Probably my favorite story of discovery is when in march of this year, someone on iNaturalist in New Zealand ended up rediscovering the frosted phoenix moth (Titanomis sisyrota) which had last been in 1959.
We have a species of tree in NZ called Three Kings Kaikōmako which when discovered was the only wild tree. It was found on the side of a cliff and nicknamed "The worlds loneliest tree". It's still critically endangered but has been breed in captivity since.
Looking into the Wollemi pine, it seems to have come extremely close to extinction thousands of years ago, as all the existing trees are genetically identical, suggesting that at some point only one or two trees were alive. Given how hardy it is, it makes me wonder just what could have happened that effected it so badly.
I wonder if any other tree or plant species in the area have the same genetic bottlenecking going on. It might give some insight into what exactly happened
The Indonesian species was also found in a fish market, by a guy on his honeymoon. Not able to follow up at the time (just a little preocupied) he had to come back later.
One of the coolest things about this channel is that one could click on the "Like" button before even watching a video and not regret it by the end of the video. All of the "All About Nature" films are always excellent.
Great topic, I also find the story of the Wollemi pine amazing in that they are now available to the public and yet sad that the original population is threatened by disease, thanks for sharing All the best Jules 💕
To @julescaru8591 Let's hope that a way can be found to combat the disease in the wild plants. 'Tis quite good that there are now separate populations as a protection against extinction of the species.
There is the wild plant called "cupu", from which the domesticated "cacao" and also domesticated "cupuacu" versions come from. It was recently determined, by genetic studies, that the domestication of cacao and cupuacu is 5.000 years old.
I watched this video 2 weeks ago, we went on vacation and visited the Eden project in the UK and i recognised the Wollemi Pine in their collection because of you!
I just heard about the littlest pig found in the foothills of Himalayas. It apparently lives with the one horned rhinoceros. Would love to hear about it from you.
Ah the Pygmy Hogs of Kaziranga National Park, Assam, India. Kaziranga is one of greatest National parks in India if not the world. The Indian One Horned Rhinos, Pygmy Hogs, Leopards, Tigers (one of the highest densities in the world + the only wild sighting of the Golden Tiger mutation), Great Pied Hornbills, Indian Elephants, Hog Badgers (a weird Mustelid), 9 of the 14 species of Primates in India including a species of Gibbon (the only ape in India) as well as a population of WILD Water Buffalo, THE ancestral species from which all Buffalo 🐃 come from, all exist in Kaziranga National Park in Assam. Truly a must visit place
Another outstanding video - thank you so much for your hard work! I knew about the coelacanth, sphinx moth, Wollemi Pine and cycad but the others were new to me. We can only hope that drastic measures will be put in place to protect the Rice's whale but I fear this isn't going to happen. I love your videos about new, rediscovered and highly endangered species. When I visited New Zealand I made a point of visiting a protected area to see the Takahe which "disappeared" for 50 years before being rediscovered in 1948. It was a marvellous yet sobering experience to be so close to these iconic birds.
I recently discovered your channel, I must say that I love it, it is so very well documented. I've always had a strange fascination for extinct or very rare animals. I would love to see a video about "extinct in the wild". Thank you for taking your time to make such good and well put videos
@@matiascallegarihowlin7466 thanks! And I'm glad you like the channel. I actually do have a video about species that are extinct in the wild. It was uploaded about a year ago, but is easy to find on my channel. I hope you enjoy it.
16:19 That's not a dromornithid skull, it belongs to Phorusrhacos, one of the many popularly called terror birds which lived in the Americas and were carnivorous. The typical Dromornithid skull actually looks very similar to that of Genyornis since the two are closely related, but for some reason over the years many reconstructions gave it an inaccurate goose-like skull. Weird since there are even cave painting of Genyornis showing it had a clearly large beak.
