This video is just perfect. There's no obnoxious music in the background, he just explains it with no other factors. Nothing super dramatic, just the reality of these facts and animals. There's so many channels who have over the top dramatic music, or really unfitting music for the subject.
Love the video Tsuki, from all the extinct and endangered animals, they are remembered for their role they played on earth. Also, I would love to see a part two of animals that have adapted to humans such as raccoons, skunks, and Opossums. 👍😁
🤔when the mongoose and dogs finally dessimate our native solenodon in the Dominican Rep I think possums can fill the empty niche if Only they could kick a mongoose ass💪😂
@@calebopossum5023 Yes, I know thank you. Just thought it would’ve been funny to add in… and trust me I know how much rats and mice love us. I grew up in the projects in the lower east side of Manhattan… That place is rat/mice infested up the wazoo.
Thank you for bringing these (sad) facts forward. We humans have not done well with preserving vulnerable animal species; we've got to do better. Your instructive videos help us all to be more aware of what we have overlooked, not so much from malicious intent but from uninformed ignorance. Cheers, and stay well.
@@sir_sack Yeah, but humans are doing it in a horrible way. A lot of animals suffer because of us. WE are the reason for it. Most animals go extinct because of natural reasons or events but nowadays it's all because of us. The world has a balance and we are disrupting it. Also if we keep doing what we are doing without changing ANYTHING all animals except for us will be gone. The world will be a jungle of cities and nothing else. It will be a sad world.
@@laylonlee229 yeah but it also works the other way too. We can’t start trying to preserve animals that are meant to go extinct as it also disrupts the natural ecosystems. If you’re going to argue one way, you can’t ignore the facts of the other. Take the polar bear, has nothing to do with us and is beginning to adapt to live on the mainland. Yet we try to preserve it instead of letting either adapt or go extinct.
@@sir_sack Yes, but consider why the polar bear is struggling as a species- habitat loss due to climate change, a human input to the ecosystem. It's not as though it's unsuitable for its environment, it is that we are destroying its environment en mass
Enjoy the channel, just wanted to offer a correction about the Caspian Tiger. Recent genetic studies have found that instead of 9 or so "subspecies" of tiger, there are only two real subspecies; mainland tigers, and tigers from the indonesian archipelago. Not to say they aren't different in some ways, but the traits that can be used to separate them are pretty recent adaptations, things that can evolve very quickly (like different sizes), and with timescales at under 110,000 years of separation (at most) they are about as distinct from each other as human "races" with 60-70,000 years of separation at the most (so not very distinct). While the island tigers do live on separate islands, all the island tigers would have been part of a continuous population when sea levels were lower, just over 11,000 years ago, so there isn't really anything significant to distinguish them at the genetic level from before that point. This was also found to be true for the different "subspecies" from mainland Asia. They show some degree of separation between each other, but it seems to only date to fairly recently, likely as a result of humans cutting off connections between different regions. The Caspian tiger was found to be from the same population as the Siberian tiger, just cut off about 10,000 years ago in central Asia. This is actually great news, because it means that while the Caspian tiger population is gone, there is a closely related and more-or-less identical tiger population that can be expanded into the Caspian's former range.
@@Death.Died0 Dude, that's not even funny. Elephants are VERY smart and emotional. They have very good memories, so if a calf sees it's mother being killed it will remember that for the rest of it's life and will be traumatized to a certain point. Don't be a heartless bastard and a troll. Literally no one thinks you're funny except other lowlifes.
Humans are to greedy to notice or care about these warning signs. There aren't enough people who care enough and are able to do something about it. But hats off to the people who do
Other Aliens continuing the first set of Aliens channel which used to be Tsuki's channel: "But sadly the Aliens went extinct because of the common cold which used to infect the Homo Sapiens"
Even though meat is my primary source of food, I still have feelings for wildlife. Special laws and regulations for birds, mammals, reptiles, rodents, fish, etc are very important so we can still have the population we need. There's many people around the world who don't care and don't even consider how important laws and regulations are. As a recreational fisherman, I make sure I obey regulations so there can either be a thriving population or a rebound in population. If I were to be a recreational hunter, I'd be the same way I am about fishing even though I love deer, goose, and duck meats. Invasive species are another issue that many governments around the world don't put effort into. The red fox being introduced to Australia has caused severe impacts on native wildlife. The European Starling and House Sparrow have had impacts on native cavity nesters here in America, and the expanding range of American birds such as the Brown-headed Cowbird and Barred Owl have had impacts on other birds and wildlife that are native.
