This video is an introduction to a series of videos called Relatives, exploring some of the most fascinating families in the animal kingdom. Here is the first video: All 40 Species & 8 Lineages of Wild Cats, Enjoy! ruclips.net/video/cIJkTw9OeKQ/видео.html
Great and informative video but I did want to point out that koalas don't live just on the west coast of Australia, they live on the east coast too. When the NSW bushfires came many wild koalas died and that was on the east coast. Still a great video though!
I like this video. It explained biomes very well. I can report the biomes such as ; 1. Artic tundra biome 2. Antartic tundra biome 3. Alpine tundra biome 4. Boreal forest biome 5. Temperate forest biome 6. Tropical forest biome 7. Temperate grassland 8. Tropical grassland 9. Desert biome 10. Pond & lake aquatic biome 11. River and stream aquatic biome 12. Wet land aquatic biome 13. Ocean aquatic biome 14. Coral & reef aquatic biome 15. Estuarine aquatic biome. I can mention them (the biomes) completely.
I think the "aquatic biome" was cheated. In the sea alone there should at least be split into coral reefs, open ocean, deep ocean and shallows as base biomes. Then there's big rivers, freshwater lakes and saltwater lakes.
Absolutely agree! It's just the video was already 30+ minutes long so I had to choose to give a more broad overview, unfortunately. Thanks for the feedback
@@Textbooktravel you could have just focused on land and then give aquatics their own video in a part 2 cause yeah they have their own biome aswell, it's not land is just land biome. but I did love the video and recognize all the work and research that went into it so thank you once again man.
Great video but it is a huge mistake to call jellyfish cepholopods, jellyfish are way more related to corals and anemones than to mollusks like squid and snails
To add to that, Cephalopods have three layers of tissue while jellyfish only have two, and two openings to their digestive tracts while jellyfish only have one
This topic is an extremely difficult one to do while still being concise. You did a wonderful job at providing the basic idea of what makes each biome unique while making it clear further grouping exists within each one. Well done!
Former zookeeper Former High school teacher You are going to make a lot of people happy ...me included...with this content. It's like the series of nature books from my childhood . perfect and beautiful!! .. beautiful work 🙌👏👏👏👏
Goodness, I hate being “that guy”, but….. Jellyfish aren’t Cephalopod. I think it’s important to be accurate in science and nature videos. Cudo’s to you for making this video, I never could do such a good job.
Thanks, George! I coudln't agree more, I'm trying to be as accurate as possible but there is so much information out there and I'm learning as I go. I think it's important that people point things out if I get them wrong so thank you for commenting
This was a great video exploring the biome world! However I noticed you focused a lot on north American species, which makes sense but I was wanting some more talk about other continents animals. (I'm mostly making this comment to boost the algorithm, but disagree with me if you want)
Haha! Thank you for the feedback! I plan on delving into the individual biomes at some point so I will be more careful in my selection for those videos
I have already watched all of your videos, the quality is stunning, not only your voice is amazing, but the footage is awesome, keep it up dude, great work
You should have noted that dromedaries are not native to Australia. They were introduced there in the late 19th C. and feral populations became hugely successful. EDIT: jellyfish are NOT cephalopods, which are mollusks, but belong to an entirely different phylum altogether, the Cnidiria, which includes corals and sea anemones.
To add to that, Cephalopods have three layers of tissue while jellyfish only have two, and two openings to their digestive tracts while jellyfish only have one.
One of the best youtubers by far watch ur videos isn't a time waste at all u giving the knowledge of nature keep it up !there are many RUclipsrs who just make jerk content for subs but u are different
You started out with two of my very favorite critters in existence - the snow owl and the snow leopard! ❤❤❤❤ Great video, well done, and with absolutely stunning visuals!
I love looking at an animal and going "oh THAT'S where they got the Pokemon idea" those marbled polecats look exactly like a zigzagoon. It's kind of scary.