@@SnubbyDaArtist Yes, they had a similar beak due to their similar diet but Gastornis too is not that closely related to Dromornithids. It lived many millions of years earlier in Europe and North America. The best example for Genyornis is Dromornis
Sansevieria sambiranensis syn. Dracaena sambiranensis would be a species I would like featured in one of your videos. I’m obsessed with snake plants and I find these to be one of the more interesting ones. The history of both genera would be interesting to dive into as well. Especially with the recent genetic testing done which has many people assimilating Sansevieria into Dracaena. I absolutely love your content btw ❤️🔥
I live in Australia and when I was younger, our school received a cutting of Wollemi pine and we had a ceremony and everything about it. The next day when we got to school, it was destroyed by vandals 😢
Love the video!! Just wanted to do a small correction, Bárbara Freitas is not Spanish she just works in Spain quite often, both Martim Melo and Bárbara are Portuguese. Thanks again for the great video and work!! 😁☺️
I love watching videos on animals living and extinct. Animals have always been a big part of my life. I love going to different states and finding different species of reptiles and fish and any other animals I can find.
i was wondering if you’d be interested in making a video about beaked whales, or including them in a video! specifically a spade toothed whale washed up on an island new zealand earlier in july, one of only 6 known specimens of the species, which got me interested in them. i think it’s interesting that they’re so little known and rare! maybe you’ve already done a video on them and i missed it but i thought it may be an interesting topic edit/update: success, he made a video with the spade toothed whale 🤩
Don't forget the Wallace line that divides geology and biology in the Indonesian oceans. Not species as such but still an important biology distinction.
I know it is less common to discover new mammals and larger animals. I remember a few years ago there was a discovery of some sort of weasel or otter of some kind found in a relatively remote forest lake or something
Discoveries like these are why I think that there's still a chance that thylacines and other assumed extinct species might still surprise us some day. A girl can hope!
Wow did not know about the mantophasmids. Fascinating that they were preserved in a time capsule from when Europe was subtropical and then to be discovered still extant in the Southern Hemisphere. I wonder when and how they went extinct everywhere else?
"They sent them off to moth experts" ...you wrote that on purpose, didn't you? :P Either way, riveting video and I love hearing these stories. I knew of just a few, and only in the "oh yeah" kind of way, so it was great to learn a lot of new stuff too!
16:20 as some have mentioned, the skull labeled "Typical Dromornithodae skull" is incorrect as that is a terror bird skull which represents Phorusrhacidae, not Dromornithodae
A story for part two: dingiso (Dendrolagus mbaiso) from New Guinea. They were considered both mythical creatures/spirits of dead people and small "hairy humanoid" cryptids before their description as weird tree kangaroos))
There are definitely more than 500 Cycads in the small town that I stay in South Africa, this is not a fact check but rather shows the efforts of locals to keep dwindling species alive. I grew up with a few in our garden.
Have you covered the likely first extinct hornbill, Penelopides panini ticaensis? Its a subspecies of the beautiful and endangered Visayan hornbill, and was only found on the island of Ticao. The bird was last seen in a group of 3 in 1971. Its likely extinct, as only 10 acres of its former habitat still exist. I can't find a whole lot about it, but maybe you can find more. I found out about the species from a lithograph that I bought, and it became one of my favorite birds.
New Zealand has some very rare and interesting plants and birds that are thought to have gone extinct only too be rediscovered, Like the Black Robin, In the 80s around five birds were found on a small island
we have a similar plant like Wollemi pine when i was young in philippines but its just like 7 or 10ft, but now i dont see it anymore, its not like a tree but a big plant
Nice that they named the owl after the park ranger who helped many scientists will selfishly name species after themselves or family members…disregarding the people usually natives of the place that helped them track and discover new species
"Bone House" Wasp...Sarcophagus means Flesh Eating [box in this case], I believe, in ancient Greek? IT's what they called the boxes in Israel that the bodies of dead Hebrews/Jews would be put into after death. Fitting name for these wasps due to what they do. Of course, the real reason these wasps like to put the ants in their entrances is because they just love the theme to The Pink Panther.
26:31 I've seen various photos of its Indonesian cousin, but no proper videos (especially since I consider L. menadoensis the lesser known of the two).
@@chonqmonk "Green Anacondas can reach lengths around double what you've stated." Then came; "Freek Vonk has recorded a video of a 26-feet-long green anaconda. Check it out..." - now then, plant pot. The video stated up to17ft long. Is 26ft double 17ft?!?!?!?! No, nowhere near, plant pot.
Classification is just our pitiful attempt to sort things into categories so we can understand them quickly… Tge idea of a species is very loosely defined and is full of exceptions.
