her yard.
    However, normally, you would rarely see them. Some do hunt them though but we have deer and wild hogs so they are the preference for hunters.

  • @LeviVanSluijs
    @LeviVanSluijs Год назад +1

    12:11 there are good prisons. You should react to the video, how Norways prisons are different from America’s | now this

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад +1

    The pelican info was new to me, but it better true 'cause it was stated with such confidence, it must be true and very logical. My Daddy has his wild turkey story. I have a few to but my wild turkey came from a bottle.

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад +1

    This is such a wonderful break from the usual videos found on social media. Why will reaction sites all be showing the same video's. Several are doing Hank's "Thank God I'm a Country Boy." now. How can so many people intelligent enough to put together a credible looking "reaction" claiming they haven't heard one of country's icon's most popular songs . "When Stupidity Goes Viral" just saw the thumbnail (I learned two days ago what that was) and it is my next stop.

  • @AngelicBunnyBoi
    @AngelicBunnyBoi Год назад

    some cheetahs are so anxious that in zoos they get emotional support dogs

  • @majinsole8554
    @majinsole8554 Год назад +2

    I love your animal knowledge journey.
    ~_~

  • @zebedeemadness2672
    @zebedeemadness2672 Год назад +3

    10:40 Alpha can still be used for describing how wolf packs work, it doesn't have to mean a dominant overbearing male that rules solely with tooth an claw, (as yes that isn't the way it works). Alpha just means the "first", or "primary", or "principal" (most significant) that can apply to the alpha pair, the decision makers, the parent pair, the ones that start the hunt, the ones that decide when it's time for pack members to leave and start there own pack, the ones that put females that shouldn't be having pups in there place etc etc.

    • @Sir_Vaza_JTV
      @Sir_Vaza_JTV Год назад +1

      I've always found it annoying when people say it isn't actually an alpha, like, what you described literally is an alpha.

    • @JakkFrost1
      @JakkFrost1 Год назад

      And even if it doesn't apply to wolves, that doesn't mean it can't apply to humans.
      Humans, both male and female, display clear signs of Alpha-Omega hierarchy.

  • @MsFlyingSnake
    @MsFlyingSnake Год назад

    A big part of the whole elephant memory thing goes to training them. An adult elephant taken from the wild is nearly impossible to control, but if they are raised in captivity, they are less likely to use their strength against their captors or to escape because they will have already tried as young elephants and been too weak to break chains, bars, ect.

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    I know who would win in a tussle between a cheetah and me. It wouldn't be me.

  • @troyshilanski380
    @troyshilanski380 Год назад +1

    Great reaction to a great channel man.

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    It is a neurological condition that makes feinting goats feint.

  • @SebasTian58323
    @SebasTian58323 Год назад +2

    I mean, you probably wouldn't can your dad alpha, but you would still know he's the one in charge. It's basically the same thing, it's just now we know they're families being led by the father and in captivity they are more aggressive because they don't know the other wolves but they still want to live in a pack. So they fight to see who's in charge.

    • @Emsev100
      @Emsev100 Год назад

      Exactly. For me alpha stands for leader. If they became it through family or fight doesn’t matter. 🤷🏼‍♀️
      Well, father and mother actually. 😂

  • @Nickthepug
    @Nickthepug Год назад

    the otter one was literally posted in Funny...

  • @wiezel16204
    @wiezel16204 Год назад

    elephants do have photographic memory yes.

  • @troyshilanski380
    @troyshilanski380 Год назад +4

    I suggest zefrank , his animal videos are funny af.

  • @anthonycurby4606
    @anthonycurby4606 Год назад

    There is a reason the turkey was suggested as our national bird

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    The Elephant Seal does the same, I believe.

  • @ManitechCorp
    @ManitechCorp Год назад

    That smartass bird still just can drop to the side to note die!?

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    Max Security. Love it

  • @stevedavis5704
    @stevedavis5704 Год назад

    I don’t know if elephants remember any longer than other animals but at least some of them not only remember but act on them. Their was a lady a while back who pissed off an elephant and the elephant killed her. Not really unexpected when you irritate something as big as an elephant. What was unusual was that the elephant showed up at the lady’s funeral forty or fifty miles away and wrecked the funeral facility and stomped the lady in her coffin. It was never reported what the lady did but obviously it really pissed of the elephant.