Great video! However the statement at 32:48 that the River Otter is the largest weasel didn't sound right since the Sea Otter is heavier. Checking, I find the Wolverine is considered the largest weasel.
Fun Fact: The Lion King is not correct, it pretty came up with the hyenas stealing lion’s food thing. Hyenas are extremely skilled hunters, due to their incredible endurance. Lions tend to struggle a bit more, and often eat their leftovers.
So far, the best video I've found of yours. One correction; the Walrus is actually the third largest Pinniped as the Northern Elephant Seal would be the second largest after the Southern Elephant Seal.
Incredible video! One little detail- jaguars range from mexico to the Pantanal in Brazil, not the Amazon. A lot of great footage of jaguars hunting caiman is from the Pantanal, where the biggest jaguars are. Otherwise, I have loved binging all your videos and hope to see a lot more!!
Actually Jaguars used to range from the south west US all the way down to Argentina, but now they are almost strictly confined to the rainforests of the Amazon Basin, and as you said, the Pantanal Wetlands. There are still small populations of Jaguars in Mexico, down to Argentina, however, the largest concentration of Jaguars resides in the Amazon Basin.
Ah yes. Ending it on leeches and crabs. It's like eating a delicious meal and the last bite is burnt/bony/nasty. Incredibly fascinating documentary on the biomes! Hope to get a plant version soon
@@Textbooktravel Not sure if you misspoke or if the research was flawed, but koalas are endemic to the East coast of Australia, though there are small populations of introduced koalas on the West coast.
29:15 a big error here! Jellyfish are not cephalopods. They are not even closely related. In fact, cephalopods are more closely related to humans than they are to jellyfish.
I enjoy these videos but the credibility took a blow with info regarding Australia, especially the mention of koalas being confined to the west coast of Australia in this video. Now I'm not quite sure what info I can and can't trust without cross checking first. Koalas live in the east. Though I am pleased that they weren't called bears. Well done with that. Australia and other parts of the southern hemisphere, have temperate forests too. In Australia, temperate forests are evergreen (except for where certain species of Southern Beech occur). Parrots, including the cockies, occur in all Aussie biomes, not only the tropics. Emus are the second tallest and Southern Cassowaries are the second heaviest, so either could be considered the second largest bird species. Largest isn't always a very useful word. Sea snakes are also marine reptiles. Sea jellies are definitely not cephalopods, but are cnidarians. Some fresh water species return to the marine biome to breed too. Like eels.
An edit for you (but great work generally)… there are no natural populations of koalas in Western Australia. Koalas are found on the east and southeast coastal and hinterland areas of Australia.
Kinda late to the party but anaconda aren't that big, a large anaconda would be like 19ft and 300lbs, as a matter of fact the longest snake in the world is a 29ft reticulated python in captivity named medusa
29:16 "cephalopods such as octopus and jellyfish" Jellyfish are not cephalopods, they are not even mollusks like octopus, they are in a completely different phyllum called Cnidaria 34:00 "Caiman are the smallest of the crocodilians" Except for the black caiman, the largest reptile in the amazon
How would you classify Swamps, and Mountains? Swamp would be Wetland, right? And can the Deepsea be classified just as Wather? You can also make an Argument for big Caves.
Swamps are indeed wetlands! What differentiates them from other wetlands is that they have a lot of trees, compared to marshes that are mostly grasses or bogs that are mostly mosses.
You mean Chile, in Argentina the temperate forest is very little, what predominates more is the deciduous and mixed forest, the Andes of Patagonia cause a barrier against the humid winds of the Pacific, making it drier in Argentina, causing trees deciduous.