They literally diverged 500,000 years ago they only share 5% DNA like the difference between humans and chimpanzees they are definitely a separate species and DNA proves it, it's not just random, that's like saying a chimpanzee is just a type of human but there not we are homo sapiens in the Great Apes family and we're extremely different from each other even though we're in the same order in primates, in fact orcas are being proved to be separate species like the transient orca and the southern resident orca through DNA, I forget there official species names but there different sizes have different patterns, different morphology and a completely different diet and diverged 200,000 years ago and they don't interbreed they have different calls and they avoid each other, they are literally different species through genetics, morphology, diet, pattern and lifestyle
I’m sorry people made you change ur thumbnail I personally thought it was pretty petty but it’s cool you listen to criticism. Since monetization is the difference between this being a job and a hobby I wonder if you can cut some of this content for tik tok considering how monetize able it is. Good luck with everything hope ur throat is healing up well.
Its probably a stupid question, and i understand that we have breed new species of farm animals and so on ....but im wondering if theres any species that we can confirm has completely evolved into something new within recorded history? I wounder how many species are actually evolving within whats left of nature into something new due to the evolving state of that nature because of humanities influences..... birds and insects seem to be the things most likely to do so ,i know i have seen evidence of birds, dolphins, and primates changing their behaviors because of human influence...😮🤔it would be cool if we could all evolve into living together in harmony, humanity, nature and technology
“Good heavens, what insect could suck it” made me choke on my water.
Fr 💀
vexvoltage6456 you look delicious
Probably my favorite story of discovery is when in march of this year, someone on iNaturalist in New Zealand ended up rediscovering the frosted phoenix moth (Titanomis sisyrota) which had last been in 1959.
That's so cool!
We have a species of tree in NZ called Three Kings Kaikōmako which when discovered was the only wild tree. It was found on the side of a cliff and nicknamed "The worlds loneliest tree". It's still critically endangered but has been breed in captivity since.
Nooo
Looking into the Wollemi pine, it seems to have come extremely close to extinction thousands of years ago, as all the existing trees are genetically identical, suggesting that at some point only one or two trees were alive. Given how hardy it is, it makes me wonder just what could have happened that effected it so badly.
I love a good curiosity
maybe a mold or some kind of disease kiled msot of them
I wonder if any other tree or plant species in the area have the same genetic bottlenecking going on. It might give some insight into what exactly happened
Imagine what Marjorie Courtenay Latimer thought when she saw that coelocanth. It'd be like finding a velociraptor carcass in a butcher shop
lol
Ehh maybe
The Indonesian species was also found in a fish market, by a guy on his honeymoon.
Not able to follow up at the time (just a little preocupied) he had to come back later.
actually the only channel that I have notifications on for. it's literally like Christmas day whenever you upload 😭
@@HarvestingThings Awesome! Thanks for being here.
Fr... its like I'm a kid again, learning the natural world with child-like wonder.
@@Soulmodulation exactly this. i remember being a kid and being so excited to learn animals facts. this channel really captures that same feeling 🥹
@@all.about.nature1987 as soon as i finish grad school im joining your patreon 🫡
thanks for bringing us this kind of content!!!! I'm always waiting for a new video @@all.about.nature1987
“Good heavens, what insect could suck it” pure gold
One of the coolest things about this channel is that one could click on the "Like" button before even watching a video and not regret it by the end of the video. All of the "All About Nature" films are always excellent.
As a nature nerd I love this channel so much and I look forward to every upload! Keep up the great work!
Great topic, I also find the story of the Wollemi pine amazing in that they are now available to the public and yet sad that the original population is threatened by disease, thanks for sharing
All the best Jules 💕
To @julescaru8591
Let's hope that a way can be found to combat the disease in the wild plants. 'Tis quite good that there are now separate populations as a protection against extinction of the species.
There is the wild plant called "cupu", from which the domesticated "cacao" and also domesticated "cupuacu" versions come from. It was recently determined, by genetic studies, that the domestication of cacao and cupuacu is 5.000 years old.
We love you content!! Thanks for keep doing it...
At 16:20 the “typical dromornithidae skull” is actually the skull of a Phorusrhacid (Phorusrhacidae), which are more closely related to Seriemas.
I watched this video 2 weeks ago, we went on vacation and visited the Eden project in the UK and i recognised the Wollemi Pine in their collection because of you!
I just heard about the littlest pig found in the foothills of Himalayas. It apparently lives with the one horned rhinoceros. Would love to hear about it from you.
Ah the Pygmy Hogs of Kaziranga National Park, Assam, India.
Kaziranga is one of greatest National parks in India if not the world.
