Oshe Shango We’re talking about how dingoes LOOK. We thought the king of Australia would be something that LOOKS scary or tough looking. Not something that looks like you can keep in your house, around kids, giving kisses to it, loving it like you would to to a domestic dog.
IDK, It’s random content! Ya salt water crocs are also apex predators. But crocs are only found in the northern most points of Queensland and Northern Territory
@Peter Frencken Like IDK, it's random content explained I do not want to be disrespectful or anything, but as someone who only heard about frightening looking animals that habitat Australia I was just not expecting this.
Correction: the dingo is officially considered native to Australia. Yes it probably came here through new Guinea. The dingo has been apart of the eco system in Australia for so long that they are now a vital part of it. So it is considered native
How could it not be native and what makes them think it isn't? Has a dingo or fossil of dingoes been found in anywhere else in the world? No? So why do they think they aren't native to Australia? What makes them think that? Or was it just a random comment somebody made and everybody went with? Supposedly they aren't desendants of Dogs, they aren't even related to Wolves, they are own their specific species. They and their fossils aren't found anywhere else in the world. Yet for some reason there is an idea the continent they are on right now isn't their native continent. Why? What makes them come to that conlclusion? Do they have a single reason at all? Or was it just a random comment?
@No. Body There's a rare occurance during a bushfire, where a tornado sucks up flammable material and transforms into a blazing maelstrom of flames :D Look it up, its wild
@@NguyenQuang-tm3ou But in a pack? A single human versus a pack of dingoes isn't such easy math. Especially if the human is unarmed. But I might still try to pet them, because I look at them, see doggos, and want to pet them.
Dingos are so maligned. If you were to threaten or corner a female protecting her pups, yes you will certainly be the focus of aggressive protective behaviours. Generally Dingos behaviour has been impacted and altered by humans. They are very weary, hyper-vigelent and will avoid contact as much possible. My dingo pup is 10 months and assimilation I has required the most work aside from recall (return on command)
Crocodiles, venomous snakes, tarantulas, buff kangaroos, rat sized moths, ect.. “What should we make the apex predator?” “ *_oh yeah, how about these cute meme dogs_* “
Australian nature is especially weird. Witness the adorable duck-billed platypus, with the venomous spurs on its hind legs. "...the venom is not lethal to humans, but the pain is so excruciating that the victim may be incapacitated." Awwww.... :)
We don’t have tarantulas here, we have the funnel web spider. We also have box jellyfish which are one of the most dangerous animals on the planet. We also have these these things called irikanji jellyfish which are hell bad too, and where I’m from in Perth has some of the highest rates of great white shark attacks
Shibas/Akitas and other Japenese hunting breeds tend toward the "primitive dog" style. You see this even with prominent feral dog populations- American Dingo (they're not dingoes despite the name), village dogs, etc. The body plan just works. That's probably why Dingoes have it too- it just works really well.
I'm Australian, in high school a family of Dingo's lived near our school and almost monthly, our school had to close for the day because they kept on coming onto the schools property wondering around lol. It happened so much our school couldn't close any longer so we just had to stay indoors when they showed up. Worst days ever
Baldhina Asnake There’re actual studies that show that raw diets pose significant risks that the exact same meal but cooked does not. The reason why raw is better than commercial dog food is because commercial dog food is terrible.
Baldhina Asnake Cooked is better than raw, studies conclusively show this. Both homemade cooked and raw dog foods are leagues ahead of the average commercial dog food.
Our last dog, Rocky was part Dingo. Dingo/Shepherd mix and lived to 15, which is great for a medium dog...And a dog who couldn't break down protein on his own, lol. Did yours have the same colouring?
Sorry to hear that, Joseph. I had a blue healer as a kid ... an Australian Cattle Dog ... she was 13 when she died. Blue Healers (and red) have dingo in the breed.
I remember my ex decided to get a DNA test on my Cattle Dog Archie (hers at the time) as his behaviors and body structure resembled more of a Dingo than a standard Cattle Dog (only his coat is standard). Turned being nearly 40% of not only Dingo but Alpine Dingo; obviously all Cattle Dogs have Dingo in them but his blood is substantial. He climbs trees, can rotate his head 180°, does a weird bark-howl-yodel and is aggressive...very aggressive. I actually don’t take him to dog parks anymore as he’s been in a few scraps and is what I consider to be dangerous. He’s also highly territorial; when it comes to hoofed animals, unlike other Heelers who will try to herd them, he actively preys on them, nearly catching a deer one time. I love him to death, he’s incredibly attached to me but because of most of his traits being more wild than a standard domestic dog, I have to keep an eye on him
You said that the fence was built to keep dingos out, which isn't true. This fence was built to prevent RABBITS which ate crops, which it failed at. The dingo stopping is not its designed purpose, however it is the (useful) purpose it fufills today.
@@maxpoggerman7396 actually she didn't all it takes is a quick Google search and many articles will tell you dingos are also a reason why the fence is still up.
