It's truly amazing that despite the fact that the vast majority of humans all have HD cameras in their pockets, we still have so many species being discovered yearly. The fact that a new Orangutan species (Tapa Nuli Orangutan) was recently discovered on Sumatra gives me hope that other 'extinct' or undiscovered species are still holding on, somewhere out there. My head tells me species like the Haasts Eagle and Thylacine are long gone, but my heart keeps saying no, they exist!
Another fantastic video. Love seeing the New Britain goshawk featured, and I'm glad you used my suggestion from last week! Keep it up. You're great at this and every video gets better and better.
@@fajaradi1223 You say that but did you know we don't actually have a full dodo specimen, we have a foot and a head, that's it. The knowledge of an entire species was lost because no one bothered to preserve one of them for science. Most species are robust enough to tolerate the loss of a single individual, it's habitat destruction and invasive species that'll really do them in.
I'm sure it was his plan from the start, If I get one I'm not letting it go. Call it science but science can happen without that level of selfishness and in my opinion, stupidity.
LOL. You are nuts. I'm just kidding. There are morons that would want to kill it, stuff it, or hang it on their wall just to call themselves the mighty hunter. 😮 😂. God bless all. Amen 🙏 ❤.
When you said that an extremely rare, considered extinct bird, the Guadalcanal Moustached Kingfisher, the only one of its kind, was euthanized by an ignorant biologist, to be added to some museum collection, I cried out and became nauseated and furious! What terrible things that man has done in the name of science.
It was nowhere near the only one of its kind. The biologists did an extensive survey before capturing and taking a single specimen, and they confirmed the existence of several birds in a very small area, indicating that they aren't all that rare, just undetected. If you read the article on Audubon where the biologist explains his reasoning you'll see that population estimates sit at around 4,000 individuals. Local knowledge also pointed to this bird not being rare in the slightest.
In addition to this, Tyrannomyrmex legatus, an ant species endemic to Sri Lanka was also photographed and filmed recently before which it was only known through a few specimens accidentally collected with leaf litter. The video of them being fed upon discovery could be found on RUclips if anyone's interested.
We are so lucky that these species are still out here today! The fact that they’ve been gone for so long is a testament to how we can still subconsciously save species even if we don’t know they’re still there, same with the Lord Howe story after it was restored. It still serves as a warning to how we still need to work hard to reforest areas and stop polluting the ocean even if we haven’t seen a species for a while. They might turn up one day!
For me, there is no defending the act of taking a specimen of a rare animal. The old needs of having a specimen in a museum as the holotype is an outdated practice when we can get high resolution images and take samples for analysis. I am not sure if I want to go read their response, because it will likely be narrow-sighted and hollow. The need for a specimen is why some animals have been pushed over the edge into extinction (see Great Auk), thus why do we need to risk it further?
Man this Bird was so beautiful and hearing that it was killed made me so sad. How about doing Research on an alive spezisim, the sounds These animals made or they behavore. But no, we humans rather kill it so one Museum can be proud to have a dead spezisim.
@@nightlunastar and the species bleach out over time loose most colours and all not to forgett that then other museums and stuff also want one and then it goes well if i pay you x amount of money will you get me one ? until the animal goes exticnt cause the less there around the more ppl will pay to get one
Great auk specimen taking I'm pretty sure was not for scientific study purposes but more for museum displays. Also, the scientist who took this kingfisher estimated the population to be in the thousands. Locals eat them and consider them unremarkable and common. Basically it's remote habitat is why it is so little known, rather than it being about to go extinct. The ethics of specimen taking can certainly be argued, but we can reasonably say this instance did not endanger the population.
I mean if we are talking kill yea no. but if we are talking about taking it and putting it into a breeding program absolutly. its clear that said animal isnt getting protected in its native habitat so hell might as well atleast take a few Specimens and give them a better chance in captivity.