Great video but wood bison do not stand 11 feet tall lmaoo After watching the whole thing I think u really need to do some better research, a lot of the things u are saying are off
Perhaps it looks West to you in the North (e-joke) but I think you will find the Koala is native to Australia's East, mainly below Capricorn, whilst the temperate forestry of WA is restricted to a smallish area in the south-west from Perth to Fremantle. Koala may be located, if very lucky, in numbers well reduced to threatened, since European redcoats arrived 234 years ago with people Britain became weary of hanging, possibly because the Irish wore them out, and the French had bigger problems with people revolting, just after the USA opted not to pay tax for someone else's imperialist wars. Fact is, in land care most Europeans are a pox and a vandal, and utterly incompetent except in mass extinction and genocide, pollution, pillage and monocultural potato, maize and banana fasmine. Shame they were habitually too damned arrogant to cure their ignorance, by taking lessons from the first nation people there many tens of thousands of years before the gold fevered disease vectors got there. That is a fact, sadly, and ashamedly. I am therefore a coloured rag burner and an antinationalist patriotism mocker. After all, I wasn't there, and had nothing to do with flag waving BS, born to my history by randon chance, and can clain acceptance for none of tghe time before 1957, and very little after that, and war mongrering propaganda from pirates and looters off their leash, the ignoble barbarian uncivil and the barely toilet trained, with dignity in a barrel of rum providing instant lobotomy, is no invention of mine. However, I like animals plants insects anf fungi much more than I do deople by the mob. (intelligence appears to reduce in direct proportion to the crowd size, perhaps even by inverse square rule)
I discovered this Channel today and I can't stop binge watching every video here, the quality of the content is incredible, and the videos are well made. I look forward to how this channel will fare in the the next months, if it continues to dish out content like this, reaching a million subscribers would be easy peasy. Thank you for the good videos.
@@dacrosber unfortunately he’s off on a lot of these facts. The most obvious one being that wood bison don’t stand 11 feet tall. It’s actually closer to 6 feet.
I was looking for this because I had to stop the video at that point. Cnidaria is a completely different phylum from what cephalopods are in, Mollusca.
Great video and hereby subscribed! It is helping my covid-isolation... 4 comments 1. Koalas are not exclusively to the west coast of Australia - they are also in the east 2. Isn't steppes pronounced "steps" 3. Can you do whales or sharks/skates/rays next? 4. Another idea for a video could be to look at unique islands like Borneo, Madagascar, Australia...
Yes, they got the koala section wrong: Koalas were introduced to the West coast in the 1930's.... they're only native to the East coast, which is where they remain most abundant.
Thank you for the feedback, Alex! Yes! I have a video on sharks planned very soon. I just looked up the pronunciation of steppe and you're totally right, thank you!
I love your vidoe but i think everyone forgets to talk about "the bush". Very confusing region because its almost woodland but that of dry climstes. Southern africa and Australia and India are typical examples of regions where you would find "the bush" . Very dry and drought prone but becomes lush when rain hits. Very rich in game espically in Zimbabwe/ Botswana/ south africa and india the bush is always brushed under the "savana" type area.
Thank you Emille! You're right, I'm finding it difficult to work out exactly how much detail to go into on these videos and the best length. At some point I plan to do individual biome videos so I will cover each in more detail. Thanks for the feedback
@@Textbooktravel for these overview videos you should keep them to a maximum of 25 to 30 minutes Then if a subject has particular interest you can do a more specific and possibly longer video on that subject alone
"weighing more than xxx pounds" man this is the internet, most of the internet doesn't use pounds, could you just go "xxxx pounds or yyyy kilos"? This is pretty annoying ngl. And there goes the same shit with the feet - - "
As a nature nerd and conservationist at heart, I truly appreciate this video and how in depth it was. I pretty much knew most things, but it was very informative and I definitely learned some new things. Great video
This video is very educational and well put together. I love the images and the fact that it does a good job both of representing a diverse representation of species while also indicating commonalities and patterns. It is also fairly accurate, just a few biome definition comments I would add; Tundra is defined by the existence of permafrost. Desert is a term for areas with low annual precipitation and is not dependent on heat. The tundra is an example of a cold desert. Tropical rainforest is a different term than tropical forest or rainforest. Rainforest is determined by annual rainfall and not location. The Pacific northwest has several rainforests. Tropical forest is a nonspecific term as tropical does give a location but 'forest' implies it is different from a rainforest. Tropical rainforest is a specific term for an area in the tropics that is also a rainforest. Marine biomes do exist but are generally referred to as zones, and are sadly generally grouped together. Intertidal, photic, abyssal, arctic, tropical or warm water just to name a few. Keep in mind that there are many definitions for biomes, but I think the above reflects the more common scientific definitions.
