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Evolution Of Penguins

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  • Опубликовано: 14 авг 2024
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    This video explains how Penguins went from normal sea birds into the specialised flightless swimmers we know and love today. It will answer questions like why can't penguins fly? Where did penguins come from? and talk about the giant penguins that use to live on earth.
    Sources:
    www.academia.e...
    onlinelibrary....
    www.ncbi.nlm.n...
    www.ncbi.nlm.n...

Комментарии • 676

  • @jimmyshrimbe9361
    @jimmyshrimbe9361 4 года назад +1648

    Convergent evolution: nature's practical joke on scientists

    • @eduardofreitas8336
      @eduardofreitas8336 4 года назад +27

      @Dieter Gaudlitz What do you mean by hype of cladistics?

    • @gimpytheimp
      @gimpytheimp 4 года назад +75

      Practical joke? I'd say the biggest example of evolution being real as natural pressures bring about similar designs to fill a niche.

    • @opposumness3107
      @opposumness3107 4 года назад +12

      Good one, made me laugh

    • @ilkeracar6567
      @ilkeracar6567 4 года назад +5

      Wish I could see a great auk today.

    • @lemmingscanfly5
      @lemmingscanfly5 4 года назад

      God Bless The Internet Most cultures branch off of and root into those of neighboring nations.

  • @earthknight60
    @earthknight60 4 года назад +621

    For the "northern penguin" you need to look up the great auk (Pinguinus impennis). Large, flightless, and occupied pretty much the same ecological niche.

    • @LarsTonguesInAspix
      @LarsTonguesInAspix 4 года назад +6

      @@mootuslootus5463 hahahahhahah

    • @Packless1
      @Packless1 4 года назад +63

      ...unfortunately extinct...! :-(

    • @LarsTonguesInAspix
      @LarsTonguesInAspix 4 года назад +30

      @@Packless1 I mean if we stayed in Africa, they wouldn't be!

    • @Packless1
      @Packless1 4 года назад +5

      @@LarsTonguesInAspix ...good point...!

    • @TheDentrassi
      @TheDentrassi 4 года назад +50

      Came into comments to say the same thing. I used to work with one of the few taxidermy specimens of this animal. They're quite penguin like and related to puffins/razorbills. Very much went extinct due to human actions through 16th to 19th century.

  • @aleksandarvil5718
    @aleksandarvil5718 4 года назад +247

    Origin of penguins and their closest avian relatives?
    Skipper: *"Kowalski, Analysis!"*

  • @oldgysgt
    @oldgysgt 4 года назад +326

    In the late 1960's my wife and I were visiting relatives in the San Francisco Bay Area. While driving back south we stopped along Highway 1 somewhere near Half Moon Bay to walk on a secluded beach. We were walking along the small beach when we saw something coming out a wave a few yards from us and move on its belly up on the wet sand. My life shouted out, "Look, a Penguin!" Sure enough, there was a small black and white Penguin just like the ones we had seen at the San Diego zoo a year before. Its color pattern was kind of like the striped sides on the Galapagos Penguin. The bird took one look at us, and still on its belly, turned and pushed into the next incoming wave. It porpoised once in the shallow water, and then disappeared. I have never heard of a Penguin that far north, so I figured no one would believe what we saw. All I can guess is the bird was VERY lost, and was as surprised to see us are we were to see it.

    • @Kaytoun
      @Kaytoun 4 года назад +62

      oldgysgt Should’ve made a left turn at Albuquerque.

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 4 года назад +52

      That's awesome! I'm from the Bay Area and have never seen penguins here, but it honestly wouldn't surprise me if they occasionally were blown up from the Galapagos. California has a long coastline, and it'd be easy for a chance encounter like that to be missed. How lucky you guys were!

    • @darrencottam1146
      @darrencottam1146 4 года назад +4

      @@Kaytoun the bugs bunny penguin episode ,I got you .that's all folks

    • @TheDeadGunslinger
      @TheDeadGunslinger 4 года назад +14

      I believe you. I mean, why not? A random penguin lost out of it's normal climate. It could happen.

    • @bone8352
      @bone8352 4 года назад +21

      Awww you called your wife your life.

  • @1lobster
    @1lobster 4 года назад +1416

    what if we flew, but in water.

  • @warhawkjah
    @warhawkjah 4 года назад +109

    5:00 the great auk was a “northern penguin equivalent” and related to puffins. Convergently evolved. Even the name penguin comes from a Celtic word for auk.

  • @Jehhgz
    @Jehhgz 4 года назад +617

    Penguins are the bird versions of whales and seals
    Yes

    • @ConcordTheGymnogyps
      @ConcordTheGymnogyps 4 года назад +2

      Penguins are not birds though.