@@jameswalton4518 "was" indicates that in the past when the fence was built it was for rabbits, but later it's useful purpose is for stopping dingoes. Re read it again mhm
Fun fact: These are related to the Australian Cattle Dog, one of the smartest dog breeds that exist! They can understand whole sentences, can be easily trained and have strong predatory instincts, which means they love to chase after toys and other things and make for excellent herders, protectors and friends.
@@KDSima I rescued 2 that were not well cared for. Just getting them well fed & healthy was the first priority. They are so smart & loving to my husband & I...but not very welcoming to strangers 😧
@@lafamilledegrace5442 U are so right. Our dog, Odin, does not get along w/our two cats they were here b4 he was. It could b bc he constantly tries to heard them🤷♀️.
There is a dog breed named the Carolina dog, referred to as the american dingo. They look similar to Australian Dingoes but, taxonomically, they fall under the regular domestic dog.
"They play a valuable role in the ecosystem, being the continent's apex predator since the extinction of the thylacine in 1936." Translation: "Ever since we killed the last apex predator, this guy's been patching up the harm from our murder!"
The thylacine was only extant in Tasmania at the time of European arrival in Australia. The Dingo was still the apex terrestrial predator over all of the Australian mainland for thousands of years.
Dingoes drove thylacines to extinction on the mainland. Thylacines survived on Tasmania where there weren’t/aren’t any dingoes. White man arrived and killed the remaining population off.
Dogs from Australia: my name is dingo! I am an apex predator and I will drink your blood !! Dogs from the rest of the world: aw I’m a cute dogie and I scared of vacuum
My coyote chow mix looked so much like a dingo. She was a wonderful companion, just liked to travel a ton on her own, making friends everywhere she went. What an amazing being she was.
@@reecerobin8413 Aboriginal people have lived in Australia for at least 80,000 years, and there is evidence that suggests even longer, so I think that qualifies being native
@@tallulah7243 80,000 would be the upper limit of when they arrived the least/latest would be by 45,000 years, but the consensus puts their arrival at about 60,000 to 55,000 years.
My first dog was a dingo/Spitz mix. She was brought over on freighter by the captain but he couldn't keep her on the ship where she was miserable. We took her in but she never acclimated to domesticity. She was more dingo than dog and while she was a great guard dog, she never bonded to people. As she aged. she became even less fond of other people and bit several. She had to be put down at age ten. Poor Skippy, she never should have been taken from the outback.
yeah i think they probably descend from a wolf-like canid from south-east asia, and if they were brought here by humans it was most likely merchants from malaysia.
It was humans. Dingoes are not unique to Australia, they can also be found in south east Asia. And are though to have arrived from aboriginals bringing them here.
Dingoes were the foundational breed for the Australian Cattle Dog also know as the Blue/Red Heeler. The Red Heeler looks very much like a Dingo, but stouter. They are great dogs, and extremely loyal and intelligent. They do need a strong willed owner though, because the first 6 months or so they are little velociraptors because the love to bite you with their sharp puppy teeth.
I have an Australian Cattle Dog who I adopted 8 years ago next month. He was about 8 or 9 months at the time. He’s the smartest dog I’ve ever had. Great instincts and the best watch dog ever. His name is Cowboy! Cowboy the Cattle Dog! 😊
I actually owned a dingo cause my mum bought one as a pup back when you could buy them, and it was the most docile dog ive been around, she was playful but at first meeting always cautious but after she sniffed your hand and you had a pat of her she opens up alot and i guess that just her breed, mostly though she was just sitting around doing nothing sometimes going out for bush walks for 2-3 days and always coming back she was just an amazing dog
native means a species evolved & developed in the same environment for long times. Dingos didn't evolve in Australia rather they came from outside, adapted in & thrived there. If they were to be native species they would be a marsupial predator likewise all native Australian animals.
@@devashisdas5024 Yeah, and it’s a shame one of the only marsupial predators was hunted to extinct since it was inaccurately accused of killing livestock which feral dogs did.
@@greathornedowl1783 Australia has a marsupial rat too. And Bats are found in almost every other continent except for Antarctica because of their longer flying capacity & having super immunity against diseases & also having simbiotic relations with disease carrying germs. Not necessarily means that bats were native but indicates that bats spread throughout migration in Australia. Apart from the marsupial rat of Australia, the common house rats & other rodents introduced by European colonizers are now causing havoc to Australian crops & made a disaster in few months earlier.
human brain: this is a wild animal. it would be incredibly difficult to get it to walk on leash or pee outside or interact safely with other dogs and people monkey brain: hehe fluffie puppie
dogs are not native to America, but they are here since the first humans arrived thousands of years ago, unfortunately there pre-colombian dog breeds were practically extinct
I'm so pleased with this episode, being a fan of that species since childhood. Two months ago, my boyfriend and I, we got us an australian cattle dog puppy, and that breed got dingo in it. 😍
I know you guys have done wolves already, but would it be at all possible for you to make a video specifically about the arctic wolf?! They have such AMAZING adaptations!!
Another great entry in this Australia series. I didn't know dingos' genealogy was so debated. Ironic how the one of best hopes in Australia's fight against invasive species is a former invasive species.