The Indian One Horned Rhinos, Pygmy Hogs, Leopards, Tigers (one of the highest densities in the world + the only wild sighting of the Golden Tiger mutation), Great Pied Hornbills, Indian Elephants, Hog Badgers (a weird Mustelid), 9 of the 14 species of Primates in India including a species of Gibbon (the only ape in India) as well as a population of WILD Water Buffalo, THE ancestral species from which all Buffalo 🐃 come from, all exist in Kaziranga National Park in Assam.
Truly a must visit place
I've just discovered your channel, and it's absolutely awesome. You're doing great work! Subscribed 🙂
Man Gladiators are such cool insects
Like every one of them
@@cevatkokbudak6414 Invasive Gypsy moths are not cool
@@thedarkmasterthedarkmaster I had forgotten about the invasive ones
@@cevatkokbudak6414 I made a video on the gypsy moths
Great Job on this..
Another outstanding video - thank you so much for your hard work! I knew about the coelacanth, sphinx moth, Wollemi Pine and cycad but the others were new to me. We can only hope that drastic measures will be put in place to protect the Rice's whale but I fear this isn't going to happen. I love your videos about new, rediscovered and highly endangered species. When I visited New Zealand I made a point of visiting a protected area to see the Takahe which "disappeared" for 50 years before being rediscovered in 1948. It was a marvellous yet sobering experience to be so close to these iconic birds.
coelacanth are honestly adorable. they remind me of like an old grandpa koi but with a dull galaxy colour palette they're honestly just gorgeous
I recently discovered your channel, I must say that I love it, it is so very well documented. I've always had a strange fascination for extinct or very rare animals. I would love to see a video about "extinct in the wild". Thank you for taking your time to make such good and well put videos
@@matiascallegarihowlin7466 thanks! And I'm glad you like the channel.
I actually do have a video about species that are extinct in the wild. It was uploaded about a year ago, but is easy to find on my channel. I hope you enjoy it.
Not sure if this counts of a discovery or not, but the 2012 paper claiming Pygmy Right Whales are a species of Cetothere surprised me.
AAN could you do a video about all the plants with only 1 individual currently? (Hyophorbe amaricaulis etc.)
16:19 That's not a dromornithid skull, it belongs to Phorusrhacos, one of the many popularly called terror birds which lived in the Americas and were carnivorous. The typical Dromornithid skull actually looks very similar to that of Genyornis since the two are closely related, but for some reason over the years many reconstructions gave it an inaccurate goose-like skull. Weird since there are even cave painting of Genyornis showing it had a clearly large beak.
So, more like Gastornis?
@@SnubbyDaArtist Yes, they had a similar beak due to their similar diet but Gastornis too is not that closely related to Dromornithids. It lived many millions of years earlier in Europe and North America. The best example for Genyornis is Dromornis
I love your channel
Love your content mannnn
Sansevieria sambiranensis syn. Dracaena sambiranensis would be a species I would like featured in one of your videos. I’m obsessed with snake plants and I find these to be one of the more interesting ones. The history of both genera would be interesting to dive into as well. Especially with the recent genetic testing done which has many people assimilating Sansevieria into Dracaena.
I absolutely love your content btw
❤️🔥
Bros had been dancing on the keyboard when they making the name
i love your videos so much!!!! :D
I live in Australia and when I was younger, our school received a cutting of Wollemi pine and we had a ceremony and everything about it. The next day when we got to school, it was destroyed by vandals 😢
Why tf you vandalise that
@@cevatkokbudak6414cuz people don’t care about plants
A tree cannot be destroyed, it can be killed.
Just recently found your channel, but love the videos! your voice is soothing and everything is so interesting!
Love the video!!
Just wanted to do a small correction, Bárbara Freitas is not Spanish she just works in Spain quite often, both Martim Melo and Bárbara are Portuguese.
Thanks again for the great video and work!! 😁☺️
I love watching videos on animals living and extinct. Animals have always been a big part of my life. I love going to different states and finding different species of reptiles and fish and any other animals I can find.
08:11 that's actually very wholesome
OTUS BIKEGILA AW. That must be the highlight of that ranger's life having a species named for him ❤
Amazing video, as always! I hope you can do another video on prehistoric/dinosaurs (maybe cryptid videos?)
