Unsurprisingly, lots and lots of frogs in here. Also highkey sad to see Toughie finishing the list. Recent decades haven't been kind to amphibians sadly and it seems like the trend isn't getting better either.
"Overlooked Squeaker frog" "Lost Shark" very fitting names. Also just a note. The Glaucous Macaw is a very unusual story as its final sighting (1951) was so far apart from the final wild sightings in the 1890s. With the exception of a wild sighting in 1913 of course. There are some rumours however of a man trading and breeding these birds in the Argentine mountains.
I feel like every animal that hasn't been seen since at least the 1960, we can mark officially as extinct, sadly enough, especially the big ones that are hard to miss.
Especially the larger mammals and also birds. Birds can be easily identified by their calls. If you cannot hear their call anywere, they are most likely extinct.
@@carlsorensen9422 or the Black-naped pheasant pigeon that was recently found on an island near Papa Niugini that hadn't been seen for around 140 years
A while back (2019) the Black Browed Babbler was rediscovered by Indonesian birdwatchers. It was only the second ever sighting after its original sighting in 1840. Though birds like the Jamaican Poorwill are most certainly extinct (unless they found a sneaky place to nest) because of the huge rats that wiped them out in only a handful of years. The New Caledonian Buttonquail is one of the hard to judge ones due it only being found once. And NEVER alive. Which may suggest it is secretive.
@@animalpic8695I can't remember where but I read this article saying that the Ivory Billed Woodpecker was found to be still alive and it did this by staying hidden from any human contact to avoid being hunted.
Forrest Galante, in his show "extinct or alive", during filming for the show in 2018, a camera trap caught apparent footage of a Zanzibar Leopard on Unguja Island. The animal appeared smaller than specimens from the mainland, and seemed to have smaller, more solid spots than normally seen on African leopards. Further investigations are planned in order to confirm whether or not this is a Zanzibar leopard, and whether a viable population still exists. Probabilly there Is a hope... 🤞🏻🤞🏻🤞🏻
@@joeyblum2533 saola isn't extinct yet, but it's classified as "critically endangered". Very rare, but still alive. Ivory-billed woodpecker and Formosan clouded Leopard are "presumed extinct" but it's still early to declare them as "extinct". So, there Is a little chance for them. Some hope (some videos, maybe fake) exists perhaps also for the thylacine... 🤞🏻
4:48 I based my name off this bird. Though my name could cover the whole Genus or even fireworks too, this bird specifically, the O`ahu Alauahio is where I got my inspiration from. For a bit of info on the bird, it has an unusual population esimate. Instead of the usual 1-50 estimate for birds that are missing or practically on the brink. This bird has a much lower esimate due to the fact it has had much to go through even after the 80s through to the present day. Because of this the bird has a population estimate of 1-7. Honestly though, this bird has never been covered anywhere on youtube so its good it gets 0.5 seconds of a sketch being shown xdd
Que bom que está gostando! Não se esqueça de olhar meu insta e TikTok também! Então, essa classificação da IUCN diz que todos os animais dessa lista estão provavelmente extintos, mas não são ainda considerados extintos definitivos pois há uma certa chance de estarem vivos, ou infelizmente só não existem dados recentes o suficientes para atualizar o provável status da espécie
Just curious but if something was last seen centuries ago why isn't it just declared extinct? The Chinese Paddlefish was last seen in the 80s I think and its been recently declared extinct in 2020. So how do some animals make it so long without official declaration?
It’s hard to tell honestly. According to IUCN, it’s mostly due to: lack of recent surveys to assess the species status (like those skinks) or the possibility of the species still living in the wild
it is harder to find for certain ehther small animals are extinct or not because they can hide easily and are hard to find. just because a small thing has been seen for a long time doesn't mean there are a few left.
@@NotesFromTheVoid dates may vary as well. The IUCN is not the absolute authority over that. I’ve tried to find more information about the 2004 sighting, but there wasn’t much
They are considered likely extinct because the current “wild” buffaloes of Sri Lanka are most likely of domestic origin, with very little or no wild blood.