    • @ouroborosi
      @ouroborosi 4 года назад +47

      @@ConcordTheGymnogyps cause the bible told you so?

    • @wormthirtyfour
      @wormthirtyfour 4 года назад +54

      @@ConcordTheGymnogyps _what_

    • @aaronkisitu4855
      @aaronkisitu4855 4 года назад +22

      Willie Wagtail [From Dot and the Kangaroo] i’m sorry what else would they be?

    • @ultrademigod
      @ultrademigod 4 года назад +39

      @@aaronkisitu4855 They're tiny men in feather suits and helmets.

  • @T33K3SS3LCH3N
    @T33K3SS3LCH3N 4 года назад +172

    If flippers are upside down wings, penguins should have tried flying on their backs 🤔

    • @lemurpie9381
      @lemurpie9381 3 года назад +26

      New Penguin update coming soon?

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 года назад +6

      @@lemurpie9381 "soon"
      Probably as soon as Hollow Knight: Silksong releases.
      So in a few million years.

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb Год назад +1

      genius

  • @Galenus1234
    @Galenus1234 4 года назад +178

    Fun fact:
    Antarctica is the last diapsid stronghold being exclusively inhabited by dinosaurs (if you ignore those few curious naked apes that temporarily dwell there in tin boxes).

    • @robokill387
      @robokill387 4 года назад +24

      What about leopard seals?

    • @WadcaWymiaru
      @WadcaWymiaru 4 года назад +22

      @@robokill387
      Or orcas...

    • @domsquaaa4323
      @domsquaaa4323 4 года назад +21

      Robot killer I think they mean on land

    • @stefanalexanderlungu1503
      @stefanalexanderlungu1503 4 года назад +1

      @@domsquaaa4323 Do seals count as land animals?

    • @plant5875
      @plant5875 3 года назад +1

      @@stefanalexanderlungu1503 they only come on land to breed, so no

  • @satanofficial3902
    @satanofficial3902 4 года назад +315

    If you get pecked by a penguin, you will turn into a werepenguin during the next full moon.

    • @oldgysgt
      @oldgysgt 4 года назад +15

      Is that what happened to Burgess Meredith in the Batman television series.

    • @edoardocastelnovi7154
      @edoardocastelnovi7154 4 года назад +10

      And you would then become Anthropornis ("man-bird")

    • @bone8352
      @bone8352 3 года назад +3

      Reminds me of Dwarf Fortress (were animals) I once played an adventure as were-raccoon. Nothing like transforming in the middle of town and ripping guards apart as a giant super strong raccoon

    • @Jason75913
      @Jason75913 3 года назад +3

      and your new moves will be Drill Peck, Close Combat, Mirror Move, and Roost

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon 3 года назад

      @@edoardocastelnovi7154 I'd replace -pornis with -suinae (Anthrosuinae or man-pig) or -canis (Anthrocanis or man-dog) to further offend the elderly chinese people who love pushing/shoving their way to board public transport in Singapore..

  • @abdulazizrex
    @abdulazizrex 4 года назад +215

    It’s mind boggling that these birds appeared so quickly after the extinction of the dinosaurs, by only 3.5 million years!

    • @roadhigher
      @roadhigher 4 года назад +48

      Many niches were just left vacant causing huge ecological gaps after the K-T. Birds were already present and flourishing for 100 million years, when the extinction hit and all their Dinosaur relatives died, they were the first to fill in the missing niches. Giant predatory birds continued the proud Therapod tradition of being top predators, following in the footsteps of their Raptor cousins. Penguin like Birds already existed, like Hesperornis, and Penguins evolved to fill their nieche.

    • @razatiger22
      @razatiger22 4 года назад +14

      @@roadhigher yep, many of the top predators died, allowing bird like dinosaurs to evolve into whatever they wanted based on food and where it was easiest to locate. During that time most of the remaining food was in the ocean.

    • @shawnsalem5627
      @shawnsalem5627 4 года назад +2

      Peguins are dinosaurs stupid

    • @pairot01
      @pairot01 4 года назад +5

      Why is it such a surprise? Something's gotta be best when that spot opens up.

    • @pairot01
      @pairot01 2 года назад +2

      @@venth6 you know what he meant, stop being an obnoxious nitpicking nerd.

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo 4 года назад +148

    1.5 meter penguin, that's brilliant! Wish they were around now.

    • @Nmethyltransferase
      @Nmethyltransferase 4 года назад +9

      @Dieter Gaudlitz But how good are their hugs?