First-time viewer here! Thanks for the video. Notifications on! ❤
i was wondering if you’d be interested in making a video about beaked whales, or including them in a video! specifically a spade toothed whale washed up on an island new zealand earlier in july, one of only 6 known specimens of the species, which got me interested in them. i think it’s interesting that they’re so little known and rare! maybe you’ve already done a video on them and i missed it but i thought it may be an interesting topic
edit/update: success, he made a video with the spade toothed whale 🤩
I have two wollemi in my yard! They're really cool and recommend everyone get one if they can
24:10 How many species are named after him?
So far, there's this moth and the Giant Wallace Bee.
I can't tell you how many, but what came to my mind is the wallace flying frog
To @robrice7246
For birds, Wallace's Standardwing, Wallace's Fairywren and Wallace's Fruit Dove.
Don't forget the Wallace line that divides geology and biology in the Indonesian oceans.
Not species as such but still an important biology distinction.
I rly luv this content
I know it is less common to discover new mammals and larger animals. I remember a few years ago there was a discovery of some sort of weasel or otter of some kind found in a relatively remote forest lake or something
Great video 👍
Great video as always, although Bryde's is pronounce like "broo-duhs."
I have loved cetaceans my entire life and only just learned this pronunciation earlier this year. It never occurred to me that "Bryde" wasn't English.
great vid
Discoveries like these are why I think that there's still a chance that thylacines and other assumed extinct species might still surprise us some day. A girl can hope!
8:02 When I don't want to go out but my friends pick me up anyways 👁_ 👁
Wow did not know about the mantophasmids. Fascinating that they were preserved in a time capsule from when Europe was subtropical and then to be discovered still extant in the Southern Hemisphere. I wonder when and how they went extinct everywhere else?
"They sent them off to moth experts" ...you wrote that on purpose, didn't you? :P
Either way, riveting video and I love hearing these stories. I knew of just a few, and only in the "oh yeah" kind of way, so it was great to learn a lot of new stuff too!
16:20 as some have mentioned, the skull labeled "Typical Dromornithodae skull" is incorrect as that is a terror bird skull which represents Phorusrhacidae, not Dromornithodae
Ichthyologist 1: Omg, where did you find this brand new species of ultra rare nearly extinct fish?
Ichthyologist 2: In a fish market…
My grandparents have a small Wollemi pine, not sure where they said they got it from. They are pretty rad little trees.
you should cover the silk henge spiders
I remember reading about some of these.
A story for part two: dingiso (Dendrolagus mbaiso) from New Guinea. They were considered both mythical creatures/spirits of dead people and small "hairy humanoid" cryptids before their description as weird tree kangaroos))
VIDEO SUGGESTION: mega cats, the feral huge cat of australia
Alfred Russel Wallace honestly deserves to be known better. Absolute legend, as Simon Whistler would say.
I’m so happy you posted again. I play with myself to your voice! It’s so soft but masculine.
Lol
@@jimc.goodfellas what
WHAT THE FVCK
BLOODY GROSS!!
@@yorhaunit21o32👍
Sounds like fun
There are definitely more than 500 Cycads in the small town that I stay in South Africa, this is not a fact check but rather shows the efforts of locals to keep dwindling species alive. I grew up with a few in our garden.
Have you covered the likely first extinct hornbill, Penelopides panini ticaensis? Its a subspecies of the beautiful and endangered Visayan hornbill, and was only found on the island of Ticao. The bird was last seen in a group of 3 in 1971. Its likely extinct, as only 10 acres of its former habitat still exist. I can't find a whole lot about it, but maybe you can find more.
I found out about the species from a lithograph that I bought, and it became one of my favorite birds.
that is literally so depressing...
New Zealand has some very rare and interesting plants and birds that are thought to have gone extinct only too be rediscovered,
Like the Black Robin,
In the 80s around five birds were found on a small island
Did your voice change?
I ❤ nature :3
You could do a whole video on animals (moths, bats, birds) that were discovered just because of a newly found weird flower.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the Northern Green Anaconda described from a massive specimen that was discovered in early 2024?
5:22 The African Scops Owl be like: 🤨
The world's smallest water lily
(Nymphaea thermarum)
Mascarene petrel (Pseudobulweria aterrima)
Cafe Marron
(Ramosmania rodriguesi)
we have a similar plant like Wollemi pine when i was young in philippines but its just like 7 or 10ft, but now i dont see it anymore, its not like a tree but a big plant
Great video, thanks. For some reason Bryde's is pronounced Broo dahs. Weird, huh?