Really think the Bornean Rainbow Toad the most interesting, I have seen the images of the leucitic penguin before so it no longer strikes me, maybe that albino panda but the beauty on that toad is really wild, the upclose shots looks like it's a fantasy animal but it is not. Still hate the guy that killed the kingfisher
PNG has amazing bird and animal species. There's also a giant rat there over 80cm long. A scientific team discovered it in a remote jungle crater in 2009. People also speculate that there might still be Thylacine living there in very remote areas. Really love this video, thank you 👍
@@SDArgo_FoC You do realize that when the scientific community realized that the auk was becoming rare museums rushed to get specimens (including their eggs) in turn speeding up their extinction. I’m pretty sure all about nature made a video about this that went into great detail about it.
All are extremely interesting finds! Thanks. And I agree with everyone else regarding the euthanizing of the Kingfisher! I thought that common practice went out LONG ago!
been binging this channel recently, i LOVE birds so every time you mention one my ears perk up. im sure im not the only person to mention this but i found out there was another sighting of shelley's eagle-owl with three photos (not in the daytime unfortunately) as well as audio! their calls are absolutely haunting.
Maybe a 360° 3D model rendering with behavioural animations and sound recreations could be better for preserving a species form. Of course this may be too idealistic in nature, but it could be very cool to have them in a "holographic" display.
I’m excited by the Ruby Dragon. I scuba dive and have never seen any type of sea horse in the ocean. I will make it a mission to see some in the wild. The weedy dragons have always fascinated me. I need to get back to scuba to see one in the wild! ❤
this is an amazing video! i just discovered your channel, so unsure if you have actually done this already but, perhaps if you do another video like this you could include the Titanomis sisyrota/frosted phoenix? It has barely any research and its family is listed as "Incertae sedis" due to that. only one image of one living has been made, and it was made in march 2024! By a swedish tourist in new zealand.
The killing of the male Guadalcanal kingfisher was absulutely barbaric and unacceptable. We owe so much to science and science has helped rescue many species from near extinction, but what this man did was sheer vanity at the expense of a male individual which could have been a critical source of genetic input for the entire species. No doubt he tried to justify the killing as "necessary to further knowledge" but this primitive attitude should have itself gone extinct a very long time ago.
After the last existing great auk was taken for a museum you would think we would have learned a lesson. That was disgraceful, I hope the collector was sacked
And I thought scientists were supposed to be smart 😂 when I saw your comment at first I thought it was gonna be a average person or a poture nor a fking scientist
Killing a rare animal just so it can be in a museum collection is so incredibly stupid. Why arent photographs together with blood/tissue samples as well as feathers enough?
In the case of the first animal, would you be okay with taking a couple breeding pairs and trying to breed them in captivity.....I just always thought about farming things like that to re populate the wild and so we can use the resource .
@obambagaming1467 As I have not read the scientist's article, I do not know if he makes a valid argument for his action or not. Still, researchers today all over the world capture animals, measure and weigh them, take skin, fur, feather and blood samples, and photograph them for a record. Then, they release them unharmed. I am not sure why that would not have been sufficient in this case.
@@AncientWildTV If the population were critically low, even the loss of one individual could be damaging to the species as a whole. It is not as if this scientist were capturing both females and males for a captive breeding programme. Also, the more I think about it, I cannot see where more valuable information could be obtained from a dead specimen than would be obtained from the other methods that I described previously. Furthermore, the fact that someone who should love nature could hold such a beautiful bird that was so docile in his hands and could be quite rare would casually kill it, I find to be quite disturbing.
I don't understand why they had to take that bird as a dead specimen. A feather or two for DNA, good measurements and photos and videos should be enough in this day and age. Taking an animal that is known to be very rare is all kinds of wrong.
Humans are an invasive species that need to use the areas they have ALREADY cleared for "human habitation" (ie, repair and occupy abandoned and disused properties, etc) instead of destroying more wild areas.