This video is an introduction to a series of videos called Relatives, exploring some of the most fascinating families in the animal kingdom. Here is the first video: All 40 Species & 8 Lineages of Wild Cats, Enjoy! ruclips.net/video/cIJkTw9OeKQ/видео.html
Brilliantly made and I found it compelling viewing thankyou for this I would love too watch more.
Great and informative video but I did want to point out that koalas don't live just on the west coast of Australia, they live on the east coast too. When the NSW bushfires came many wild koalas died and that was on the east coast. Still a great video though!
Same
Same
I like this video. It explained biomes very well. I can report the biomes such as ;
1. Artic tundra biome
2. Antartic tundra biome
3. Alpine tundra biome
4. Boreal forest biome
5. Temperate forest biome
6. Tropical forest biome
7. Temperate grassland
8. Tropical grassland
9. Desert biome
10. Pond & lake aquatic biome
11. River and stream aquatic biome
12. Wet land aquatic biome
13. Ocean aquatic biome
14. Coral & reef aquatic biome
15. Estuarine aquatic biome.
I can mention them (the biomes) completely.
I think the "aquatic biome" was cheated. In the sea alone there should at least be split into coral reefs, open ocean, deep ocean and shallows as base biomes. Then there's big rivers, freshwater lakes and saltwater lakes.
Absolutely agree! It's just the video was already 30+ minutes long so I had to choose to give a more broad overview, unfortunately. Thanks for the feedback
@@Textbooktravel you could have just focused on land and then give aquatics their own video in a part 2 cause yeah they have their own biome aswell, it's not land is just land biome. but I did love the video and recognize all the work and research that went into it so thank you once again man.
@@Textbooktravel I'm pretty sure this is one of "those videos," you could've made it a few hours long and no one would mind lmao
also the intertidal zone!
Sea mounts & black smokers too!
The devs really took their time with the game the amounts of detail is astonishing
A fellow Tierzoo fan?
@@CaraTheStrange the goat
Lolololollololoooloo
Yeah, but the current Meta is quiet bad balanced. Its mostly fine, but they sould buff Frogs, and completly remove Homon Sapiens.
@@Sunaki1000 Truee, the homo sapiens are sooo overpowered smh
Great video but it is a huge mistake to call jellyfish cepholopods, jellyfish are way more related to corals and anemones than to mollusks like squid and snails
Thank you for the feedback, Brent! I'm making a real effort to improve the accuracy of the vids so appreciate all of the feedback in the comments
I'm just now seeing this video and made the same comment.
Also when he says "other whales" as predatory behaviour of the orca, implies that an orca is a whale but they are actually Delphinidae
To add to that, Cephalopods have three layers of tissue while jellyfish only have two, and two openings to their digestive tracts while jellyfish only have one
@@lepalmero they're the largest dolphins. It's actually a pretty fun fact when you think about it.
This topic is an extremely difficult one to do while still being concise. You did a wonderful job at providing the basic idea of what makes each biome unique while making it clear further grouping exists within each one. Well done!
Former zookeeper
Former High school teacher
You are going to make a lot of people happy ...me included...with this content. It's like the series of nature books from my childhood . perfect and beautiful!! .. beautiful work 🙌👏👏👏👏
Snowy Places 1:10
Forests:
Woodland 5:10
Rainforest 11:06
Snowforest 5:45
Grasslands 14:41
Savannah 15:03
Desert 20:31
Sea 24:17
Goodness, I hate being “that guy”, but…..