    • @ANTSEMUT1
      @ANTSEMUT1 4 года назад +7

      Didn't they just discover a fossil of a penguin who was 2.6 metres tall?

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake 4 года назад +3

      Dieter Gaudlitz All penguins have deviant tendencies far greater than those of any child

    • @timothymoore8549
      @timothymoore8549 4 года назад +2

      I absolutely love everything you put out Stefan

    • @valeriavagapova
      @valeriavagapova 4 года назад +4

      @@ANTSEMUT1 Hm, the only news I can find are about 1.6 meter penguin

  • @foxsparrow8973
    @foxsparrow8973 3 года назад +103

    I've always wondered if penguins are a living transition animal that could some day evolve into a full time water species like an ichthyosaur or dolphin.

    • @stormisuedonym4599
      @stormisuedonym4599 2 года назад +58

      All species are transitional species.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 2 года назад +12

      They lay eggs and even more signicantly, they have to moult their feathers every year. It's hard to see how those two factors could gradually change through evolution to allow them to entirely avoid land.

    • @stormisuedonym4599
      @stormisuedonym4599 2 года назад +26

      @@Dave_Sisson Live birth has evolved in multiple sauropsid species, and switching from a single molt to ongoing shedding could solve the issue of the feathers.

    • @chheinrich8486
      @chheinrich8486 2 года назад +9

      Well, the famous speculative paleontology book "after man" has just such a creature in its world 50 Million years in the future,

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 2 года назад

      A scientist has released new findingss on the benefits of penguins being flightless. Appropriately, it's on Falklands TV news. ruclips.net/video/FZhp5YPVULM/видео.html

  • @skybluskyblueify
    @skybluskyblueify 4 года назад +163

    I thought the "northern penguins" were the great auks?

    • @Avatar_Brandy
      @Avatar_Brandy 4 года назад +48

      yep, in fact the word "penguin" originally referred to the great auk, not the southern penguins we know today

    • @Kyle-gw6qp
      @Kyle-gw6qp 4 года назад +2

      Bruh the northern penguins got eaten but no one eats southern penguins?

    • @pairot01
      @pairot01 4 года назад +15

      @@Kyle-gw6qp No one lives in antartica bruh

    • @Kyle-gw6qp
      @Kyle-gw6qp 3 года назад +2

      @metaphysicalgraffiti I aim to please

    • @CorporalTailsDude
      @CorporalTailsDude 3 года назад +2

      @@pairot01 polar bears: am I a joke to you?

  • @DavidBennell
    @DavidBennell 4 года назад +90

    I am fairly sure they lost the ability to fly due to their weight, to survive the cold an emperor penguin is a fairly chubby 23kg while the wandering Albatros the bird with the longest wingspan is 7kg

    • @opposumness3107
      @opposumness3107 4 года назад +5

      Wow, only 7kg!?!? It's so huge!

    • @user-ed9qu5im2y
      @user-ed9qu5im2y 4 года назад +27

      @@opposumness3107 Yeah a lot of it just hollow bones and feathers (and powerful muscles ofc, but only in the parts of their bodies where they need to be that strong for flight). In general birds are waaaay lighter than they look.

    • @opposumness3107
      @opposumness3107 4 года назад +5

      @@user-ed9qu5im2y yeah, I know.
      But still, it's hard to fathom. They can grip and carry quite a lot of their mass, those winged ones.
      I once experienced a seagull dropping a rock the size of my hand with fingers extended down right between my pet rabbit and me. Would've killed the rabbit and maybe even me, if it hit my head.
      That rock must've weighed about 1-2kg . If an albatross weighs 7kg, then that seagull nearly lifted half its body weight - I'm speculating.

    • @Kyle-gw6qp
      @Kyle-gw6qp 4 года назад +4

      Chapter one, too fat to fly

    • @carolineyuen3247
      @carolineyuen3247 4 года назад +4

      I too lost my ability to fly during quarantine

  • @seekperspective
    @seekperspective 3 года назад +17

    Dude, I'm going to be honest with you. I have learned and sustained more information from your videos than I have in school. You are doing a great job, keep up the good work! These video's will motivate so many teens to consider biology as a major.

  • @AydenHub
    @AydenHub 4 года назад +53

    Fascinating, I've always wondered how penguins evolved to be so unique compared to other birds

  • @shadowmax889
    @shadowmax889 4 года назад +54

    But there was an aquatic bird like the penguin that went extinct in the northern hemisphere the Great Auk, so the hypothesis of why there are not flightless aquatic birds in the northern hemisphere due to predators maybe is false.