Man's unwillingness to accept change is all that labels something "invasive"; Nature is the rightful landlord and decider of who's moving-in or being evicted.
I didn't know dingos were this awesome, wow. Apex predators are usually not this interesting. When you mentioned the dingo culled invasive species I thought of the cane toad - something the dingo can't cull - could you do a video on them, Animalogic?
I almost had one sneak up on me while I was walking around with headphones on, my family were a fair bit off, saw it behind me and started waving to warn me, I turned around and saw it just hanging out a few meters behind me.
The rabbit-proof fence isn't 5,000km long; the dingo fence IS, and it WAS made for dingoes. The error in the video is that she said it's to keep them out of the Southwest, but it was to keep them out of the Southeast.
@@rohypnotist6263 In fact they have got 3 fences: 2 succesive ones to protect the South-Western corner from rabbits, and a much longer, 3rd one to protect the South-East of dingoes... National Geographic Magazine had published a story about it years ago...
These dogs look just like Indian Pariah dogs....I had one till he died..After looking at these guys it looks like i had a dingo at home...They look so similar hight , color , ears everything...Indian dogs breed once a year and live in small packs in rural areas they also hunt pigs, mouse and even cattles ...they are very fit and agile and have the immunity so strong they can tolerate anything...
From Malaysia? Maybe these guys have a spiritual ancestor. When I say that, I really mean a kind of animal spirit of nature- you know, magical creatures.
Well dingos are actually decended form Indian wolf's as when aboriginal people brought them to Australia they had domesticated the wolf's as they explored Asia and brought said wolf's to Sahul (Australia and Papua new Guinea) which became the dingos and there various subspecies.
The land with some of the most dangerous and venomous animals on the planet.
Apex predator cute little dog.
Maxim M.
RIGHT!? I’m so confused! I thought it would be a crock or a snake.
Oshe Shango
We’re talking about how dingoes LOOK. We thought the king of Australia would be something that LOOKS scary or tough looking. Not something that looks like you can keep in your house, around kids, giving kisses to it, loving it like you would to to a domestic dog.
Peter Frencken
Your right! These cute little dingoes can be very, very, very dangerous if your not careful. One wrong move and your on their plate.
IDK, It’s random content! Ya salt water crocs are also apex predators. But crocs are only found in the northern most points of Queensland and Northern Territory
@Peter Frencken Like IDK, it's random content explained I do not want to be disrespectful or anything, but as someone who only heard about frightening looking animals that habitat Australia I was just not expecting this.
if shiba inu's were pokemon, dingos would be their evolution
Yamper
Those already exist and they are called Akita Inu.
@@jean-philippeforgues-morai235 Then dingos are the evolution of akita inu
@@scobrallon9948 Ah yes, the classic 3 stage evolution.
@@jean-philippeforgues-morai235 actually dingos, papuan singing dogs, akitas, shiba inus, and chow chows are all related
Other continents: wild dogs
Australia: wild doges
ajoajoajoaj dude we can own them if we get a permit soooo yeah
@@philltime7873 I'm probably going to move to australia don't care about spiders and stuff that can kill me I just want a pet doge
Venice: Il Doge.
@@groupoftrouts7748 In Australia you want to stay out of any water that you don't fully know. Crocs and box jellies are extremely dangerous.
@@groupoftrouts7748 I had a pet dingo, it was mixed with staffy breed. Very nice, well behaved, and athletic
Correction: the dingo is officially considered native to Australia.
Yes it probably came here through new Guinea. The dingo has been apart of the eco system in Australia for so long that they are now a vital part of it. So it is considered native
I'm pretty sure if it isn't considered a cornerstone species it should be
How could it not be native and what makes them think it isn't?
Has a dingo or fossil of dingoes been found in anywhere else in the world? No? So why do they think they aren't native to Australia? What makes them think that? Or was it just a random comment somebody made and everybody went with?
Supposedly they aren't desendants of Dogs, they aren't even related to Wolves, they are own their specific species. They and their fossils aren't found anywhere else in the world.
Yet for some reason there is an idea the continent they are on right now isn't their native continent. Why? What makes them come to that conlclusion? Do they have a single reason at all? Or was it just a random comment?
But where else are dingo fossils found?
@@mzseef PNG
@@mzseefno where
Dingos are just the buff doge memes.
True
So literally just a Shiba Inu
bruhhhhhh i just realized that
Nah it’s a shiba but they are aggressive
@@elijahjohnson5872 or akita inu, shiba is smaller
Travelling Auastralia, I might fear Seasnakes, Trapdoorspiders or Firetrnadoes,
But deep inside I know I'll most likely die trying to pet a Dingo
@No. Body There's a rare occurance during a bushfire, where a tornado sucks up flammable material and transforms into a blazing maelstrom of flames :D
Look it up, its wild
Lol you can easily overpower these guys lol even rotweiller can bully them
Sorry if this was a joke tho,I just wanted to point that out
@@NguyenQuang-tm3ou But in a pack? A single human versus a pack of dingoes isn't such easy math. Especially if the human is unarmed. But I might still try to pet them, because I look at them, see doggos, and want to pet them.