Jellyfish aren’t Cephalopod.
I think it’s important to be accurate in science and nature videos. Cudo’s to you for making this video, I never could do such a good job.
Thanks, George! I coudln't agree more, I'm trying to be as accurate as possible but there is so much information out there and I'm learning as I go. I think it's important that people point things out if I get them wrong so thank you for commenting
@@Textbooktravel They're actually more closely related to anemones and corals! They belong to the phylum cnidaria.
This was a great video exploring the biome world! However I noticed you focused a lot on north American species, which makes sense but I was wanting some more talk about other continents animals. (I'm mostly making this comment to boost the algorithm, but disagree with me if you want)
Yea noticed that he focused almost solely on the northern hemisphere
Haha! Thank you for the feedback! I plan on delving into the individual biomes at some point so I will be more careful in my selection for those videos
@@jason9996 he focused on Africa a good bit. South America as well.
Incredible stuff! Such a great video. Quality of the images were amazing too. Subscribed after 5 minutes.
I have already watched all of your videos, the quality is stunning, not only your voice is amazing, but the footage is awesome, keep it up dude, great work
so glad I found this channel!!!! one of my favorites and I'm already learning so much
Kind of a map nitpicking but there's also temperate forests and prairies in Mexico
You should have noted that dromedaries are not native to Australia. They were introduced there in the late 19th C. and feral populations became hugely successful.
EDIT: jellyfish are NOT cephalopods, which are mollusks, but belong to an entirely different phylum altogether, the Cnidiria, which includes corals and sea anemones.
To add to that, Cephalopods have three layers of tissue while jellyfish only have two, and two openings to their digestive tracts while jellyfish only have one.
One of the best youtubers by far watch ur videos isn't a time waste at all u giving the knowledge of nature keep it up !there are many RUclipsrs who just make jerk content for subs but u are different
Your videos always brighten my day. This one was especially amazing! 😊
You started out with two of my very favorite critters in existence - the snow owl and the snow leopard! ❤❤❤❤
Great video, well done, and with absolutely stunning visuals!
I love looking at an animal and going "oh THAT'S where they got the Pokemon idea" those marbled polecats look exactly like a zigzagoon. It's kind of scary.
Great video! However the statement at 32:48 that the River Otter is the largest weasel didn't sound right since the Sea Otter is heavier. Checking, I find the Wolverine is considered the largest weasel.
I agree, also wood bison definitely don’t stand 11 feet tall lmao
Fun Fact: The Lion King is not correct, it pretty came up with the hyenas stealing lion’s food thing. Hyenas are extremely skilled hunters, due to their incredible endurance. Lions tend to struggle a bit more, and often eat their leftovers.
And they hunt in packs
I noticed that the tadpoles in 33:10 were actual catfish fries but the information was on point
So far, the best video I've found of yours. One correction; the Walrus is actually the third largest Pinniped as the Northern Elephant Seal would be the second largest after the Southern Elephant Seal.
Incredible video!
One little detail- jaguars range from mexico to the Pantanal in Brazil, not the Amazon. A lot of great footage of jaguars hunting caiman is from the Pantanal, where the biggest jaguars are.
Otherwise, I have loved binging all your videos and hope to see a lot more!!
Actually Jaguars used to range from the south west US all the way down to Argentina, but now they are almost strictly confined to the rainforests of the Amazon Basin, and as you said, the Pantanal Wetlands.
There are still small populations of Jaguars in Mexico, down to Argentina, however, the largest concentration of Jaguars resides in the Amazon Basin.
Ah yes. Ending it on leeches and crabs. It's like eating a delicious meal and the last bite is burnt/bony/nasty.