Makes perfect sense to me. Kill a rare animal to study it vs taking a blood sample, plucking a feather or two and photographing it from all angles. Why go to all that trouble when you can just kill it and study it at your leisure? Yeah, makes perfect sense to me.
this video is super fascinating! it's amazing to see these animals we've only heard about. however, i can't help but wonder if the emphasis on rare animals overshadows the ones that are critically endangered and need more attention. what do you all think?
Maybe any scientist insisting on euthanasing & preserving rare, higher order type specimens before their natural lifespan is up, should be required to advance volunteer their own bodies for preservation in Formalin or for plastination for others to study-at the end of their own mortal existence? Methinks many would grudgingly forgo this outdated practice with that stipulation?
@@rickh3714 Well the problem is that we already have a holotype specimen for a human, we collected it literal EONS ago, we don't actually need more of them for our collection so no one actually needs to get euthanized for that. Also humans are dying and donating their bodies to science all the time, we're not in major need of human bodies, we got that covered. Your gotcha uno reverse doesn't work on any level my friend but nice try, maybe just think things through before you say dumb shit.
wow, i had no idea that seahorses were different from sea dragons even. you taught me something totally new! i thought people just had different names for them in different locales, like potato bug vs. roly poly LOL
The most fascinating picture in this video is that of the heavy chsin andcontainment requied to keep thetrsil camera from being stolen in the Walter's duiker portion
Please do a video on Bugun Liocichla, one of the rarest and recently discovered birds of the Himalayas in India. It is Critically Endangered. I have also captured a photograph of leucistic short eared owl.
I have witnessed the monitor lizard annihilate other populations of lizards by eating their eggs. I had to go way back into the jungle to see one of the green lizards again.
Idk about yall but im not a tiktoking streaming goru i absolutely love nature and am always seeing something that stumps me, could just be your normal everyday animal but in my experience i cannot just whip out my phone and immediately start recording and just capture a crystal clear image of whatever it is i saw, on top of having a slow phone so even if i could pull it out that fast theres no shot that itll start recording immediately either, lets make an example lets say i seen a brand new species but i didn't know snd i try to film it id have 6 seconds to get me phone out and record and if im in the woods and its already moving to wherever im 92% of the time not gonna catch anything so I feel like theres thousands of other animals weve never seen or if we have seen them people dismiss everything till they have a picture
The new Britain Goshawk was recently photographed for a long time, though various people have claimed to have seen it… it still took over hundred years to finally photograph it.
The new sea dragon is amazingly cool. Sea dragons and seahorses seem so fragile, they are just surprising to behold. Thanks for your video.
It's truly amazing that despite the fact that the vast majority of humans all have HD cameras in their pockets, we still have so many species being discovered yearly.
The fact that a new Orangutan species (Tapa Nuli Orangutan) was recently discovered on Sumatra gives me hope that other 'extinct' or undiscovered species are still holding on, somewhere out there. My head tells me species like the Haasts Eagle and Thylacine are long gone, but my heart keeps saying no, they exist!
Another fantastic video. Love seeing the New Britain goshawk featured, and I'm glad you used my suggestion from last week! Keep it up. You're great at this and every video gets better and better.
I've never seen a raptor like that it was kinda beautiful
Appreciate how you are succinct and deliver the info without a ton of fluff talk that has nothing to do with the video. Keep up the good work.
"Yay! We've found a VERY rare species! ... Let's *kill* it!"
Ehem ...
Let's "preserve" it for the sake of "science"
@@fajaradi1223 You say that but did you know we don't actually have a full dodo specimen, we have a foot and a head, that's it. The knowledge of an entire species was lost because no one bothered to preserve one of them for science. Most species are robust enough to tolerate the loss of a single individual, it's habitat destruction and invasive species that'll really do them in.
I'm sure it was his plan from the start, If I get one I'm not letting it go. Call it science but science can happen without that level of selfishness and in my opinion, stupidity.
LOL. You are nuts. I'm just kidding. There are morons that would want to kill it, stuff it, or hang it on their wall just to call themselves the mighty hunter. 😮 😂.