Dingos are so maligned. If you were to threaten or corner a female protecting her pups, yes you will certainly be the focus of aggressive protective behaviours. Generally Dingos behaviour has been impacted and altered by humans. They are very weary, hyper-vigelent and will avoid contact as much possible. My dingo pup is 10 months and assimilation I has required the most work aside from recall (return on command)
@@NguyenQuang-tm3ou lol 😝 ok champ !!! How many Rottweilers have you seen over power a dingo ?!?
I rescued a stray dog once that exactly looked like a Digo and yes it killed every chicken in the neighborhood
It was doing you a favor, and keeping you from being woken up early by roosters!
What is a "Digo"
Anonymous yeah! It should be a Dogo
@@regulardudedoingregularstu1046 dogo argentino?
Did everyone in the neighborhood cooked their chickens afterward?
Give them 10 million years to evolve and they'd probably become lion-sized and venomous. Somehow. Because 'Straya.
Lol!
😂😂😂😂😂
While the lions become buffalo sized and flaming, because africa
@@somagb1 and squirrels become dingo because British
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Rest Of the World Apex predators: Bears, Tigers, Lions, Panthers etc.
Australia: Dogs.
North America: Wolves
England's apex predator is the badger 😂
@@JJones-oi3jc honey badger?
Yeah, we also have 25 foot long crocodiles lol
Wolves can kill any other land predator
Crocodiles, venomous snakes, tarantulas, buff kangaroos, rat sized moths, ect..
“What should we make the apex predator?”
“ *_oh yeah, how about these cute meme dogs_* “
lol nature is weird
Australian nature is especially weird.
Witness the adorable duck-billed platypus, with the venomous spurs on its hind legs.
"...the venom is not lethal to humans, but the pain is so excruciating that the victim may be incapacitated."
Awwww.... :)
The saltwater crocodile is the top/apex predator of Australia
We don’t have tarantulas here, we have the funnel web spider. We also have box jellyfish which are one of the most dangerous animals on the planet. We also have these these things called irikanji jellyfish which are hell bad too, and where I’m from in Perth has some of the highest rates of great white shark attacks
If they aren’t natives, how did they evolve not to fall into the sky? Certainly they don’t have a built in ground harness?
They might have super sticky paws, but don't quote us on that.
Animalogic I’ll look into it. I’m going to ask as many researchers as I can.
plus, they chase rabbits on the wrong side of the bush, I bet
Continental Divide, look it up.
Animalogic ‘they might have super sticky paws’
- Animalogic
They kinda look like shiba dogs, they’re so cool. :D
what I was thinking, although it looks more like an akita
Shibas/Akitas and other Japenese hunting breeds tend toward the "primitive dog" style. You see this even with prominent feral dog populations- American Dingo (they're not dingoes despite the name), village dogs, etc. The body plan just works. That's probably why Dingoes have it too- it just works really well.
Lauren key word “Looks”
Well, it is a wolf-like body plan...
@@someoneidk308 Yep. My Podengo is a primitive breed, and ha follows close to that. I actually had someone ask me if he was a dingo once.
I thought Emus were the Kings of Australia
It's one of those Game of Thrones scenarios where there's a bunch of kings duking it out.
Emus are definitely the kings, they won the Emu War back in the day against humans with artillery cannons
Edit: Autocorrect
Come on they won against the Australian military
But am I the only one who sees Shebos in Dingos
@@animalogic Omg XD dont listen Diotama!
I'm Australian, in high school a family of Dingo's lived near our school and almost monthly, our school had to close for the day because they kept on coming onto the schools property wondering around lol. It happened so much our school couldn't close any longer so we just had to stay indoors when they showed up. Worst days ever
Worst days? Should b Considered a Great Day bcause Animals Should b Allowed to Roam Free
@@DannyUrena-oj9rm dingos are dangerous like wolves. Can you be less ignorant
@@DannyUrena-oj9rm yep humans are animals too. Same freedom instincts. That's why it sucked to be locked up. Man school was the worst haha
This is a great story! Where was your school? Surely it was in rural WA
1:48
Animalogic: unlike dogs, they can't bark
Me: I'lL TaKe YoUr EnTiRe StOcK
@Baldhina Asnake dogs are supposed to go on raw diets like raw meat anyways so it applies to both
Baldhina Asnake
There’re actual studies that show that raw diets pose significant risks that the exact same meal but cooked does not. The reason why raw is better than commercial dog food is because commercial dog food is terrible.
Baldhina Asnake
Cooked is better than raw, studies conclusively show this. Both homemade cooked and raw dog foods are leagues ahead of the average commercial dog food.
That's terrifying, imagine something more dangerous than a guard dog and you can't even hear it if you tried to break in
They do bark, but it's typically to alert the pack of imminent danger. It's like a _"HEY! Watch out!"_ in Dingo-speak.