Great video. Have you heard of the Northern White Rhinoceros? There are currently only 2 known ones left, but both are female. So it's basically exist, or will be after those 2 die if no new ones are suddenly discovered.
The two females eggs have been harvested, as well as the sperm of male individuals form the species so there is hope for the species, although neither of the two females can carry children so in order to continue the species a surrogate mother from a different species would have to be used but there is still hope
@@theearth__9146 unfortunately the critical limit for a species is 200 genetically distinct individuals, otherwise the lack of diversity will end them.
Yeah I understand that people miss the aquatic fishy vids but to be honest I was running out of resources, there were only certain fish I could cover in those videos because I could only get clips of more common fish but I'm glad you stuck around and I appreciate the support :)
Good video, you also could do a video about the contrary of this, The lazarus species/taxon, animals that was thought to be extint but was found some individuals alive today. The most iconic one being the Coelacanth, it would give a good video and certain a more positive one. Most of them still has a high risk level of being extint but still... Have a good day.
Honestly it's heartbreaking how many beautiful and important animals we've killed off. When ever I hear about the extinction of a predatory animal or large herbivores, I can't help but think of the massive ecological impact. Not only are we loosing another species to the selfishness of our own kind but the ecosystem is loosing another player that keeps it in balance. It's similar to what happens when wolves or bison got hunted out of certain areas. Only we don't have a way to reintroduce these animals back to their homes in an impactful way. We can't just go air dropping new Caspian Tigers back into their home range. We can't return Stellar Sea Cows to their home range or bring back the many many other animals that we personally screwed over. All we can do is try to do better with the ones we have left.
Its something more people need to open their eyes too, almost all modern extinctions have been in some way caused by humans, something needs to be done and fast
If you ever do a part two of this video you should make one of them the Newfoundland wolf it was a very unique animal that I think would be cool and it only went extinct recently
We need to do more about invasive species, cats are a very common and huge issue as most love to let their cats out of which the cats hunt for sport over hunting..As well as people in general letting go pets into the wild, and the red foxes as you mentioned. We should do our best to cut down numbers of invasive species in areas so we can limit their damage and hopefully raise the populations of the native species. We also need to take WAY better care of the ocean, it's super important, and we should try our best to save the little tigers left in the wild along with the many other big cats struggling in numbers..Big cats these days are rare in the wild but SUPER common in captivity which is incredibly sad to think about as they're too big for captivity and deserve to be out in the wild free to play, breed, hunt, and live.
It's theorize that thr stellar sea cow could be found all over the Northern Pacific but the extensive hunting of Sea Otters caused them to have to compete with sea urchins for kelp, since Sea Otters love eat sea urchins.
Your thumbnail reminds me of a music video by Miracle Musical called Isle unto Thyself. The music video features the animals similar to the thumbnail and the line "Gone not forgotten" is in the lyrics.
Exactly this is what cloning should be used for but first we need a program to rebuild habit, the over all environment and address the other cause of the extension or the new population won't be able to tack hold and thrive
Not all humans are bad, but a lot of extintions come from sport hunting. Caspar tiger died because of sport hunters. I believe the same is happening to wolves because of farmers and sport hunters. I dont get it.... Hunting for fun is almost murder? No, it IS murder. I get hunting for food, but hunting for sport is an excuse to kill for fun. I swear, these "sport hunters" are psychotic. The guy who killed the worlds famous lion was a trophy hunter. A serial killer of sorts. Sport hunting should go illegal. Its just an excuse for people with murderous tendencies to kill... If per say, there are a lot of wolves killing your sheep, buy donkeys. Donkeys will protect your cattle and you wont need to run over wolves like a psycopath. Humans have no need to control the ecosystem themselves.... Animals who are prone to almost go extinct after protection should just... not lose protection? I am using wolves a lot as an example. People have grudge for animals (especially apex predators). its depressing.