Les calculs sont pourtant bien à effectuer pour n de 0 à 4,selon vous il y aurait alors 4 racines 5° de l'unité ,de 0 à 3 ,alors qu'il y en a 5; pour n =4,on ne revient pas en cos 0=1...
Oi! Não sei se ficou sabendo, mas uma espécie de lagarto nomeado "Bachia psamophila" (esses mesmos largatinhos que parecem cobras com perninhas pequenas) acabou de ser redescoberto no mês de setembro desse ano! Uma pena ainda estar considerado "em extremo risco de extinção".
why do so many frogs/toads species went missing/extinct lately like 90s-2000s? the last video also shows how so many frogs went extinct late in the 90s, im very concerned
tbh... the last Yangtze river Dolphins seen alive were advanced aged ones. So while the might not be officially extinct yet, they are functionally extinct due to them not being able to breed anymore. The Kouprey was last seen in 1969... so i feel like its 90% confirmed its officially extinct, since imo, it would be hard to miss such a large animal, especially taking into consideration its primary habitat is open grasslands, dense and open canopy forests. Several expeditions have been done since the 1980 and every single one has failed to spot a Kouprey (Which like i said, is kinda impossible if its not extinct, taking in mind its habitat). Another thing we need to take in mind is that the Yangtze river has been dammed off... which has also let to the possible extinction of the Yangtze Sturgeon in the wild, especially since the last individual of that species has been seen in 2000 and has been officially declared Extinct in the wild since July 2022, since they are bred in captivity and set back in the Yangtze river, but for whatever reason, don't breed in the wild.
@@nickdentoom1173 yep! All those animals are listed Critically Endangered - Possibly Extinct because there’s still a little chance of finding them, or not enough certainty to assess them as Extinct
Uhm just saying pretty sure a kauai ōō a type of extinct bird in 1987 (pretty sure) is a honey eater bird and last recording sound it was calling to a female but none were left…
@@samrandles5396 in Madagascar, Forrest discovered a Hippo skull 200 years old, suggesting the Malagasy Hippo died earlier than previously thought and may have survived to the modern day 🦛
You got the scientific names of the sri lanka water buffalo, kouprey, tora hartebeest, and barbary leopard completely wrong, their correct scientific names are actually Bubalus bubalis migona, Bibos sauveli, Alcelaphus buselaphus tora, and Panthera pardus barbarica respectively.
For the Ungulates, I used Ungulate Taxonomy by Groves and Grubb. Regarding the leopard, the scientific name is Panthera pardus panthera, but today is under Panthera pardus pardus
Actually, the scientific name of the barbary leopard is Panthera pardus barbarica, Panthera pardus panthera is not a valid scientific name because Panthera is a genus for the leopard, the oldest described subspecies is the one native to Northeastern Africa.
Also, Groves and Grubb hoofed mammal taxonomy is incorrect because there are just one-hundred-and-sixty-four extant bovid species within seventy-two genera, ten subfamilies, and three major clades, so here is the bovid phylogeny as officially recognized:
Because there are just 164 extant bovid species within seventy-two genera, ten subfamilies, and three major clades, there are just two extant species of hartebeest recognized, which are the Northern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus) and the Southern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus caama), the tora hartebeest is a subspecies of northern hartebeest, also, Bubalus arnee is treated as a junior synonym of Bubalus bubalis, making the asiatic water buffalo just one extant species with only two subspecies recognized, which are the Indian Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis bubalis) and the Southeast Asian Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis hosei), the domestic water buffalo is classified as a population of indian water buffalo, the sri lanka water buffalo's classification is still controversial as it may technically be a population of indian water buffalo or a distinct subspecies, so for this reason of there just being 164 extant bovid species, it does not rank all subspecies into full species level, instead for most cases, it lumps multiple coexisting subspecies into a different species name based on geographical similarities.
Thanks for the feedback! I’m sorry if it was too fast for you. I thought my first video took too long so I decided ti shorten each clip. Maybe next video ill keep 5s per animal 😉. In this case, I suggest you to slow down the video on RUclips.