God bless all. Amen 🙏 ❤.
He seemed pretty friendly, take him home. Put him in a zoo.
When you said that an extremely rare, considered extinct bird, the Guadalcanal Moustached Kingfisher, the only one of its kind, was euthanized by an ignorant biologist, to be added to some museum collection, I cried out and became nauseated and furious! What terrible things that man has done in the name of science.
It was nowhere near the only one of its kind. The biologists did an extensive survey before capturing and taking a single specimen, and they confirmed the existence of several birds in a very small area, indicating that they aren't all that rare, just undetected.
If you read the article on Audubon where the biologist explains his reasoning you'll see that population estimates sit at around 4,000 individuals. Local knowledge also pointed to this bird not being rare in the slightest.
😢😢😢😡😡
Me too. I was enjoying the video up until the euthanization comment. It made me want to cry.
I love these videos. It’s so amazing to see animals that have been “missing” for decades!
In addition to this, Tyrannomyrmex legatus, an ant species endemic to Sri Lanka was also photographed and filmed recently before which it was only known through a few specimens accidentally collected with leaf litter. The video of them being fed upon discovery could be found on RUclips if anyone's interested.
@@KGTKK I tried to find an insect for this video but I wasn't coming across one. Wish I knew this a week ago.
@@all.about.nature1987 Oh!😅 Maybe they could be featured in an upcoming video...
@@all.about.nature1987 Also I just want to mention how much I love your work. You bring so much joy to wildlife enthusiasts like me myself.❤️
🎉thank you!
We are so lucky that these species are still out here today! The fact that they’ve been gone for so long is a testament to how we can still subconsciously save species even if we don’t know they’re still there, same with the Lord Howe story after it was restored. It still serves as a warning to how we still need to work hard to reforest areas and stop polluting the ocean even if we haven’t seen a species for a while. They might turn up one day!
I liked the South Philippine Dwarf Kingfisher out of all that I saw. It reminds me of a Hummingbird. Thank you for bringing these animals to us.😊
For me, there is no defending the act of taking a specimen of a rare animal. The old needs of having a specimen in a museum as the holotype is an outdated practice when we can get high resolution images and take samples for analysis. I am not sure if I want to go read their response, because it will likely be narrow-sighted and hollow. The need for a specimen is why some animals have been pushed over the edge into extinction (see Great Auk), thus why do we need to risk it further?
Screw you
Man this Bird was so beautiful and hearing that it was killed made me so sad. How about doing Research on an alive spezisim, the sounds These animals made or they behavore. But no, we humans rather kill it so one Museum can be proud to have a dead spezisim.
@@nightlunastar and the species bleach out over time loose most colours and all
not to forgett that then other museums and stuff also want one
and then it goes
well if i pay you x amount of money will you get me one ?
until the animal goes exticnt cause the less there around the more ppl will pay to get one
Great auk specimen taking I'm pretty sure was not for scientific study purposes but more for museum displays.
Also, the scientist who took this kingfisher estimated the population to be in the thousands. Locals eat them and consider them unremarkable and common. Basically it's remote habitat is why it is so little known, rather than it being about to go extinct.
The ethics of specimen taking can certainly be argued, but we can reasonably say this instance did not endanger the population.
I mean if we are talking kill yea no. but if we are talking about taking it and putting it into a breeding program absolutly. its clear that said animal isnt getting protected in its native habitat so hell might as well atleast take a few Specimens and give them a better chance in captivity.
Another wonderful video as always. The Pointy-nosed Blue Ratfish was definitely the most interesting animal featured in the video imo.
You're so awesome, thank you!
Really think the Bornean Rainbow Toad the most interesting, I have seen the images of the leucitic penguin before so it no longer strikes me, maybe that albino panda but the beauty on that toad is really wild, the upclose shots looks like it's a fantasy animal but it is not.