Saving endangered species is such a monumentally complex endeavor… It’s a process that requires the coordination and cooperation of nearly every person and community on earth. In addition to the education of nearly every population on earth, that covers a whole variety of topics that are endemic to the success of mass sustainability. Everything from economics, conservation, city/town infrastructure, sanitation, responsible hunting/fishing/resource management, health, nutrition…and most importantly, the very, VERY difficult (and sensitive) task of trying to change centuries (even millennia) of deeply rooted traditional medicine, cultural practice and religious ceremonies. It’s easy to point the finger and say *”those jerks should just hunt less and use less plastic!”* While yes, that’s absolutely true (to a degree) in most cases-and I wish it was as simple and superficial of a solution as that…. Sadly, it is SO much bigger and more complicated of a problem than just trash and responsible hunting. 🥺😞
"Recently" proceeds to show 5 from like what the last 100 years I thought this was going to be more recently like just animals that went extinct within the past 5 years
If we ever do figure out how to time travel I hope it’s to fix things like this. These poor souls are many that we failed to save. Hopefully there are others we can save and get our act together
Wow I didn’t know that that Wilderbeast was involved with ancient Egyptians. Is there some kind of weird background noise in this Video or am I losing my mind?
Manatee or Sea Cow have not gone extinct, but are protected animals, because they are endangered. Similar to the Siberian Tiger. Also this video is well put together otherwise.
@Kris De Roo I see that after looking it up. Apparently all species related including the dugong are considered vulnerable or endangered. I am sorry for misunderstanding. Apparently the manatee and this one in the video are both commonly known as Sea Cows.
Back home we learned about how good sea lion oil was but the meat of the animals were not so good. Apparently it was not only not good to eat but difficult to cook, they seemed to be really cute. I wonder with the similarities of their evolution with only an ocean separating them if bribing them back at least in theory would be possible.
The Tota Lake Duck 🦆 went extinct very recently it deserves a video. By the way that guy who offered new subscribers to Tsuki in exchange for a Colombian 🇨🇴 invasive species video 🦛. Be safe
Man extinction sucks but dinosaurs among other animals are an perfect example that it's inevitable and just destiny for pretty much all species. We will have our day too.
But the dinosaurs weren’t killed by man’s stupidity and the decisions that everything belongs to us, we need to learn to live along wildlife and how to care for them so they can thrive instead of having their day
@@nensig8243 That won't happen until we get to a technological level where we can build artificial space stations capable of supporting large populations indefinitely and mining all the resources we need from uninhabitable planets, meteor, comets or moons once we have those we basically could just leave garden worlds as vacation destinations and/or nature reserves.
@@Kakarot64. A simple, faster fix is to lower the human population so that we don't consume a mass amount of resources that increases every single day. But there's no way to do that without being cruel in some way or form. But even if we found a way we'd have to adapt to the lower population too. The problem with living on other planets and such is then there may be new "countries " in space that identify separately from earth, and over time they could (once earth is unnecessary) separate completely from earth due to new politics and essentially leave the planet to rot while they enjoy their new lives. (once science advances enough for it to be possible in the first place.). Think america or the birth of any new country. Eventually, they will demand "freedom". Even if we found a way out of our own cruel cycle, it'll just start all over again in a different place once we settle. Because that's how humans have always been. Unable to handle eachother. Sometimes running from a problem isn't a solution, but rather delaying the inevitable Itll be impossible to leave garden planets. There will always be someone who will forcefully claim ownership over land and use it to their own gain. Besides, imagine telling every human to pack up and hop into space when the planet is still green. That's about 50 wars worth of effort. Just takes one person to get tired of it and use a nuke. If only politics was that simple..
I think once endangered animals are bred successfully in captivity the first thought is to release them into the wild and reintroduce them but i could do a video on species that have comeback from the brink of extinction
The most famous example I know off would be the Père David's deer, which has been extinct in the wild for more than a century, but is really commonly kept in captivity (although efforts to reintroduce them are currently being made).
I see no harm in replacing an extinct animal with a similar species🤔like caspian with siberian tigers.it can save many critters in threat of extinction..those desert pup fish that are disappearing could easily thrive in other places i'm sure💯💪🇩🇴
Probably sea cow is the hardest to breed I saw another video a sea cow in an ocean park and the keeper said It cost more to feed it than the largest aquarium even though it only eats vegetables. So if its on the wild probably can eat all the kelps in the area in a month.
No, there's more. :D While there's only one species of *dugong* remaining, their close relatives, the manatees, still exist. Though manatees face some danger as well.
This video is just perfect. There's no obnoxious music in the background, he just explains it with no other factors. Nothing super dramatic, just the reality of these facts and animals. There's so many channels who have over the top dramatic music, or really unfitting music for the subject.