  • @justmejoy124
    @justmejoy124 Год назад

    Odd that elephant behavior is shown because I was just reading a report made of a lady killed by an elephant and it was said it trampled her to death and even returned to her funeral just to do it again traveling miles to return to do so which I found odd but what do I truly know if these creatures. The odd thing also is where I live in Tennessee my very small hometown at one time years ago there was an elephant hung at a railroad here for killing someone if which the town has tried to rectify since and we have sponsored painted statues very unique in our s.all downtown area. I don't know why but I've always associated them with being wise such have I also associated owls as well . Actually once saw an albino owl in this area also lol and no not the white owl cigar either haha a real 🦉

  • @olwynskye417
    @olwynskye417 Год назад

    Decent prisons, if that's even a thing? How about that Norwegian island prison? Looks more comfortable than my spartment.

  • @king.khisson3168
    @king.khisson3168 Год назад

    Shout-out to Douglas Adams his books are worth it every time

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад

    Yes elephants have a long memory, they can remember land after not being there for years, and it is believed they mourn dead elephants

  • @justguy-4630
    @justguy-4630 Год назад

    I thought he was going to ask if elephants have a long... Something else. And the answer is yes and they're prehensile too.

  • @stephanginther9051
    @stephanginther9051 Год назад

    I got sneezed on by an elephant once.

  • @prestonwhite6423
    @prestonwhite6423 Год назад +1

    Yes, they have fabulous memories (from what we can observe based on the function of information of human brain that tries to recognize behavior through a specific lens of perception that is biased). They also can keep track at least 30 elephant locations at the same time. They communicate via vibration through the ground, those vibration share info such as location. I do want to say this, there's no such thing as most or more intelligent. The reason is that understanding intelligent requires understanding every single mind of a creature. You also need to understand their senses, their mood, and other things. In order to know ALLL aspects of intelligence of a elephant that is uniquely elephant, you would need to be an elephant. There are more variation and types of intelligence then humans. Imagine an open large plane that represent different types of intelligence. Humans and other animals have their own subspace inside that plane. The overlape between the human and animal subspace of intelligence is what we recognize as "intelligence" in those animals. Meaning, there is a subspace of intelligence that we can't perceive to understand. Every living thing process information differently with different perspectives, human perspective isn't the only one.

  • @JakkFrost1
    @JakkFrost1 Год назад

    If I don't lie anywhere near that much per day, largely because I don't talk to many people in my life, does that mean I'm below average?

  • @ReleaseTheQuackers
    @ReleaseTheQuackers Год назад

    *YES* Bison/Turkey burgers ROCK!!! Bison is the best meat on earth!!!

  • @MikeMayneOfficial
    @MikeMayneOfficial Год назад

    Scandinavian countries have the nicest prisons

  • @woahblackbettybamalam
    @woahblackbettybamalam Год назад +1

    React to Rober Sepher. His out of Africa video is wild

  • @unkemptjargon91
    @unkemptjargon91 Год назад

    You're saying there aren't milfs dying to meet me? Next thing you'll say is that people lie on twitter

  • @normanholmes11
    @normanholmes11 Год назад

    Did u mean bison or bovine? Cause I thought bison were protected in your country since the early settlers nearly "unsubscribed" them

  • @donnaarehartpiffier8800
    @donnaarehartpiffier8800 Год назад

    I think cheetahs are cats, like lions and leopards and tigers, Oh MY

  • @JakkFrost1
    @JakkFrost1 Год назад

    Rutting, or going into rut, is for many male mammals what going into heat is for female mammals.

  • @murphygirl4782
    @murphygirl4782 Год назад

    I already knew that the whole "alpha, beta, delta, exc" wolf titles where incorrect. I love wolves and find them very fascinating. Needless to say, it's pretty annoying when fictional writers use these titles for their books.

  • @gryphyonroc8968
    @gryphyonroc8968 Год назад

    Nature is metal

  • @TuckshopBandit1
    @TuckshopBandit1 Год назад

    I've come to realise that every single fact about animals I was told as a child is shit: Lemmings don't unalive themselves single-file, turkeys don't drown themselves, sharks don't go into a frenzy from a drop of blood. Kids are stupid lmao

  • @michaelbraum77
    @michaelbraum77 Год назад

    I thought you were going to say "Do elephants have an extremely long...penis?" Instead of memory. Yes, they do have an extremely long penis. I mean, memory. There is a group of elephants in Africa and the guy that was accepted by them died. Every year, on the EXACT date of his death, the elephants go to his house to give him their respect. And, NO, they are not afraid of mice!