  • @JoeJoeTheCapybara
    @JoeJoeTheCapybara 4 года назад +35

    This is awesome! I wonder if whales never evolved that a giant baleen penguin would have evolved instead?

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 года назад +26

      Thank you and it's entirely possible or maybe deep sea penguins that ate giant squid

    • @proudpapaprick
      @proudpapaprick 4 года назад +16

      Packs of killer penguins that chased down seals and sharks.

    • @proudpapaprick
      @proudpapaprick 4 года назад +6

      @Dieter Gaudlitz Still, tis a fun thought experiment.

    • @Lankpants
      @Lankpants 4 года назад +13

      I think it would have been very hard for penguins to become truly fully aquatic due to their reproductive systems. Fully aquatic marine tetrapods all seem to have had one very important trait in common, they give birth to live young. This is obviously true of modern fully aquatic marine mammals, but also seems to have been true of ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs and mosasaurs, quite a rare trait amongst reptiles but seemingly unanimous amongst this lifestyle.
      It seems likely to me that penguins body plans are more limited due to this, they have to return to land in order to give birth which means their body needs to function on land. They can't be as specialised as swimmers as whales are which makes exclusively filter feeding and supporting massive bodies much harder, not to mention that it's hard to make a body that large function on land at all.
      Without being fully aquatic there seems to be a smaller size limit imposed on filter feeders. There are birds that fill this niche and they're certainly not what you'd call small, flamingos are rather large but they're still no whales. Of course, to even get a penguin to this point you'd need the right set of mutations and selective pressure to cause this. A small semi-aquatic filter feeding penguin doesn't seem evolutionary impossible, but without internalising their eggs they were never going to become avian whales. Again, the internalisation of eggs isn't impossible and has happened multiple times throughout history but it just further complicates the pathway for whale-penguins to develop.

    • @Chillerll
      @Chillerll 4 года назад +2

      @@Lankpants I never thought about the eggs. I guess you are right, fully aquatic penguins could not have happened without a major change in the way how these birds reproduce. But there used to be fully aquatic reptiles, I wonder how they did it.

  • @studiosraufncingr6965
    @studiosraufncingr6965 4 года назад +85

    Idk why, but today under shower i was like: where did the penguins come from and why do they live in antartica?

  • @BananaCake26
    @BananaCake26 4 года назад +53

    It's a shame most of the megafauna is extinct. I wish giant penguins were still around today :(

    • @Chillerll
      @Chillerll 4 года назад +14

      It's even more frustrating because they became extinct so recently, giant penguins became extinct 150 years ago. Similar to Dodos. And even the last Mammoths were still alive as the pyramids were built.

    • @Kyle-gw6qp
      @Kyle-gw6qp 4 года назад +4

      @@Chillerll it was smaller mamoths though, still impressive but not quite as jaw dropping

    • @zieckenbritz811
      @zieckenbritz811 4 года назад +1

      @@Chillerll giant penguins became extinct 150? Years ago? Wtf? 1-5-0 years ago? Are u sure?

    • @Chillerll
      @Chillerll 4 года назад +6

      @@zieckenbritz811 I looked it up on wikipedia. I mean specifically the great auk. The article says:
      The great auk had disappeared from Funk Island by 1800.
      So its more like 200 years, but still not a very long time ago.

    • @StarGiraffinum
      @StarGiraffinum 3 года назад

      Well we better not the megafauna we have left ever go extinct.

  • @transnewt
    @transnewt 4 года назад +43

    everyone is all like "penguins could never live in the north!" and im here just sayin...
    what about great auks?

    • @oldgysgt
      @oldgysgt 4 года назад +11

      From what I have just read, the Great Auk is not closely related to Penguins, although they fill much the same niche.

    • @user-qd8yy9lc4g
      @user-qd8yy9lc4g 4 года назад +14

      Indeed, Great Auks are, obviously, auks, or alcids, which include plenty of flying species including the puffins. Known great auk nesting sites were remote, rocky islands; while attacks on nesting sites by polar bears were not unheard of, great auks overall did not have that many predators.

    • @pairot01
      @pairot01 4 года назад +3

      They couldn't live there and thus went extinct

  • @ZeroThepainter
    @ZeroThepainter 4 года назад +11

    I read the mountains of madness so I was curious about penguin evolution. You video contained the information in an easy to follow timeline

    • @maxkronader5225
      @maxkronader5225 4 года назад +2

      @Zero
      And fortunately we did not have to deal with the Old Ones or rebel Shoggoths to learn about it!😁

  • @davidwilsch4668
    @davidwilsch4668 4 года назад +9

    Another great video. I really like this channel, the way you present information and combine it with paleoart just works for me. I've tried to think of some suggestions for videos: evolution of bats, paleozoic invertebrates, recently extinct animals - either focusing on one species or mentioning several. You could definitely make more videos about birds. This is the first one you have done and there are many topics to choose from. Large flightless birds in South America and New Zealand, Argentavis, Pelagornis, Bullockornis or maybe birds right after the split from non-avian dinosaurs.