Dingo's really just look like normal dogs
They kinda look like a Shiba Inu
You'd think that until you see them open their jaws
@@BishhImFlamin0 WOOAAHHH wait a minute what do you mean by that do they got like 60000 rows of shark teeth or something
Cause they were at one point
That's because they are dogs. Fossil records suggest that they split from domestic dogs some 3-4 millennia ago.
“Dingo: The king of Australia”
Emus who won a war against Australia:
*Am I a joke to you?*
Wasn’t that New Zealand?
CROCY
Apparently you are
The ibis: *look here you little-*
@@robertbektas1810 no its Australia. NZ has Moa which is now extinct due to over hunting.
Aw my dog Sophie was part dingo. She died a few months ago at 14, she was a sweet animal, and looked a lot like a dingo.
Our last dog, Rocky was part Dingo. Dingo/Shepherd mix and lived to 15, which is great for a medium dog...And a dog who couldn't break down protein on his own, lol. Did yours have the same colouring?
Sorry to hear that, Joseph. I had a blue healer as a kid ... an Australian Cattle Dog ... she was 13 when she died. Blue Healers (and red) have dingo in the breed.
Mine was a pure mutt, lost him 5 years ago when he ran off with a female. Forgot to castrate him.
@@dirandrous7682 i find this hilarious... Cause my cat did the same years ago 😅😂
I remember my ex decided to get a DNA test on my Cattle Dog Archie (hers at the time) as his behaviors and body structure resembled more of a Dingo than a standard Cattle Dog (only his coat is standard). Turned being nearly 40% of not only Dingo but Alpine Dingo; obviously all Cattle Dogs have Dingo in them but his blood is substantial. He climbs trees, can rotate his head 180°, does a weird bark-howl-yodel and is aggressive...very aggressive. I actually don’t take him to dog parks anymore as he’s been in a few scraps and is what I consider to be dangerous. He’s also highly territorial; when it comes to hoofed animals, unlike other Heelers who will try to herd them, he actively preys on them, nearly catching a deer one time. I love him to death, he’s incredibly attached to me but because of most of his traits being more wild than a standard domestic dog, I have to keep an eye on him
Dingo the king of Australia
Saltwater crocodile: I haven’t laughed this hard since I’ve been nicknamed salty.
@Jefferson Villatoro Osorio how does that make a difference?
@@johnsilcox321 because they arn't fully equipped for terrestrial life, they are more aquatic.
*me being an Aussie, literally going straight to the comments to see what ppl say about our beautiful country*
You know what did Dingo eat?
Babies?
I just give my pet dingo normal dog food
Fark ya onabout cun?
Haha I did the same ! And I also come to see what they said about the dingo 🤣🤣🤣 it’s been interesting that’s for sure !!
Dingo: I am king of Australia .
Saltwater Croc: that was very cute.
Meanwhile, Dingodile is enjoying himself with a Barbeque.
@Xavier O’brien this is not true at all yes they live in the north of country but can live hours inland and in any type of water
DistractedDingo those stupid crocs can end your dingo with just one single bite lol
Huy Tran stupid crocs hardly harras or catch roos.
crocs are only kings of sea coastlines and lakes, since they rely on being invisible in water
danielle really living her best life huh
Cuddles with the outback critters must now be on the list
Shut up
@@natturn-her5050 ......
For real I'm so jealous.
yup...she doubled..
There was a dog from the Australian outback and Dingo was its name-o D I N G O, D I N G O and Dingo was its name-o!
You brought back a memory I didn’t even know I had
“I’d take a dingo home if I could”
Me: You literally can. They’re called Queensland Heelers and they act like dingos too.
That have dingo bloodlines but they're not a dingo
They belong to the wild, I'm glad to see that they survived and of course they are useful for the ecosystem
I really appreciate the fact that you edited this upside down for the viewers to watch it without tilting their screen! :)
3:54 'Balanced as all things should be', a movie quote at the perfect spot
I thought I was the only one who noticed
Me too
They straight up ignored the “Perfectly” part.
Dingoes to me look like a mixture of a wolf and a Shiba Inu.
So stinkin' CUTE.
Ikr!
They eat babies! So cute.
Grannvale Flame Emperor kinda does make it less adorable when you watch it tear out a kids heart and eats their leg, but I guess we disagree.
They both descend from the Asian Wolf, which many other domestic dogs have as well. Surprisingly not too many descend from Gray Wolves
@@thechocolatedonut7216 and so do dogs, wolves, and other animals, what’s your point
What about the Singing dogs of New Guinea... They also can't bark, and they climb trees
Can't bark and climes trees so like a cat?
I need to search this one..... thanks Sai alfonso
Iirc they are thought to be related
theyre considered to be same subspecies
The two land masses were connected during the last ice age.
You said that the fence was built to keep dingos out, which isn't true. This fence was built to prevent RABBITS which ate crops, which it failed at. The dingo stopping is not its designed purpose, however it is the (useful) purpose it fufills today.
@@MomeGnome yeah she did
@@maxpoggerman7396 actually she didn't all it takes is a quick Google search and many articles will tell you dingos are also a reason why the fence is still up.