Still hate the guy that killed the kingfisher
All of them very interesting!!!!!!! But the Guadalcanal Moustached Kingfisher🤩❤ thanks for sharing ! Love your videos
PNG has amazing bird and animal species.
There's also a giant rat there over 80cm long. A scientific team discovered it in a remote jungle crater in 2009.
People also speculate that there might still be Thylacine living there in very remote areas.
Really love this video, thank you 👍
Even though the political climate is troubling, at best, your videos give me hope for the planet.
Thank you SO MUCH for the work that you do!!! ❤ ❤ ❤
This channel is a joy...great content.
It should be shown in schools like this pure content
@@rahulgeddada6065 Agreed.
8:21 it really seems we really haven’t learned from the great auk’s extinction. Collection doesn’t always require killing the animal people.
Truth!! ^ especially nowindays with modern science they still fall back on such a barbaric practice.
It went extinct via overhunting for reasons not related to museum specimen collecting. Dont use fallacies
The collecting only started happening when the Auk was already nearly hunted to extinction and would have otherwise.
@@SDArgo_FoC You do realize that when the scientific community realized that the auk was becoming rare museums rushed to get specimens (including their eggs) in turn speeding up their extinction. I’m pretty sure all about nature made a video about this that went into great detail about it.
@@ionryful the point still stands that maybe we shouldn’t kill rare birds just to have a museum specimen.
Great vid! Kingfishers are underrated!
I saw the notification on my phone and clicked straight away 👍🏻
Same
All are extremely interesting finds! Thanks. And I agree with everyone else regarding the euthanizing of the Kingfisher! I thought that common practice went out LONG ago!
awesome and magnificent content - like always! thanks for your work!
Great photos, the last one is a real life shiny ✨
Just incredible work .. Thank you.
I love all the animals. I like the king fishers, the Borneo rainbow frog, and the hairs. I also like that hawk that looks like a giant parrot.
Your videos got me into wildlife photography.I’m always hoping to catch a photo of something rare or unheard of in my area.
Thank you for the video!
been binging this channel recently, i LOVE birds so every time you mention one my ears perk up. im sure im not the only person to mention this but i found out there was another sighting of shelley's eagle-owl with three photos (not in the daytime unfortunately) as well as audio! their calls are absolutely haunting.
Maybe a 360° 3D model rendering with behavioural animations and sound recreations could be better for preserving a species form. Of course this may be too idealistic in nature, but it could be very cool to have them in a "holographic" display.
The man who killed the Kingfisher should serve time in jail! What a total jerk
RIGHT ON!! LET'S FIND A REASON TO TURN HIM INTO A SPECIMEN! HE DID THAT TO MAKE HIMSELF RICH & FAMOUS!
Why?
🤦@@PercyTinglish
@@RuhtRowRaggy so... No reason?
You can have understanding or you can be nice. Not everyone chooses the latter.
WOW
New species and new photo's will keep appearing.....................
Just hope that they don't disappear....
#1 nature chanel
Merveilleux comme toujours ( perfect vidéo as usual)
Thank you
Merci beaucoup!
Heh, Lemon Meringuin.
I’m excited by the Ruby Dragon. I scuba dive and have never seen any type of sea horse in the ocean. I will make it a mission to see some in the wild. The weedy dragons have always fascinated me. I need to get back to scuba to see one in the wild! ❤
Amazing! Thank you!
King fisheres are so cute with their big beaks
They're all magnificent !!!
Wake up y’all, All About Nature just posted new content!
I just woke up as they posted 😭😭
hsbebwo nnajsiwkwnw kspiwn wsj?
@@jans_ dhdds deusdinacsijdscw cdiocdnaicdsjc cducismsic. Efudj!
Rainbow toad was my favorite!!
I can’t wait till big foots on this channel
In like forty years he’s gonna be talking about how we recently discovered the bones of the last individual or something like that
Incredible Finds!
this is an amazing video! i just discovered your channel, so unsure if you have actually done this already but, perhaps if you do another video like this you could include the Titanomis sisyrota/frosted phoenix? It has barely any research and its family is listed as "Incertae sedis" due to that. only one image of one living has been made, and it was made in march 2024! By a swedish tourist in new zealand.