  • @cowmustard7848
    @cowmustard7848 4 года назад +35

    This is such a good channel!
    You explain it all so well! Your channel kind of Reminds me of Ben G Thomas or PBS Eons.
    Will you also do video's about extant taxons?

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 года назад +4

      Thank you, there both great channels and maybe, what exactly did you want to learn about them

    • @cowmustard7848
      @cowmustard7848 4 года назад +4

      @@mothlightmedia1936 No problem!
      It would be really interesting to see you do a video about Tetradontiform fish. Think cowfish, triggerfish, sunfish, vilefish etc. Or maybe the evolution of lice.
      Dunno, I just think they are really interesting :D

    • @DrunkNamedJohn
      @DrunkNamedJohn 4 года назад +3

      He is less long-winded and more focused than Ben. And he gets right to the point and doesn't take 3 minutes to intro the video.

    • @mradhayuda1
      @mradhayuda1 4 года назад

      I came here from pbs.

    • @SpiritBear12
      @SpiritBear12 4 года назад +1

      @@mothlightmedia1936 *they're

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo 4 года назад +8

    As you asked for a suggestion, what about the evolution of crocodiles?? I often hear that they've been around since the dinosaur age but can they really have undergone no evolutionary changes in all that time?

    • @Armatu5
      @Armatu5 4 года назад +1

      Stefan Milo I may be wrong, but I think I remember hearing as a child that the gator and shark families both existed before dinosaurs. I would love to see a video about it though, definitely!

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 года назад +6

      That does sound like an interesting topic.

    • @diegorodriguesdesouza7389
      @diegorodriguesdesouza7389 4 года назад +4

      Crocodiloforms were one of the first diapsida to came into being, along the eons they have changed a lot to occupie a great amount of different niches.

    • @MrIkana
      @MrIkana 4 года назад +7

      @@Armatu5 Sharks are literally older than trees.

  • @marcosmota1094
    @marcosmota1094 4 года назад +5

    Can we all bow in awe of this man...super smooth presentation and great content. One of my fastest subs ever and on deck for a Patreon sub.

  • @ericgutierrez1274
    @ericgutierrez1274 8 месяцев назад +1

    Just found this channel I absolutely love your work! Your voice is very calming too so it’s great whenever I need to wind down with some fascinating stuff

  • @billflunkendorf
    @billflunkendorf 3 года назад +2

    I’m just imagining skipper from Madagascar saying “well we did it boys, we successfully survived the KT extinction “

  • @seanregensburg5532
    @seanregensburg5532 4 года назад +8

    The northern hemisphere had a penguin like bird called the great auk is possible that the reason penguins didn’t get a foot hold in the north is because great auks already leaved there

  • @redtsun67
    @redtsun67 3 года назад +4

    Penguins planning out their playthrough like "i'm gonna evolve out of the ocean then evolve to fly then evolve into flightless bird then evolve to live in the ocean"

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 года назад +1

      Then we have flying fish and squid evolving to fly.

    • @dieente556
      @dieente556 3 года назад

      parkour

  • @skyem5250
    @skyem5250 4 года назад +2

    What do you mean "sometimes adorable"? Penguins are ALWAYS adorable!

  • @Pigeon_Zilla
    @Pigeon_Zilla Год назад

    Lets thank the cameraman going back in time just to show the evolution of our adorable flightless avian friends

  • @Michael-vi7pz
    @Michael-vi7pz 4 года назад +3

    Amazing video as usual, you're the only channel I have notifications on for! If you're looking for ideas I would love to see a video about terror birds or Phorusrhacids?

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 года назад +1

      Thank you I really appreciate it and that sounds like a good topic

  • @nickpost3310
    @nickpost3310 4 года назад +4

    Fantastic channel. Very surprised you don’t have a million subs yet. Soon!

  • @colosalblack
    @colosalblack Год назад

    Moth Light Media is top notch binge watching youtube material. Can't get enough of these videos.

  • @doctorc8852
    @doctorc8852 4 года назад +2

    First time watcher. I thought it was a great video. I have subbed today and look forward to seeing more like this.

  • @laurenespinosa8429
    @laurenespinosa8429 4 года назад +3

    Fun video! Thanks for posting!