@@jameswalton4518 "was" indicates that in the past when the fence was built it was for rabbits, but later it's useful purpose is for stopping dingoes. Re read it again mhm
Animalogic: Dingo
Me, an Intellectual: Danger Doge
Please do the Basilisk, I love the alternate name “Jesus Lizard” and the way they do it is so cool
Agreed
The real sonic character we need gotta go fast on water.
You mean the frilled lizard?
That's also a kind of basilisk
I have a pet basilisk
An undeserved name.
Fun fact: These are related to the Australian Cattle Dog, one of the smartest dog breeds that exist!
They can understand whole sentences, can be easily trained and have strong predatory instincts, which means they love to chase after toys and other things and make for excellent herders, protectors and friends.
They are related to the kelpie, apparently lol...
My husband and I have an Australian Cattle dog. You r right. So bloody smart.
@@KDSima I rescued 2 that were not well cared for. Just getting them well fed & healthy was the first priority.
They are so smart & loving to my husband & I...but not very welcoming to strangers 😧
@@lafamilledegrace5442 U are so right. Our dog, Odin, does not get along w/our two cats they were here b4 he was. It could b bc he constantly tries to heard them🤷♀️.
I have one and she’s so smart and protective. They’re natural guard dogs. I’ve always talked to her as I would to a kid and she understands me.
“They can’t eat kibble “ so use prime meat or mutton ? Are they knock out tames, tell me
Lol ark? Idk small dire wolf i havent played in over a year (mobile sadly)
I think there passive tames with cooked prime meat
Scientists - They are not a dog breed, they are their own animal.
Me - Awwww, wild Shiba Inu. Pet pet pet.
There is a dog breed named the Carolina dog, referred to as the american dingo. They look similar to Australian Dingoes but, taxonomically, they fall under the regular domestic dog.
Carolina Dogs are pariah dogs. Their outward similarity with the Australian Dingo is the result of convergent evolution.
"They play a valuable role in the ecosystem, being the continent's apex predator since the extinction of the thylacine in 1936."
Translation: "Ever since we killed the last apex predator, this guy's been patching up the harm from our murder!"
The thylacine was only extant in Tasmania at the time of European arrival in Australia. The Dingo was still the apex terrestrial predator over all of the Australian mainland for thousands of years.
The dingo is largely to blame for the thylacine’s extinction on the mainland. It earned its rightful spot as apex predator.
“But now we want to murder or fence them too to protect our ranching”
Dingoes drove thylacines to extinction on the mainland.
Thylacines survived on Tasmania where there weren’t/aren’t any dingoes.
White man arrived and killed the remaining population off.
“Balanced as all things should be” Lol okay thanos.
Dogs from Australia: my name is dingo! I am an apex predator and I will drink your blood !!
Dogs from the rest of the world: aw I’m a cute dogie and I scared of vacuum
@shroomboy I don't blame it, it probably knows the horrible truth about pugs...
@@cintronproductions9430 I would certainly be scared of horribly inbred minature humans with breathing problems and easily detached and lost eyes.
Or maybe more of whoever forced them into that state..
You forgot African wild dogs and hyenas
Painted dogs anyone?
This video: *Dingo’s are the kings of Australia!*
Everybody and the Emu’s: *What about the Emu’s?*
The ibis: *look here you little-*
Ibis V Dingo would be one hell of a war.
Shes doing everything I wanna do study animals and draw pictures of them 🥺
That awkward moment when having a placenta means you can rofl stomp all over your competition.
Yeah, Shiba Inu becomes apex predator, and Mittens the Kitten wreaks genocide across the land. Useless marsupials.
WTF!!!!!! lol!!!! Lmao!!!!!!
I don't wanna know what either one of you are talking about, cause I wanna laugh okay
🤣🤣🤣
My coyote chow mix looked so much like a dingo. She was a wonderful companion, just liked to travel a ton on her own, making friends everywhere she went. What an amazing being she was.
Alright friend i love your comments. How are you doing. is me Tom hardy. UK actor . Nice to meet you where are you from❤
So cute❤️
They look like distant relatives of Shiba Inu xD
Their actually related to New Guinea singing dog
Dingos are qualifyably the true dogs of Ireland.....they will literally thrive off the snakes in the grass as a backup
Uhhh what? There are no snakes in Ireland.
Dingoes are from a country with the complete opposite climate, what are you on about? Ireland has dog breeds
When you spot a dingo,
you know
you have just hours to flee
3500 years in Australia?? Okay, I am calling them native then
As far as things go here in Aus, they're newbies, lol, but they're more native than feral cats and pigs are, that's for sure.
@George Dunn Pretty sure the people aren't native either from a scientific perspective.
@@reecerobin8413 Aboriginal people have lived in Australia for at least 80,000 years, and there is evidence that suggests even longer, so I think that qualifies being native
@George Dunn There is no joke. The Australian aboriginals technically evolved there too, after migrating from Africa.
@@tallulah7243 80,000 would be the upper limit of when they arrived the least/latest would be by 45,000 years, but the consensus puts their arrival at about 60,000 to 55,000 years.