Good suggestion, Kirkland!
Wow!
The killing of the male Guadalcanal kingfisher was absulutely barbaric and unacceptable. We owe so much to science and science has helped rescue many species from near extinction, but what this man did was sheer vanity at the expense of a male individual which could have been a critical source of genetic input for the entire species. No doubt he tried to justify the killing as "necessary to further knowledge" but this primitive attitude should have itself gone extinct a very long time ago.
After the last existing great auk was taken for a museum you would think we would have learned a lesson. That was disgraceful, I hope the collector was sacked
The moron has no defence for an indefensible act.
I hate you rob moyle
Very enjoyable video as always.
"Oh boy a super rare bird! I better kill it so it becomes even more rare!"
And I thought scientists were supposed to be smart 😂 when I saw your comment at first I thought it was gonna be a average person or a poture nor a fking scientist
Thank you for your video❤
8:31 The way my smile faded
I have the LAST ever photo of a Homo Sapiens using a pay phone.
All beautiful.❤
Killing a rare animal just so it can be in a museum collection is so incredibly stupid.
Why arent photographs together with blood/tissue samples as well as feathers enough?
Or place a tracker and let it live out its life first. Like seriously. It may have had a family to take care of.
In the case of the first animal, would you be okay with taking a couple breeding pairs and trying to breed them in captivity.....I just always thought about farming things like that to re populate the wild and so we can use the resource .
@obambagaming1467
As I have not read the scientist's article, I do not know if he makes a valid argument for his action or not. Still, researchers today all over the world capture animals, measure and weigh them, take skin, fur, feather and blood samples, and photograph them for a record. Then, they release them unharmed. I am not sure why that would not have been sufficient in this case.
@@RCSVirginia are there any concerns about the methods used in this case compared to standard research practices?
@@AncientWildTV
If the population were critically low, even the loss of one individual could be damaging to the species as a whole. It is not as if this scientist were capturing both females and males for a captive breeding programme. Also, the more I think about it, I cannot see where more valuable information could be obtained from a dead specimen than would be obtained from the other methods that I described previously. Furthermore, the fact that someone who should love nature could hold such a beautiful bird that was so docile in his hands and could be quite rare would casually kill it, I find to be quite disturbing.
Thank you for using cm and inches, you are a hero!
I don't understand why they had to take that bird as a dead specimen. A feather or two for DNA, good measurements and photos and videos should be enough in this day and age. Taking an animal that is known to be very rare is all kinds of wrong.
Humans are an invasive species that need to use the areas they have ALREADY cleared for "human habitation" (ie, repair and occupy abandoned and disused properties, etc) instead of destroying more wild areas.
That's because humans are fucked up, worthless pieces of shit
jfc that poor Kingfisher :(
that's horrible
Makes perfect sense to me. Kill a rare animal to study it vs taking a blood sample, plucking a feather or two and photographing it from all angles. Why go to all that trouble when you can just kill it and study it at your leisure? Yeah, makes perfect sense to me.
I’m glad it makes sense to someone!
this video is super fascinating! it's amazing to see these animals we've only heard about. however, i can't help but wonder if the emphasis on rare animals overshadows the ones that are critically endangered and need more attention. what do you all think?
I hate that bastard who killed the kingfisher!!!
Maybe any scientist insisting on euthanasing & preserving rare, higher order type specimens before their natural lifespan is up, should be required to advance volunteer their own bodies for preservation in Formalin or for plastination for others to study-at the end of their own mortal existence?
Methinks many would grudgingly forgo this outdated practice with that stipulation?