I think the reason why there are so many (especially at the beginning of the video), is because there might have been done a lot of research about them at the same time, including to determine which are and which might be extinct
@AnimalPic, I feel awfully sorry for all of those animals, all except for the snakes, which were probably turned into the fanciest of leather goods from cowboy boots 👢 to expensive luxurious sets of matched luggage 🧳. It’s a good enough punishment for the snakes, venomous or not, especially since the incident in the garden of Eden in the book of Genesis.
Snakes are just as important as the other animals shown in the video. Sadly, this kind of mentality has made snakes, birds, and mammals go extinct in recent times. Tigers have lost more than 90% of their original distribution because they were considered pests.
Again, not as diverse as those from millions of years past. From the Anomalocaris to the Woolly Mammoth. From the Cambrian explosion to the last Ice Age.
Unsurprisingly, lots and lots of frogs in here. Also highkey sad to see Toughie finishing the list. Recent decades haven't been kind to amphibians sadly and it seems like the trend isn't getting better either.
Extremely sad period for frogs. Most of them affected by chytridiomycosis. Let’s hope this “pandemic” ends soon
@@animalpic8695 yes!
Da funny funny funny funny funny rocket frog
May I protect the critically endangered species?
May i protect the critically endangered species?
"Overlooked Squeaker frog" "Lost Shark" very fitting names.
Also just a note. The Glaucous Macaw is a very unusual story as its final sighting (1951) was so far apart from the final wild sightings in the 1890s. With the exception of a wild sighting in 1913 of course.
There are some rumours however of a man trading and breeding these birds in the Argentine mountains.
I feel like every animal that hasn't been seen since at least the 1960, we can mark officially as extinct, sadly enough, especially the big ones that are hard to miss.
Especially the larger mammals and also birds.
Birds can be easily identified by their calls. If you cannot hear their call anywere, they are most likely extinct.
not necseraly trure an exampel is black browed babbler that was lost for 170 years before it was rediciverd one boreo in 2020
@@carlsorensen9422 or the Black-naped pheasant pigeon that was recently found on an island near Papa Niugini that hadn't been seen for around 140 years
A while back (2019) the Black Browed Babbler was rediscovered by Indonesian birdwatchers. It was only the second ever sighting after its original sighting in 1840.
Though birds like the Jamaican Poorwill are most certainly extinct (unless they found a sneaky place to nest) because of the huge rats that wiped them out in only a handful of years. The New Caledonian Buttonquail is one of the hard to judge ones due it only being found once. And NEVER alive. Which may suggest it is secretive.
They really need to do surveys so we can tell if they need to be moved to the extinct list or not
I like your video, AnimalPic.
Great video 👍
Thank you very much! Which species do you think might be still alive?
@@animalpic8695baiji because the river is so big they could be anywhere in small numbers.
I heard and saw an ivory-billed woodpecker in the summer of 2018. I live not too far from the Choctawhatchee River.
That’s interesting. Unfortunately, so far we don’t have any good proof of their existence
@@animalpic8695I can't remember where but I read this article saying that the Ivory Billed Woodpecker was found to be still alive and it did this by staying hidden from any human contact to avoid being hunted.
@@juliancar5700 smart ahh bird.
Can you do rediscovered creatures next?
Video idea: Supposedly extinct animals, that were rediscovered.
Thanks for the suggestion! I’ll take a look
I know it’s sad but most likely all the ones that haven’t been seen for more then 100 years probably are extinct
5:54 Ah yes. The Ō’ō long lost brother.
Forrest Galante, in his show "extinct or alive", during filming for the show in 2018, a camera trap caught apparent footage of a Zanzibar Leopard on Unguja Island. The animal appeared smaller than specimens from the mainland, and seemed to have smaller, more solid spots than normally seen on African leopards. Further investigations are planned in order to confirm whether or not this is a Zanzibar leopard, and whether a viable population still exists.
Probabilly there Is a hope... 🤞🏻🤞🏻🤞🏻
Although Forrest Gallante didn’t actually find them, what’s the likelihood of these animals still living?