Dingos: the dominant apex predator of australia land
Me: He he tall doge
Animal logic can you talk about Hummingbird Hawk-Moth
F to the poor family members who losted their babies to these naughty bois
No treats for two days at least
I'm disappoint at how long far I had to scroll down to o find someone mention reference that incident. its was about 40 years ago now though.
It was ONE TIME
My first dog was a dingo/Spitz mix. She was brought over on freighter by the captain but he couldn't keep her on the ship where she was miserable. We took her in but she never acclimated to domesticity. She was more dingo than dog and while she was a great guard dog, she never bonded to people. As she aged. she became even less fond of other people and bit several. She had to be put down at age ten. Poor Skippy, she never should have been taken from the outback.
Is there any genetic trace with other canines nearby in South Asia or Asia in general?There has to b a trace like on an island or something
yeah i think they probably descend from a wolf-like canid from south-east asia, and if they were brought here by humans it was most likely merchants from malaysia.
There's a similar wild dog that lives in Papua New Guinea. It's called the New Guinea singing dog and is closely related to the Dingo.
@@diva3713 Aboriginals brought them to Australia
@@MrWackozacko yeah i thought so. but the indigenous australians arrived in australia farrr before any evidence of dingos
It was humans. Dingoes are not unique to Australia, they can also be found in south east Asia. And are though to have arrived from aboriginals bringing them here.
Dingos are so cool..., They are like Spotted Wild dogs on Africa, they are wild dogs not wolves
José Manuel Tejedor Varcarcel dogs and wolves are the same species tho... dogs are like, a subspecies of wolves
Watch the video dingos more pointed to being their own thing but I guess they're still in the same family
they even aint wild dogs bro
Spotted wild dogs aren’t even dogs. Despite that, my favorite dog is the spotted wild dogs. Unfortunately, my family don’t think them as cute.
Love em, i can be yo family
Dingoes were the foundational breed for the Australian Cattle Dog also know as the Blue/Red Heeler. The Red Heeler looks very much like a Dingo, but stouter. They are great dogs, and extremely loyal and intelligent. They do need a strong willed owner though, because the first 6 months or so they are little velociraptors because the love to bite you with their sharp puppy teeth.
Is that the same thing as the 'kelpie'?
I have an Australian Cattle Dog who I adopted 8 years ago next month. He was about 8 or 9 months at the time. He’s the smartest dog I’ve ever had. Great instincts and the best watch dog ever. His name is Cowboy! Cowboy the Cattle Dog! 😊
Dingoes do in fact bark, just not frequently. It’s a myth that they cannot.
I actually owned a dingo cause my mum bought one as a pup back when you could buy them, and it was the most docile dog ive been around, she was playful but at first meeting always cautious but after she sniffed your hand and you had a pat of her she opens up alot and i guess that just her breed, mostly though she was just sitting around doing nothing sometimes going out for bush walks for 2-3 days and always coming back she was just an amazing dog
still can, just have to be above the sheep fence.
@@selectidiot if i could i would honestly go get one
@@samtimo3002 same, I'm below the sheep fence.
"I used the invasive species to destroy the invasive species"
I mean 4000 years kind of makes them native
If they've been in Australia for 3500 years, they're a native species.
Not by definition of the word native,
native means a species evolved & developed in the same environment for long times. Dingos didn't evolve in Australia rather they came from outside, adapted in & thrived there. If they were to be native species they would be a marsupial predator likewise all native Australian animals.
@@devashisdas5024 Yeah, and it’s a shame one of the only marsupial predators was hunted to extinct since it was inaccurately accused of killing livestock which feral dogs did.
@@devashisdas5024
Not really true. Bats and rodents are not marsupials but there are plenty of native bats and rodents here.
@@greathornedowl1783 Australia has a marsupial rat too. And Bats are found in almost every other continent except for Antarctica because of their longer flying capacity & having super immunity against diseases & also having simbiotic relations with disease carrying germs. Not necessarily means that bats were native but indicates that bats spread throughout migration in Australia. Apart from the marsupial rat of Australia, the common house rats & other rodents introduced by European colonizers are now causing havoc to Australian crops & made a disaster in few months earlier.
human brain: this is a wild animal. it would be incredibly difficult to get it to walk on leash or pee outside or interact safely with other dogs and people
monkey brain: hehe fluffie puppie
Me: Doggos
Animalogic: They're wild predato-
Me: Shh, doggos are doggos
"Break out the butter! Gonna make toast" - Dingodile
They look like a shiba inu crossed with a wolf
"Dingos have been in australia for at least 3500 years"
also "dingos are not native australiens" 🤯
Is that mutually exclusive?
Not sure what you mean here, Dingoes aren't native even if they've been there for over 3,000 years
dogs are not native to America, but they are here since the first humans arrived thousands of years ago, unfortunately there pre-colombian dog breeds were practically extinct
Well I mean they replaced the thylacine on the mainland and have become naturalised as the top order predator so they're pretty much native.
@@MomeGnome 3,001 years
I'm so pleased with this episode, being a fan of that species since childhood. Two months ago, my boyfriend and I, we got us an australian cattle dog puppy, and that breed got dingo in it. 😍
Can we just salute dingos for a moment for serving their country
Dingo's looks like a normal dog and a normal pet.