  • @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119
    @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119 4 года назад +1

    You make really interesting videos, and they are great to fall asleep to because your voice is so calm with English accent

  • @MountbattenMusicVideos
    @MountbattenMusicVideos 3 года назад +2

    I cannot believe you didn't mention the Guillemot. The Guillemot is penguin-like in appearance; very beautiful, slim, pointed bill, in summer a black or dark brown head and upperparts (in winter their heads go white), white underparts, dark legs and feet. Their color eyes are different like with us humans, from brown to blue, but the Guillemots have eyes so beautiful like one has never seen a diamond as beautiful as the eyes of a Guillemot.

  • @kaiden7063
    @kaiden7063 4 года назад +2

    Love your videos, suprised you don't have more subs, you definitely deserve them!

  • @javierdelvalle4624
    @javierdelvalle4624 3 года назад +2

    You forgot to mention the Great Auk which was a flightless Marine Bird from the northern hemisphere.

  • @cheeseburgerlazers
    @cheeseburgerlazers 3 года назад +1

    this was my first video of yours ive seen and its really well thought out and informative and id love to hear about pangolins

  • @araincs
    @araincs 2 года назад +1

    There was a northern penguin analog called the great auk that was also flightless but was hunted to extinction by sailors in the 19th century

  • @Upasfukk
    @Upasfukk 2 года назад +1

    does anyone else completely zone out for like a minute or two multiple times when watching moth light?

  • @darrencottam1146
    @darrencottam1146 4 года назад +2

    I've just discovered your channel ,great content.

  • @thePlum
    @thePlum Год назад +1

    I work at a Zoo, using your video, I've created a script to include in my Penguin talk, check it out:
    Penguins are one of the few species of multi-celled organisms that inhabit some of the harshest environments on Earth, like Antarctica.
    DNA evidence has Penguins closely aligned with Albatrosses and Petrels - but exactly where penguins came from is still up for debate.
    Through evolution, penguins became highly specialized swimmers, but as a result, their wings became less adapted for flight.
    Penguins have made a remarkable tradeoff in the course of their evolution. Their flippers, which are so essential to their survival underwater, have effectively become the reverse of bird's wings.
    While birds' wings push air underneath to create lift, penguins' flippers push water above them, allowing them to swim with great efficiency. But this has come at a cost. In exchange for becoming master swimmers, they have lost the ability to fly, even though the ability to soar into the sky could have provided a crucial escape from seal predators.
    Penguins likely filled the ecological niches left behind by extinct marine reptiles that once occupied the ocean during the days of the dinosaurs. They evolved in the harsh environments of the South Pole and spread throughout the southern hemisphere, adapting to warmer climates and speciating into various species. The lack of land predators and monopoly over small fish prey populations gave them a significant advantage.
    There were various large species of penguins in the past, including the giant penguins, which were the height of humans. Today, smaller penguins have continued to survive due to less competition from large marine mammals.
    The ancestors of penguins are believed to be closely related to the aptenodytes family, which includes the largest living species of penguins, the King and Emperor penguins.
    In conclusion, penguins are highly adaptable creatures that have evolved to survive in some of the harshest environments on Earth. From their origins to their current state, they continue to fascinate and amaze us with their resilience and ability to evolve.
    💗💗THANK YOU AS ALWAYS MOTH LIGHT !!!

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo 4 года назад +1

    Fantastic attention to detail, and sequential logic. Thanks!

  • @vulgarresponse7080
    @vulgarresponse7080 3 года назад +1

    I love Penguins especially the orange flavour ones!

  • @codyweaver7546
    @codyweaver7546 2 года назад +2

    Penguins: I'm a dinosaur!
    World: Okay
    Penguins: I'M A BIRD!!!
    World: Okay
    Penguins: NOW I'M A SEAL!!!
    World: FFS just pick one!

  • @cmoor8616
    @cmoor8616 4 года назад +5

    Me: *Thinks about making a sandwich*
    RUclips: Evolution of Penguins
    Me: *Yes.*

  • @kevinqwen221
    @kevinqwen221 4 года назад +2

    I love this video. Subbed and I'd to watch more similar videos

  • @AAA-Wolf
    @AAA-Wolf Год назад +1

    Fun Fact: You can gather organic polymer from penguins by beating them to death with a club

  • @BigBoiRedFrog
    @BigBoiRedFrog Год назад

    The most amazing lightless aquatic bird!

  • @LJ-he9qn
    @LJ-he9qn 4 года назад

    Pegwings, penlings, pelguins... Pengwings. All your videos are great. Thank you for the great content and for saying ‘penguin’ proper.