Pachylemur🐒
Newfoundland Wolf🐺
Florida Black Wolf🐺
Javan Tiger🐅
Thylacine🦘
Formosan Clouded Leopard🐆
Great Auk🐧
Cape Lion🦁
Caribbean Monk Seal🦭
Malagasy Dwarf Hippopotamus🦛
Ivory-Billed Woodpecker🐦
Saola🦄
Southern Rocky Mountain Wolf🐺
@@joeyblum2533 saola isn't extinct yet, but it's classified as "critically endangered". Very rare, but still alive.
Ivory-billed woodpecker and Formosan clouded Leopard are "presumed extinct" but it's still early to declare them as "extinct". So, there Is a little chance for them. Some hope (some videos, maybe fake) exists perhaps also for the thylacine... 🤞🏻
Love that show
@@AlauahioMS that guy lied multiple times
@@cartooncatboy3009 Yeah true
2:19 This was taken on the year it vanished?! It feels creepy for some reason!
The footage is from 1956
4:48 I based my name off this bird. Though my name could cover the whole Genus or even fireworks too, this bird specifically, the O`ahu Alauahio is where I got my inspiration from.
For a bit of info on the bird, it has an unusual population esimate. Instead of the usual 1-50 estimate for birds that are missing or practically on the brink. This bird has a much lower esimate due to the fact it has had much to go through even after the 80s through to the present day. Because of this the bird has a population estimate of 1-7.
Honestly though, this bird has never been covered anywhere on youtube so its good it gets 0.5 seconds of a sketch being shown xdd
Also the korean crested crested shelduck has likely 50-0 individuals
@@hack5960 Many many birds are listed with that estimate :o
Oii melhor canal de animais extintos, só qra saber se esse animais está possivelmente extintos ou ñ??
Que bom que está gostando! Não se esqueça de olhar meu insta e TikTok também!
Então, essa classificação da IUCN diz que todos os animais dessa lista estão provavelmente extintos, mas não são ainda considerados extintos definitivos pois há uma certa chance de estarem vivos, ou infelizmente só não existem dados recentes o suficientes para atualizar o provável status da espécie
Can you do video about extinct animal that are rediscovered
É muito bizarro a quantidade absurda de largarto/sapo que estão possivelmente extinto, nossa
E tem mais alguns que acabei não colocando pois não existem fotos, desenhos, vídeos da espécie
Fun fact: Extinct animals will also be alive again example the “Kakapo”
Fortunately, the Kakapo never went extinct. But I'm sure invasive species and habitat loss almost decimated the species
Another one is Coelacanth. This species was gone for more than 50 million years.
@@animalpic8695 There’s also another wild ass but it is extinct. It went extinct in 1928, It was the Syrian wild ass.
Some of them are on ReWild's 25 Most Wanted Lost Species.
Just curious but if something was last seen centuries ago why isn't it just declared extinct? The Chinese Paddlefish was last seen in the 80s I think and its been recently declared extinct in 2020. So how do some animals make it so long without official declaration?
It’s hard to tell honestly. According to IUCN, it’s mostly due to: lack of recent surveys to assess the species status (like those skinks) or the possibility of the species still living in the wild
it is harder to find for certain ehther small animals are extinct or not because they can hide easily and are hard to find. just because a small thing has been seen for a long time doesn't mean there are a few left.
why so meny frogs and toads 😢
I thought the baiji was last seen in 2004?
Also wow that is a lot of frogs
2002 is QiQis death. There could have certainly been some Baiji left in the wild, but QiQi was the last confirmed sighting
@@animalpic8695 Huh, 2004 is the date I usually see for the last confirmed sighting
@@NotesFromTheVoid The IUCN says 2002
@@NotesFromTheVoid dates may vary as well. The IUCN is not the absolute authority over that. I’ve tried to find more information about the 2004 sighting, but there wasn’t much
Where white eye river martin? I don't see it
It’s listed as Critically Endangered only
Im Confused at 2:02 IF the Sri Lankan Water Buffalo is dead, why is their modern footage of it?
They are considered likely extinct because the current “wild” buffaloes of Sri Lanka are most likely of domestic origin, with very little or no wild blood.