Incredibly fascinating documentary on the biomes! Hope to get a plant version soon
Wow, you cover a lot of territory in this video. Thank you.
Thank you, George!
@@Textbooktravel Not sure if you misspoke or if the research was flawed, but koalas are endemic to the East coast of Australia, though there are small populations of introduced koalas on the West coast.
great video, but you skipped Mediterranean evergreen forests, caves and omitted Central and Eastern European steppe
Hopefully you gain attention more soon! I love videos like this they are so entertaining. You deserve it.
He’s off on a lot of facts unfortunately. I’ve been trying to get his attention lmao
Addicted to this Chanel - appreciate the knowledge brother.
Keep growing forward 🤗 I deff support your channel ‼️
29:15 a big error here! Jellyfish are not cephalopods. They are not even closely related. In fact, cephalopods are more closely related to humans than they are to jellyfish.
Yes and wood bison don’t stand 11 feet tall lol
Found this channel today love it
Super cool had to subscribe
aahhh, I can't wait for more uploads from you!!
Just discovered this channel looking for inspiration for my d&d campaign!!
I enjoy these videos but the credibility took a blow with info regarding Australia, especially the mention of koalas being confined to the west coast of Australia in this video. Now I'm not quite sure what info I can and can't trust without cross checking first. Koalas live in the east. Though I am pleased that they weren't called bears. Well done with that. Australia and other parts of the southern hemisphere, have temperate forests too. In Australia, temperate forests are evergreen (except for where certain species of Southern Beech occur). Parrots, including the cockies, occur in all Aussie biomes, not only the tropics. Emus are the second tallest and Southern Cassowaries are the second heaviest, so either could be considered the second largest bird species. Largest isn't always a very useful word. Sea snakes are also marine reptiles. Sea jellies are definitely not cephalopods, but are cnidarians. Some fresh water species return to the marine biome to breed too. Like eels.
wow thank you for infomation , also you deserve more subscriber
Boreal Forest dips into the Northwestern US too in Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Oregon.
Koalas don't live on the west coast of Australia...It's the other side in the east.
African rock pythons are not small
That's true! I think I meant in comparison to the Nile croc but you're right, I definitely could have picked a smaller snake! Thanks for commenting
Arent they the third largest snakes in the world
26:50
Wait, what?
Walrus spends time on land searching for mollusks to eat?
Might want to double check that. Lol
Enjoyed the vid.
Great video 👍👍
An edit for you (but great work generally)… there are no natural populations of koalas in Western Australia. Koalas are found on the east and southeast coastal and hinterland areas of Australia.
Kinda late to the party but anaconda aren't that big, a large anaconda would be like 19ft and 300lbs, as a matter of fact the longest snake in the world is a 29ft reticulated python in captivity named medusa
29:16 "cephalopods such as octopus and jellyfish"
Jellyfish are not cephalopods, they are not even mollusks like octopus, they are in a completely different phyllum called Cnidaria
34:00 "Caiman are the smallest of the crocodilians"
Except for the black caiman, the largest reptile in the amazon
Love your content mate
9:55 Koalas are not relegated to the West Coast, pretty common on the East Coast too.
Its really helpful.
How would you classify Swamps, and Mountains? Swamp would be Wetland, right?
And can the Deepsea be classified just as Wather? You can also make an Argument for big Caves.
Swamps are indeed wetlands! What differentiates them from other wetlands is that they have a lot of trees, compared to marshes that are mostly grasses or bogs that are mostly mosses.
just to correct you the deserts donot cover the deccan of the sub contient instead tropical savanna
19:37 What da Squirrel doin?
This video feels like it should be shown to aliens who know nothing about our planet
Excelent video!!!!
Thanks, V! 😊
He’s actually off on alot of these facts unfortunately
When are they gonna add the Deep Dark biome?!
“Killer whales” or orcas aren’t whales, they are dolphins
This is very interesting to learn!