  • @mradhayuda1
    @mradhayuda1 4 года назад +2

    Wow. Thanks. Its good video.

  • @indeed_iditor
    @indeed_iditor 2 года назад +1

    Nobody:
    Penguin at 6:08 : I believe I can fly~ (underwater)

  • @austinmajor3288
    @austinmajor3288 3 года назад +1

    They're in a Northern Hemisphere equivalent of the Penguins, it was called the Great auk which was wiped out by humans a couple hundred years ago.

  • @artistjim114
    @artistjim114 4 года назад +2

    Great channel! Can you do a video on the giant horses and huge hooves animals?

  • @Nhotavo
    @Nhotavo 4 года назад +3

    brilliant! thanks

  • @baselshishani5575
    @baselshishani5575 3 года назад

    This useful video can be made more useful by minor improvements: printing out all the species names you mention so I can google them up without guessing if I want to further investigate, and the monotone voice can be made bit more vibrant.

  • @DrCartof
    @DrCartof 3 года назад +3

    Hey Moth! Could you please tell me what the song in the background of this video is called? It really helps me sleep.

    • @koldan5892
      @koldan5892 3 года назад

      Let me know if you find out how it's called please

  • @brianbuhlmadsen1435
    @brianbuhlmadsen1435 4 года назад +2

    Well, there were one northern ”pinguin”. Called “Gejr-bird”.
    The last speciment was caught by scientists from Copenhagen University, and is still to be found there in the exebition at the zoological museeum in Copenhagen.
    da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gejrfugl

    • @HolasoyMai
      @HolasoyMai 3 года назад

      It's called Great Auk in English 🙂

  • @laidbacklifestyle389
    @laidbacklifestyle389 4 года назад +2

    Awesome video!!! Could you do a video on the (convergent) evolution of old worlds vs new world vultures! Or the Felidae family?

  • @sibykmathewcpa7287
    @sibykmathewcpa7287 4 года назад +3

    this channel is so educational 👍🏻

  • @Shadeem
    @Shadeem 4 года назад +1

    a very informative video. I am now curious about the channel and other videos. But as others have said, the auks, and the great auk were the northern penguins, until we wiped them out.

  • @shadowraith1
    @shadowraith1 4 года назад +7

    Any genetic studies?👍

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 года назад +6

      Yes and I forgot to link it, thanks for reminding me even if it was unintentional, should be in the description now

  • @MrPandarilla
    @MrPandarilla 3 года назад +2

    I cant believe you talked about penguins for nine and a half minutes without ever mentioning the OG penguin which the word originated with: The Great Auk

  • @daydreamer8662
    @daydreamer8662 4 года назад

    At 7:40 Super cool pic that just demands all kinds of promos - yoo

  • @shawnsalem5627
    @shawnsalem5627 4 года назад +3

    Let's get this straight
    The waimanu is an avian dinosaur!!!!

  • @thejdmguru621
    @thejdmguru621 9 месяцев назад

    We have Cape Penguins and they are so adorable.

  • @mjade1673
    @mjade1673 4 года назад +1

    Excellent! Cant believe ive never seen this channel before ;(

  • @BlueClefto
    @BlueClefto 4 года назад +7

    So, if the penguin keeps evolving to live always in water, is going to be the aviar versión of dolphins..

    • @satoshiketchump
      @satoshiketchump 4 года назад

      Not as long as seals and cetaceans exist.

    • @isoinic4575
      @isoinic4575 4 года назад

      @@satoshiketchump likely that penguins could adapt better to human damages, as many mammals. so maybe they will the starting species for very fascinating species in far future

    • @pairot01
      @pairot01 4 года назад

      That was literally said in the video, it's the bird version of whales and seals

    • @BlueClefto
      @BlueClefto 4 года назад

      @@pairot01 huh? Oh yeah, the video. Didn't actually watched it. Just came to write that ever I wrote.

  • @gecko-saurus
    @gecko-saurus Месяц назад

    Great summary of penguin evolution. ❤
    However, I will point out that _Anthropornis_ is not known from New Zealand, but only from 2 species and indeterminate species on Seymour Island, Antarctica.