@@rickh3714 Well the problem is that we already have a holotype specimen for a human, we collected it literal EONS ago, we don't actually need more of them for our collection so no one actually needs to get euthanized for that. Also humans are dying and donating their bodies to science all the time, we're not in major need of human bodies, we got that covered. Your gotcha uno reverse doesn't work on any level my friend but nice try, maybe just think things through before you say dumb shit.
Christopher Filardi
@@radioraffadefinitely a small hat
Cause that's helpful.
wow, i had no idea that seahorses were different from sea dragons even. you taught me something totally new! i thought people just had different names for them in different locales, like potato bug vs. roly poly LOL
Great video!!!
Wonderful
When can we expect photos of the Cuban Kite & Miss Waldron's Red Colobus soon (among many others)?
The most fascinating picture in this video is that of the heavy chsin andcontainment requied to keep thetrsil camera from being stolen in the Walter's duiker portion
Please do a video on Bugun Liocichla, one of the rarest and recently discovered birds of the Himalayas in India. It is Critically Endangered.
I have also captured a photograph of leucistic short eared owl.
It’s a wonder anything at all survived through that mess during WWII.
The monkey and goshawk were my favorites.
LOL! He killed it to save it. What a great guy and science in general. Don’t forget, give us two weeks to flatten the curve.
08:20 its so sad
HELL YEAHHH
Can you make a video about prehistoric animals?
They were all interesting.
I have witnessed the monitor lizard annihilate other populations of lizards by eating their eggs. I had to go way back into the jungle to see one of the green lizards again.
Actenoides excelsus, however found them all interesting to various degrees. Like to think i'm a sucker for natural beauty.
the creepy feet of that tiny kingfisher they reminded me of their ancestors😂😂😂😂
what? that first animal the deer with "gills" was photo'd live in the 90s. I saw it on SIGHTINGS
Was the first one in the deer family?
These are the headlines I want to see
There are some animals that are not extinct at you included like the panda and the penguin 0:21
I love small antelope, so the duiker does it for me
The most interesting is the Leucistic Penguin!
Idk about yall but im not a tiktoking streaming goru i absolutely love nature and am always seeing something that stumps me, could just be your normal everyday animal but in my experience i cannot just whip out my phone and immediately start recording and just capture a crystal clear image of whatever it is i saw, on top of having a slow phone so even if i could pull it out that fast theres no shot that itll start recording immediately either, lets make an example lets say i seen a brand new species but i didn't know snd i try to film it id have 6 seconds to get me phone out and record and if im in the woods and its already moving to wherever im 92% of the time not gonna catch anything so I feel like theres thousands of other animals weve never seen or if we have seen them people dismiss everything till they have a picture
I like to see if you can do animals that we dont see 100 years ago a finely find (fife animals pls doit😢)
Cool video. Woulda been cool to have caught the elusive "bigfoot" 😅
The new Britain Goshawk was recently photographed for a long time, though various people have claimed to have seen it… it still took over hundred years to finally photograph it.
I've seen several albino whitetail deer in my life, some were partial albinos, some were full albinos.
It would be wonderful if somebody finds a thylacine again
Would a hermit count or is that too mean of a statement
This Walter's Duiker we have this too much in my country (Philippines) we called it "Pilandok"
Super
8:47 😒 why the hell did they have to kill the only male ever caught what if it was the last one kinda doomed the species 🤦
shit like that happens and its gonna keep happening those who dont learn from history are doomed to repeat it
It’s his job they’ve been doing that since when discovering new animals and science was a thing
The penguin ❤❤
You can’t fool me with the new Britain name it’s a goshawk inspired by napoleon dynamite
#8 I thought that was a small bird until I saw the man holding it.
The Philippine Kingfisher is magically beautiful. Collecting a rare species for science is unacceptable.
Pretty sure I've seen Photos of King Penguins like that, already Years ago though
King penguins don't live in Antarctica but emperor penguins live in Antarctica
Definately the eagle owl and penguin, all of them really
Só cool
Giant black rats around 15inches to 20inches can be seen in Malaysian river banks and drains.
Ok thanks?