Yes it is, but he’s a little off on some of the things he’s saying, but not everything
9:15 same.
In addition, meercats may tackle the occasional scorpion.
Amazing video!!!!!
this video is amazing wow
Gotta catch em all!
What a realistic Minecraft Biomes, what kind of Minecraft modded is this?
This video is so wholesome 🥰👌🏽
27:28 Austrial Asia
Wow this minecraft update looks awesome
I love your videos and don't want to be picky but I must say you often mispronounce crepuscular as "crespular" and steppe as "steep" instead of "step"
Axolotls are sooooo cute! They are my favorite sea animal
koals are found on the east coast of australia
You forgot to mention the Deep Sea Biome
Australian here: Koalas are NOT only on the west coast
What does old world and new world mean?
Killer whales are not whales. They are dolphins. For 26 minutes I thought this video really knew what is was talking about. Still nice to watch.
Dolphins are whales
You make me want to actually learn something. I pray you're a teacher or something
2:55 Please explain it in metric system...
5.5 feet is equivalent to 165.1 cm
Yo solo lo vi para ver a los animales 😃 doy su fan #1
Just gonna quickly input that I live in Australia and koalas are on the east coast too
What about temperate rainforests such as the ones in Argentina and New Zealand
You mean Chile, in Argentina the temperate forest is very little, what predominates more is the deciduous and mixed forest, the Andes of Patagonia cause a barrier against the humid winds of the Pacific, making it drier in Argentina, causing trees deciduous.
my ears got on pun of
taiga and tiger
Great video but wood bison do not stand 11 feet tall lmaoo
After watching the whole thing I think u really need to do some better research, a lot of the things u are saying are off
Alot 9f animals he restricts to "Canada and Alaska " are also continental US.
Perhaps it looks West to you in the North (e-joke) but I think you will find the Koala is native to Australia's East, mainly below Capricorn, whilst the temperate forestry of WA is restricted to a smallish area in the south-west from Perth to Fremantle. Koala may be located, if very lucky, in numbers well reduced to threatened, since European redcoats arrived 234 years ago with people Britain became weary of hanging, possibly because the Irish wore them out, and the French had bigger problems with people revolting, just after the USA opted not to pay tax for someone else's imperialist wars. Fact is, in land care most Europeans are a pox and a vandal, and utterly incompetent except in mass extinction and genocide, pollution, pillage and monocultural potato, maize and banana fasmine. Shame they were habitually too damned arrogant to cure their ignorance, by taking lessons from the first nation people there many tens of thousands of years before the gold fevered disease vectors got there. That is a fact, sadly, and ashamedly. I am therefore a coloured rag burner and an antinationalist patriotism mocker. After all, I wasn't there, and had nothing to do with flag waving BS, born to my history by randon chance, and can clain acceptance for none of tghe time before 1957, and very little after that, and war mongrering propaganda from pirates and looters off their leash, the ignoble barbarian uncivil and the barely toilet trained, with dignity in a barrel of rum providing instant lobotomy, is no invention of mine.
However, I like animals plants insects anf fungi much more than I do deople by the mob.
(intelligence appears to reduce in direct proportion to the crowd size, perhaps even by inverse square rule)
The dromedary camel is very common in saudi arabia
Earth Lore let's gooooo
Forest and jungle are different I think
Fun fact: Argentina is the only country in the world with all the biomes mentioned in the video.
Fun fact: You're mistaken because there are others. For one, the United States of America has all these biomes.
Koalas live onky on the east coast of Australia actually ***
= helped me with my math project
Beautiful 😍😍😍😍
many snowy owls do migrate... i was really enjoying the chanel but some extra fact checking would do yoi well
They also have leopard in the grasslands....
I discovered this Channel today and I can't stop binge watching every video here, the quality of the content is incredible, and the videos are well made. I look forward to how this channel will fare in the the next months, if it continues to dish out content like this, reaching a million subscribers would be easy peasy. Thank you for the good videos.