  • @justinliberty5345
    @justinliberty5345 Год назад

    Yes they have grave yards

  • @dysfunktional6537
    @dysfunktional6537 Год назад +1

    First time ive been this early.
    Where's my prize at?

  • @syx3s
    @syx3s Год назад +2

    i know what rutting is because i've seen and have been taught about moose rut pits. which are insane btw. those things go insane when they've got their hormones on. northern ontario life.

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Год назад

      Have you encountered any tourists who still think that moose are just like big passive deers who will stand still for a photo? I've been to Yellowstone a number of times, and there are always potential Darwin Award recipients looking to get famous.

    • @CubeGodd
      @CubeGodd Год назад

      dangerous psychopaths with hormone problems? sounds like an average teenager to me 😂

    • @syx3s
      @syx3s Год назад

      @@theprogressivecynic2407 the only tourists that go that far out into the middle of nowhere have trailers, permits, and hunting rifles.

    • @davidconner-shover51
      @davidconner-shover51 Год назад

      They close down hiking trails parts of the county around here when they are sighted

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Год назад

      @@syx3s That's good.

  • @davidconner-shover51
    @davidconner-shover51 Год назад

    7:00 likely some idiot transferred this idea from rodents, which have a much better sense of smell, can and will and eat their young if they've been touched or feel threatened

  • @alexgibson7960
    @alexgibson7960 Год назад +1

    🤠

  • @tlstewart1939
    @tlstewart1939 Год назад

    😂😂😂😂

  • @jakeand9020
    @jakeand9020 Год назад

    I don't think calling a turkey "intelligent" is the right word, they're just not THAT stupid. I guess, in comparison to other game birds, they're up there, but that's not exactly steep competition.
    As for domesticated turkeys, which would probably be what you normally eat they're significantly less intelligent than that. I mean, compared to chicken they may as well be rocket scientist, but seeing as the toenail you clipped off last week is probably about as smart as a chicken, that's not saying much. Out of all the animals we eat on a regular basis, turkeys are not even close to the top of the list in intelligence.
    Obviously pigs are at the top of that list, by a solid margin, they are one of, if not the, smartest domesticated animals there are. Anything comparable to them, we don't normally eat. I've often considered not eating them because of how intelligent they are but... On one hand, you feel bad about eating them, on the other hand Bacon.

  • @fredbays
    @fredbays Год назад

    turkey not the dumbest birds around but then look at where they live. In and around us who will make paddies out of them.
    Ya wild ones have a few mor e cells up top but not many more.
    When it comes to preparing them for concussion not all that hard if u know what u are doing
    Me I hunt with a crossbow (Ya even turkey other smaller flow) Head shots. I only take males in the spring first week of season take about 20 of them out of the flocks around me
    No I dont like wild turkey I give them away Take them to reduce pop around me only so much male pop can do if there are too many females for him to service. Ya I take just about ever Tom in the area I hunt
    Now turkey that i buy as chicks those big white ones Got 60 of them in my back yard right now Been there 2 weeks all ready Five are for me the other 45 are sold.
    Buut back too why I dont like turkeys in my fields.. Simple crop damage Deer same acme inn fact if it eats my stuff I will eat it. or feedd it to something that I will eat

  • @sarahbell158
    @sarahbell158 Год назад

    HE TALKS WAY TOO QUICK, I CANT TAKE IT IN, THATS WHY I DONT WATCH THESE CLIPS ANYMORE

    • @EE-iy9rq
      @EE-iy9rq Год назад +1

      Gotta listen and pay attention

  • @josephstalin8509
    @josephstalin8509 Год назад +1

    First

  • @darkorlando1
    @darkorlando1 Год назад

    Yes he have a video on it

  • @ekramer2478
    @ekramer2478 Год назад

    There is a gent on RUclips named Dolph Volger I think it is. He is good for cheetahs. Elephants. Ever see a horse? Yes, yes they do.