Nice that they named the owl after the park ranger who helped many scientists will selfishly name species after themselves or family members…disregarding the people usually natives of the place that helped them track and discover new species
Lived around the gulf my whole life and never knew about those whales
"Bone House" Wasp...Sarcophagus means Flesh Eating [box in this case], I believe, in ancient Greek? IT's what they called the boxes in Israel that the bodies of dead Hebrews/Jews would be put into after death. Fitting name for these wasps due to what they do. Of course, the real reason these wasps like to put the ants in their entrances is because they just love the theme to The Pink Panther.
"Good heavens what insect can suck it" - me talking about Imperfect Cell from DBZ
21:11 - 21:19 As if its Escarpment cousin wasn't doing bad enough.
pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee part 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Drom skull isn’t the right one, the left is a terror bird skull
Imo the insect looks like a grasshopper crossed w a mantis if anything
26:31 I've seen various photos of its Indonesian cousin, but no proper videos (especially since I consider L. menadoensis the lesser known of the two).
8:09 lil bro was posed for the camera.
They nerfed Newton's Thunderbird
All I know is that owl seems like a little trouble maker
Green Anacondas can reach lengths around double what you've stated.
No. Myth based on wild stories. Actual snakes have never been documented.
Virtually no wild snakes much over 20 feet have ever been found.
@@keithfaulkner6319 Freek Vonk has recorded a video of a 26-feet-long green anaconda. Check it out...
@@chonqmonk "Green Anacondas can reach lengths around double what you've stated."
Then came;
"Freek Vonk has recorded a video of a 26-feet-long green anaconda. Check it out..."
- now then, plant pot. The video stated up to17ft long. Is 26ft double 17ft?!?!?!?! No, nowhere near, plant pot.
6:21 to be fair, I don't blame them for being scared
Is this a re upload?
❤❤
I saw a snake manatee, I sent it.
Over 1,000 owls in just 5 square miles???
Apparently they're not very territorial.
And there must be a HUGE food supply to keep them all fed and happy with each other.
I was so sad when the video ended :/
The Northern green Anaconda is very doubtful and is likely to be a clade within the species.
Classification is just our pitiful attempt to sort things into categories so we can understand them quickly…
Tge idea of a species is very loosely defined and is full of exceptions.
They literally diverged 500,000 years ago they only share 5% DNA like the difference between humans and chimpanzees they are definitely a separate species and DNA proves it, it's not just random, that's like saying a chimpanzee is just a type of human but there not we are homo sapiens in the Great Apes family and we're extremely different from each other even though we're in the same order in primates, in fact orcas are being proved to be separate species like the transient orca and the southern resident orca through DNA, I forget there official species names but there different sizes have different patterns, different morphology and a completely different diet and diverged 200,000 years ago and they don't interbreed they have different calls and they avoid each other, they are literally different species through genetics, morphology, diet, pattern and lifestyle
Lizards have more new species found on google recently
Species? How do people determine distinction between species? Is specie distinction determined by an animal has some very distinct feature?
Jesus Rivas was first author on the Eunectus paper, not Bryan Fry.
Did you get a new mic? You sound like a whole different person
Just get the seeds from those palms and plant them all over they’ll do fine lol
Trees should never be endangered. Humanity sucks, we are literally the worst thing to happen to our world.
Yeah true but sometimes some trees are just not quality enough to compete with others
Under 1 hour gang
Does his voice sound different ?
🐳🐳🐳🐳
I’m sorry people made you change ur thumbnail I personally thought it was pretty petty but it’s cool you listen to criticism. Since monetization is the difference between this being a job and a hobby I wonder if you can cut some of this content for tik tok considering how monetize able it is. Good luck with everything hope ur throat is healing up well.
Its probably a stupid question, and i understand that we have breed new species of farm animals and so on ....but im wondering if theres any species that we can confirm has completely evolved into something new within recorded history? I wounder how many species are actually evolving within whats left of nature into something new due to the evolving state of that nature because of humanities influences..... birds and insects seem to be the things most likely to do so ,i know i have seen evidence of birds, dolphins, and primates changing their behaviors because of human influence...😮🤔it would be cool if we could all evolve into living together in harmony, humanity, nature and technology
Is the rices whale made of rice