*Support AnimalPic on PayPal*: animalpicpost@gmail.com
Make sure to watch the List of Extinct Animals - ruclips.net/video/eRL7xTp2Zbc/видео.html
nice videos dude
Les calculs sont pourtant bien à effectuer pour n de 0 à 4,selon vous il y aurait alors 4 racines 5° de l'unité ,de 0 à 3 ,alors qu'il y en a 5; pour n =4,on ne revient pas en cos 0=1...
🤔
At minute 3:37 it's not Giant hispaniolan galliswap but it's altagracia Giant galliswap
Oi! Não sei se ficou sabendo, mas uma espécie de lagarto nomeado "Bachia psamophila" (esses mesmos largatinhos que parecem cobras com perninhas pequenas) acabou de ser redescoberto no mês de setembro desse ano!
Uma pena ainda estar considerado "em extremo risco de extinção".
Obrigado por avisar. Não conhecia essa espécie
why do so many frogs/toads species went missing/extinct lately like 90s-2000s? the last video also shows how so many frogs went extinct late in the 90s, im very concerned
That would be because of chytrid fungus from African hairy toads.
So many frogs and skinks.
The kouprey and yangtze river dolphin are not officially extinct.
Yes, only considered possibly extinct. Personally, I really hope they are not extinct 🙏🙏🙏
tbh... the last Yangtze river Dolphins seen alive were advanced aged ones. So while the might not be officially extinct yet, they are functionally extinct due to them not being able to breed anymore. The Kouprey was last seen in 1969... so i feel like its 90% confirmed its officially extinct, since imo, it would be hard to miss such a large animal, especially taking into consideration its primary habitat is open grasslands, dense and open canopy forests. Several expeditions have been done since the 1980 and every single one has failed to spot a Kouprey (Which like i said, is kinda impossible if its not extinct, taking in mind its habitat).
Another thing we need to take in mind is that the Yangtze river has been dammed off... which has also let to the possible extinction of the Yangtze Sturgeon in the wild, especially since the last individual of that species has been seen in 2000 and has been officially declared Extinct in the wild since July 2022, since they are bred in captivity and set back in the Yangtze river, but for whatever reason, don't breed in the wild.
@@nickdentoom1173 yep! All those animals are listed Critically Endangered - Possibly Extinct because there’s still a little chance of finding them, or not enough certainty to assess them as Extinct
I have seen the 10 lined skink in my yard before and I was born in the 2000s so it's not extinct. Surprising.
It would be cool to see photos or even a video. Maybe we can save it from extinction
Uhm just saying pretty sure a kauai ōō a type of extinct bird in 1987 (pretty sure) is a honey eater bird and last recording sound it was calling to a female but none were left…
Yep, the famous Kauai Oo. Sadly now considered Extinct by the IUCN
Yeah i was gonna say cause im pretty sure it wasnt on the list
@@JaxsonAndJoey it’s in my other video called list of Extinct animals 😉. This one only includes animals listed as Possibly Extinct
😢😢😢😢❤❤❤❤
Although Forrest Gallante didn’t actually find them, what’s the likelihood of these animals still living?
Pachylemur🐒
Newfoundland Wolf🐺
Florida Black Wolf🐺
Javan Tiger🐅
Thylacine🦘
Formosan Clouded Leopard🐆
Great Auk🐧
Cape Lion🦁
Caribbean Monk Seal🦭
Malagasy Dwarf Hippopotamus🦛
Ivory-Billed Woodpecker🐦
Saola🦄
Southern Rocky Mountain Wolf🐺
For me the most likely are the Javan Tiger, Saola and Thylacine (I've been to Tasmania and the west coast is still very wild)
@@samrandles5396 in Madagascar, Forrest discovered a Hippo skull 200 years old, suggesting the Malagasy Hippo died earlier than previously thought and may have survived to the modern day 🦛
Espero que todos esos animales sigan vivos y aparezcan algún día
I got bad news the Rabbs' fringe-limbed treefrog it has officially gone extinct :( :[
@@Snowbat656 really? 😔 I checked IUCN’s red list and it’s still listed as CR
@@animalpic8695 to go on Wikipedia bro💀
Plant next
Dont forget the korean crested shelduck
@@hack5960 thanks! Never heard of this bird before
It is ranked critically endangered possibly extinct
You forgot the Saint Croix racer
My bad. I likely missed in the list while doing the video. There were too many animals 😅
For whom is going to heaven it will be found there
Why aren't most of these just considered extinct?