Dingo is Doggo. Look layk Shobe Inu. They Doge.
they also enjoy eating babies
They are wild doge
Yess
Comments: Dingos aren’t the real kings!
Me: Well yes, but actually no
Austin Kucharski
But dingos aren't native to Australia, so are they REALLY kings....
We got,
The king of Savannah: Lions
King of the dessert: sand cat
Now we had,
The king of Australia: *This doggos*
*starts the video*
"The Australian Outback"
Man, this is gonna be wild
"Balanced, as all things should be"
The dingos are out here really doin' Thanos's work!
3:00 F in the chat for the Thylacine. Such a beautiful puppo that I never got to see...
animal logic: *shows cute dingos being friendly*
me: Ahhh! what cute ghost pokemon shirt!!! 😍
For some reason among all the animals on this planet I feel myself spiritually relating to the Dingo the most.
I know you guys have done wolves already, but would it be at all possible for you to make a video specifically about the arctic wolf?! They have such AMAZING adaptations!!
really nice seeing you traveling and making interactions to atleast the possible way :)
Another great entry in this Australia series. I didn't know dingos' genealogy was so debated. Ironic how the one of best hopes in Australia's fight against invasive species is a former invasive species.
Man's unwillingness to accept change is all that labels something "invasive"; Nature is the rightful landlord and decider of who's moving-in or being evicted.
They keep the balance huh...
So you're telling me that they're canine Thanoses?
Can we all take a sec to appreciate her beautiful drawing😍😍
Yes, thank you. :)
Bro the dingo is probably one of the safest animals in Australia💀
they're so cute and they don't bark, what's not to love?
they murder children
I didn't know dingos were this awesome, wow. Apex predators are usually not this interesting.
When you mentioned the dingo culled invasive species I thought of the cane toad - something the dingo can't cull - could you do a video on them, Animalogic?
When a member of a singing group goes solo*
Dingoes: "Hmmmmpph" in distaste
Yayyyyy finallyyyyyy thanks so much for spreading awareness
Thank you for your use of the metric system, I can’t wait till America makes the switch completely
Dingo: I am the king of Australia
Emu: Oh really
Saltwater crocodile: Hello guys🐊
I almost had one sneak up on me while I was walking around with headphones on, my family were a fair bit off, saw it behind me and started waving to warn me, I turned around and saw it just hanging out a few meters behind me.
Yipes!
It’s not gonna do shit to you, maybe it’ll bite you but that’s about it
@@dantemadden1533 ye most likely
@@dantemadden1533 Don't understimate a dingo.
If dingoes are the kings, then kookaburras are jesters
Hint, hint ;)
The dingo is the coolest wild dog out there!
I reckoned dhole and African wild dog
Nawl they just wild dogs nothing special
@@jinx_pachi4061 heck they're a dog and dogs are pretty special
Not a dog, dingoes are their own thing
They make great pets. Very easy to train & super loyal. Mine is 18yrs old.
They can't bark but they can "Oi mate".
The fence you mentioned wasn't for dingos... It was for RABBITS
👍
The rabbit-proof fence isn't 5,000km long; the dingo fence IS, and it WAS made for dingoes. The error in the video is that she said it's to keep them out of the Southwest, but it was to keep them out of the Southeast.
@@BlackIndigenousPosse Thanks for clarifying .I saw this movie years ago that was called 'Rabbit proof fence' and thought this was that fence too .
@@rohypnotist6263
In fact they have got 3 fences: 2 succesive ones to protect the South-Western corner from rabbits, and a much longer, 3rd one to protect the South-East of dingoes... National Geographic Magazine had published a story about it years ago...
@@asadattayyem2637 I think the third one is for cane toads.
“The conquering king, the apex predator of Australia”
Literally every poisonous and venomous animal in Australia: _ARE WE A JOKE TO YOU ?_
No poisonous animal could be king, poison is a defence against being preyed upon.
Can you do a video on it’s cousin the New Guinea singing dog also you should do a video on bush dog
Dude the cameraman in the beginning was like "Woah dude stop the car! look at this sick lizzard!"
These dogs look just like Indian Pariah dogs....I had one till he died..After looking at these guys it looks like i had a dingo at home...They look so similar hight , color , ears everything...Indian dogs breed once a year and live in small packs in rural areas they also hunt pigs, mouse and even cattles ...they are very fit and agile and have the immunity so strong they can tolerate anything...
From Malaysia? Maybe these guys have a spiritual ancestor. When I say that, I really mean a kind of animal spirit of nature- you know, magical creatures.
*_*Wild Doge appears.*_*
**Pet* *Feed* **Run*
love your gengar shirt
What sound dogs make? Bark
What sound dingos make? None
Well dingos are actually decended form Indian wolf's as when aboriginal people brought them to Australia they had domesticated the wolf's as they explored Asia and brought said wolf's to Sahul (Australia and Papua new Guinea) which became the dingos and there various subspecies.