  • @bitterzombie
    @bitterzombie 4 года назад +1

    Surprised you don't mention the great Auk! They are the northern equivalent of a penguin, though they were more closely related to cormarants and possibly the dodo. They were, however, LARGE flightless waterbirds that lived on the rocky northern coastlines. Sadly however, like the Dodo, they had to nest on the ground which made them super vulnerable to predators... particularly human sailors, who hunted the plentiful waterfowl to extinction like they did so many other forms of sea life in the northern hemisphere. Like the Dodo, they were considered to be stupid and whole flocks were slaughtered for sport as well as food. Ironic that this "stupid animal" would have been an abundant food source for sailors in that area if they'd have just.... NOT killed them all

  • @ambergris5705
    @ambergris5705 4 года назад +1

    Can you imagine that if it weren't for the arrival of mammals in the water, we would maybe have a penguin the size of a blue whale?

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe8345 3 года назад +1

    Thanks

  • @bryanjoung5322
    @bryanjoung5322 4 года назад +2

    the thought of a man-sized penguin is genuinely SO terrifying to me

    • @kigut7443
      @kigut7443 4 года назад

      why? theyre more huggable that way

    • @maxkronader5225
      @maxkronader5225 4 года назад

      @@kigut7443 Nah, they're stinky like old fish.

  • @Samuel-by1zg
    @Samuel-by1zg 4 года назад +1

    There was a northern penguin which was made extinct in the 19th century due to humans. It’s name was the great auk. It was actually what gave the penguins their name. It was flightless and filled the same niche as penguins. However their similarities are caused by convergent evolution they are not closely related.

  • @feralking3000
    @feralking3000 2 года назад +1

    these videos are amazing

  • @carrotthepunk
    @carrotthepunk 3 года назад

    My bf playing Ark: "babe, what is a kairuku?"
    Me trying to write my thesis with instrumental Andes music in the backrground for inspiration: *watches an almost 10min video that has nothing to do with the game * "A type of prehistoric penguin!"
    (Sidenote, the music fits well to the video. 10/10 I recommend)

  • @MrXD117
    @MrXD117 4 года назад +3

    I always thought penguins looked like guillemots except guillemots can fly

    • @ultrademigod
      @ultrademigod 4 года назад

      Penguins look exactly like Great Auks, and I do mean exactly like them.
      They even got the name Penguin from the Latin name Pinguinus impennis.

  • @siquq
    @siquq 4 года назад +1

    Regarding northern birds similar to penguins, look at the great auk. The flightless aquatic bird design worked fine in the northern hemisphere.

  • @philipocarroll
    @philipocarroll 4 года назад +1

    5:00 The Great Auk was the Northern equivalent bird of penguins. It went extinct in 1844. The word "Penguin" was originally applied to this bird before true penguins were known in England.

  • @shantha5437
    @shantha5437 4 года назад

    Beautiful programmes!
    Very nice like to watch more .🙂👍

  • @ExtremeMadnessX
    @ExtremeMadnessX 4 года назад +1

    What about great auk? It was flightless and basically live like a penguin.

  • @tedoymisojos
    @tedoymisojos 4 года назад +4

    I still dont understand evolution well enough. I want to keep hearing about that

  • @dinobotcypertron4602
    @dinobotcypertron4602 4 года назад +1

    搜索结果
    网络搜索结果
    Hey, What do you think about the great auk (Pinguinus impennis)? They used to live near the north pole.

  • @faylynwaggoner3878
    @faylynwaggoner3878 3 года назад

    The seal at 7:13 “You got games on your phone?”

  • @colmbarrett3333
    @colmbarrett3333 4 года назад +6

    Do you know how the auks first came into being?

  • @viyank6644
    @viyank6644 4 месяца назад

    awesome video

  • @ganksfromheaven2168
    @ganksfromheaven2168 4 года назад

    Love this channel it should have alot more subscribers

  • @1lobster
    @1lobster 4 года назад +2

    this explains why geese have teeth. they are more primitive than other birds.

  • @The_Badger-dl7gg
    @The_Badger-dl7gg 3 года назад +1

    Wouldn't the Great Auk account for a lack of penguins in the North? As Auks shared an almost identical niche?

  • @shaquille.oatmeal838
    @shaquille.oatmeal838 3 года назад

    What I normally watch: screaming goats
    What I watch in public: moth light media

  • @chazsaw
    @chazsaw 4 года назад +1

    I was wondering if you have heard of the great auk?

  • @fixfireleo
    @fixfireleo 2 года назад

    I misread the title and kept wondering when you were going to talk about Pelagornis! lol

  • @robertjohnso7087
    @robertjohnso7087 2 года назад

    I LOVE THIS CHANNEL. That’s it. That’s all I got...

  • @thehorriblebright
    @thehorriblebright 4 года назад +1

    6:35 Lovecraftian horror intensifies.

  • @bloodbathdiablos6359
    @bloodbathdiablos6359 Год назад

    Waimanu in a minecraft addon: *Scary howling*