Lack of surveys to better assess if they are extinct, or possibility of a few surviving individuals
You got the scientific names of the sri lanka water buffalo, kouprey, tora hartebeest, and barbary leopard completely wrong, their correct scientific names are actually Bubalus bubalis migona, Bibos sauveli, Alcelaphus buselaphus tora, and Panthera pardus barbarica respectively.
For the Ungulates, I used Ungulate Taxonomy by Groves and Grubb. Regarding the leopard, the scientific name is Panthera pardus panthera, but today is under Panthera pardus pardus
Actually, the scientific name of the barbary leopard is Panthera pardus barbarica, Panthera pardus panthera is not a valid scientific name because Panthera is a genus for the leopard, the oldest described subspecies is the one native to Northeastern Africa.
Also, Groves and Grubb hoofed mammal taxonomy is incorrect because there are just one-hundred-and-sixty-four extant bovid species within seventy-two genera, ten subfamilies, and three major clades, so here is the bovid phylogeny as officially recognized:
@@indyreno2933 but why is wrong? It’s almost as the same used in the Mammals of the World
Because there are just 164 extant bovid species within seventy-two genera, ten subfamilies, and three major clades, there are just two extant species of hartebeest recognized, which are the Northern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus) and the Southern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus caama), the tora hartebeest is a subspecies of northern hartebeest, also, Bubalus arnee is treated as a junior synonym of Bubalus bubalis, making the asiatic water buffalo just one extant species with only two subspecies recognized, which are the Indian Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis bubalis) and the Southeast Asian Water Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis hosei), the domestic water buffalo is classified as a population of indian water buffalo, the sri lanka water buffalo's classification is still controversial as it may technically be a population of indian water buffalo or a distinct subspecies, so for this reason of there just being 164 extant bovid species, it does not rank all subspecies into full species level, instead for most cases, it lumps multiple coexisting subspecies into a different species name based on geographical similarities.
😭😭😭😭💔💔💔🙏🙏
video is too fast.
Thanks for the feedback! I’m sorry if it was too fast for you. I thought my first video took too long so I decided ti shorten each clip. Maybe next video ill keep 5s per animal 😉. In this case, I suggest you to slow down the video on RUclips.
Question, what did the skinks do to us to end up killing off entire species?!
Nothing! We killed them by bringing invasive species 😔
I think the reason why there are so many (especially at the beginning of the video), is because there might have been done a lot of research about them at the same time, including to determine which are and which might be extinct
0:46
Bro died a virgin
Fs in the chat
Fs
😥😥😥
@AnimalPic,
I feel awfully sorry for all of those animals, all except for the snakes, which were probably turned into the fanciest of leather goods from cowboy boots 👢 to expensive luxurious sets of matched luggage 🧳. It’s a good enough punishment for the snakes, venomous or not, especially since the incident in the garden of Eden in the book of Genesis.
Snakes are just as important as the other animals shown in the video. Sadly, this kind of mentality has made snakes, birds, and mammals go extinct in recent times. Tigers have lost more than 90% of their original distribution because they were considered pests.
How many of these have lost in time just because of one selfish species, homo sapiens
Again, not as diverse as those from millions of years past. From the Anomalocaris to the Woolly Mammoth. From the Cambrian explosion to the last Ice Age.
I am sorry the Java stingaree is extinct
Yeah 😅, recently updated from CR PEX to Extinct
@@animalpic8695 de winton's golden mole is NOT EXTINCT ANYMORE
@@Snowbat656 yeah 😄😄😄
@@animalpic8695 🫢 you are alive
@@animalpic8695 um ye