I did the same. I hope they post more stuff soon.
Exactly, props to this guy for actually doing his research and being knowledgeable
Meeetoooo
Ez pz
@@dacrosber unfortunately he’s off on a lot of these facts. The most obvious one being that wood bison don’t stand 11 feet tall. It’s actually closer to 6 feet.
I look forward to seeing this channel grow! Keep this up, and you'll go far with this.
Thank you!
If you continue with uploading videos with this type of quality, you will get many subscribers in the future. Keep up the good work!
Thank you!! I really appeciate that
29:15 .... jelly fishes are a part of cnidaria. Please don't confuse it with cephalopods . Other than this mistake fantastic video .
I was looking for this because I had to stop the video at that point. Cnidaria is a completely different phylum from what cephalopods are in, Mollusca.
Great video and hereby subscribed! It is helping my covid-isolation... 4 comments
1. Koalas are not exclusively to the west coast of Australia - they are also in the east
2. Isn't steppes pronounced "steps"
3. Can you do whales or sharks/skates/rays next?
4. Another idea for a video could be to look at unique islands like Borneo, Madagascar, Australia...
The way he pronounced steppe really bothered me
Yes, they got the koala section wrong: Koalas were introduced to the West coast in the 1930's.... they're only native to the East coast, which is where they remain most abundant.
Thank you for the feedback, Alex! Yes! I have a video on sharks planned very soon. I just looked up the pronunciation of steppe and you're totally right, thank you!
Thank you! And keep up the great work
Hjjymp0
“Tundra’s infamous carnivores”
*shows cute fluffy arctic fox squinting*
I love your vidoe but i think everyone forgets to talk about "the bush". Very confusing region because its almost woodland but that of dry climstes. Southern africa and Australia and India are typical examples of regions where you would find "the bush" . Very dry and drought prone but becomes lush when rain hits. Very rich in game espically in Zimbabwe/ Botswana/ south africa and india the bush is always brushed under the "savana" type area.
Thank you Emille! You're right, I'm finding it difficult to work out exactly how much detail to go into on these videos and the best length. At some point I plan to do individual biome videos so I will cover each in more detail. Thanks for the feedback
@@Textbooktravel for these overview videos you should keep them to a maximum of 25 to 30 minutes
Then if a subject has particular interest you can do a more specific and possibly longer video on that subject alone
"weighing more than xxx pounds" man this is the internet, most of the internet doesn't use pounds, could you just go "xxxx pounds or yyyy kilos"? This is pretty annoying ngl. And there goes the same shit with the feet - - "
As a nature nerd and conservationist at heart, I truly appreciate this video and how in depth it was. I pretty much knew most things, but it was very informative and I definitely learned some new things. Great video
Thank you!
@@Textbooktravel No problem! Keep up the good work
Dude these are some great videos, im binging all of them, keep up the amazing content 👍🏼
This video is very educational and well put together. I love the images and the fact that it does a good job both of representing a diverse representation of species while also indicating commonalities and patterns. It is also fairly accurate, just a few biome definition comments I would add;
Tundra is defined by the existence of permafrost.
Desert is a term for areas with low annual precipitation and is not dependent on heat. The tundra is an example of a cold desert.
Tropical rainforest is a different term than tropical forest or rainforest. Rainforest is determined by annual rainfall and not location. The Pacific northwest has several rainforests. Tropical forest is a nonspecific term as tropical does give a location but 'forest' implies it is different from a rainforest. Tropical rainforest is a specific term for an area in the tropics that is also a rainforest.
Marine biomes do exist but are generally referred to as zones, and are sadly generally grouped together. Intertidal, photic, abyssal, arctic, tropical or warm water just to name a few.
Keep in mind that there are many definitions for biomes, but I think the above reflects the more common scientific definitions.
The Pacific Northwest has specifically temperate rainforests that range all the way into Canada.