Love the video Tsuki, from all the extinct and endangered animals, they are remembered for their role they played on earth. Also, I would love to see a part two of animals that have adapted to humans such as raccoons, skunks, and Opossums. 👍😁
🤔when the mongoose and dogs finally dessimate our native solenodon in the Dominican Rep I think possums can fill the empty niche if Only they could kick a mongoose ass💪😂
@@niokhobayediouf3416 Opossums are not bad animals, they do more stuff for the environment that's good than bad.
Don’t forget rats! They love us 😭
@@alexdaniel2816 Rats and Mice have followed us for Eons. They're the Reason why Cats domesticated themselves with humans.
@@calebopossum5023 Yes, I know thank you. Just thought it would’ve been funny to add in… and trust me I know how much rats and mice love us. I grew up in the projects in the lower east side of Manhattan… That place is rat/mice infested up the wazoo.
Thank you for bringing these (sad) facts forward. We humans have not done well with preserving vulnerable animal species; we've got to do better. Your instructive videos help us all to be more aware of what we have overlooked, not so much from malicious intent but from uninformed ignorance.
Cheers, and stay well.
Animals are meant to go extinct. Animals have been going extinct for millions of years and will continue to do so for millions more
Animals have been going extinct since the beginning of time
@@sir_sack Yeah, but humans are doing it in a horrible way. A lot of animals suffer because of us. WE are the reason for it. Most animals go extinct because of natural reasons or events but nowadays it's all because of us. The world has a balance and we are disrupting it. Also if we keep doing what we are doing without changing ANYTHING all animals except for us will be gone. The world will be a jungle of cities and nothing else. It will be a sad world.
@@laylonlee229 yeah but it also works the other way too. We can’t start trying to preserve animals that are meant to go extinct as it also disrupts the natural ecosystems. If you’re going to argue one way, you can’t ignore the facts of the other. Take the polar bear, has nothing to do with us and is beginning to adapt to live on the mainland. Yet we try to preserve it instead of letting either adapt or go extinct.
@@sir_sack Yes, but consider why the polar bear is struggling as a species- habitat loss due to climate change, a human input to the ecosystem. It's not as though it's unsuitable for its environment, it is that we are destroying its environment en mass
Enjoy the channel, just wanted to offer a correction about the Caspian Tiger. Recent genetic studies have found that instead of 9 or so "subspecies" of tiger, there are only two real subspecies; mainland tigers, and tigers from the indonesian archipelago. Not to say they aren't different in some ways, but the traits that can be used to separate them are pretty recent adaptations, things that can evolve very quickly (like different sizes), and with timescales at under 110,000 years of separation (at most) they are about as distinct from each other as human "races" with 60-70,000 years of separation at the most (so not very distinct).
While the island tigers do live on separate islands, all the island tigers would have been part of a continuous population when sea levels were lower, just over 11,000 years ago, so there isn't really anything significant to distinguish them at the genetic level from before that point.
This was also found to be true for the different "subspecies" from mainland Asia. They show some degree of separation between each other, but it seems to only date to fairly recently, likely as a result of humans cutting off connections between different regions. The Caspian tiger was found to be from the same population as the Siberian tiger, just cut off about 10,000 years ago in central Asia. This is actually great news, because it means that while the Caspian tiger population is gone, there is a closely related and more-or-less identical tiger population that can be expanded into the Caspian's former range.
That’s good to hear. Hopefully the tigers may be reintroduced to the Caspian region once suitable habitat is available.
@@migs232 Thankfully, plans have already been made to do so in Kazakhstan and Iran en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_Tiger_Introduction_Project!
What would you do without google eh
Its really depressing to learn how many animals we've hunted down to extinction.
yet kinda sad we can no longer hunt and eat elephants because of stupid laws
And then also help them from extinction and give support to other species and also save them from the "natural" selection shit
@@Death.Died0 Dude, that's not even funny. Elephants are VERY smart and emotional. They have very good memories, so if a calf sees it's mother being killed it will remember that for the rest of it's life and will be traumatized to a certain point. Don't be a heartless bastard and a troll. Literally no one thinks you're funny except other lowlifes.
@@Death.Died0 stupid laws? They're the only reason more animals aren't already wiped out.
@@laylonlee229 like me
Humans are to greedy to notice or care about these warning signs. There aren't enough people who care enough and are able to do something about it. But hats off to the people who do
white ppl* don’t involve everyone else into shi they started
@@Galaxy-rj1kj Very pretencious arent we
Aliens continuing Tsuki's Channel:
*But sadly, the Homo Sapiens went extinct because of Homo Sapiens...*
Other Aliens continuing the first set of Aliens channel which used to be Tsuki's channel:
"But sadly the Aliens went extinct because of the common cold which used to infect the Homo Sapiens"
Even though meat is my primary source of food, I still have feelings for wildlife. Special laws and regulations for birds, mammals, reptiles, rodents, fish, etc are very important so we can still have the population we need. There's many people around the world who don't care and don't even consider how important laws and regulations are.
As a recreational fisherman, I make sure I obey regulations so there can either be a thriving population or a rebound in population. If I were to be a recreational hunter, I'd be the same way I am about fishing even though I love deer, goose, and duck meats.
Invasive species are another issue that many governments around the world don't put effort into. The red fox being introduced to Australia has caused severe impacts on native wildlife. The European Starling and House Sparrow have had impacts on native cavity nesters here in America, and the expanding range of American birds such as the Brown-headed Cowbird and Barred Owl have had impacts on other birds and wildlife that are native.
Cycle of life.
@@FishesFlyTillTheWorldDies ?
@@FishesFlyTillTheWorldDies humanity is just too greedy to obey the cycle of life
Hey Tsuki, if you could bring back one extinct animal, including dinosaurs and such, which species would you choose?
not tsuki but i would pick titanoboa
that's a very good question and a very hard one to answer but i'd have to say that thylacine as it was so unique, what about you?
@@TsukiCove Thats a good choice! i'd probably bring back the Dodo, just because they would be too damn cute.
@@victornilsson7375 I'd pick a mammoth. So enormous and dangerous at times, yet magestic
well i have a counter question, what animal would you not have introduced in a country?
For example the rabbit in Australia.
Could you talk about the old world dogs? They where incredible and we still have yet to see anything even close to them
Great video.
Have you heard of the Northern White Rhinoceros? There are currently only 2 known ones left, but both are female. So it's basically exist, or will be after those 2 die if no new ones are suddenly discovered.
The two females eggs have been harvested, as well as the sperm of male individuals form the species so there is hope for the species, although neither of the two females can carry children so in order to continue the species a surrogate mother from a different species would have to be used but there is still hope
@@theearth__9146 unfortunately the critical limit for a species is 200 genetically distinct individuals, otherwise the lack of diversity will end them.
I miss aquatic topic a bit ,but still love your channel ❤! High quality content as always. Keep going 💪
Yeah I understand that people miss the aquatic fishy vids but to be honest I was running out of resources, there were only certain fish I could cover in those videos because I could only get clips of more common fish but I'm glad you stuck around and I appreciate the support :)
@@TsukiCove did you know hartebeest are related to my favorite animal the wildebeest
Good video, you also could do a video about the contrary of this, The lazarus species/taxon, animals that was thought to be extint but was found some individuals alive today. The most iconic one being the Coelacanth, it would give a good video and certain a more positive one. Most of them still has a high risk level of being extint but still...
Have a good day.
Stellar's Sea Cow just makes me feel like i have already seen it,I do not know why
Because it looks like a manity
@@bobbyhillthe3rd Yeah probably
Honestly it's heartbreaking how many beautiful and important animals we've killed off. When ever I hear about the extinction of a predatory animal or large herbivores, I can't help but think of the massive ecological impact. Not only are we loosing another species to the selfishness of our own kind but the ecosystem is loosing another player that keeps it in balance. It's similar to what happens when wolves or bison got hunted out of certain areas. Only we don't have a way to reintroduce these animals back to their homes in an impactful way. We can't just go air dropping new Caspian Tigers back into their home range. We can't return Stellar Sea Cows to their home range or bring back the many many other animals that we personally screwed over. All we can do is try to do better with the ones we have left.
Thank you for posting videos like this. Its sad to see animals dissapear when they don't do anything to deserve it.
Man I love watching these videos before I start school
Wholesome
You should do a video on the 30+ animal extractions caused by domestic cats. That's 30 more extinctions we as humans are responsible for.
Thank you. I have another reason to hate cats now!
Yes so true ….
Man, your content is fantastic! Subbed, and I've been binge-watching your videos the past few dsys.
Love the video mate keep it up 😊
thanks i appreciate it and i will do :)
Its something more people need to open their eyes too, almost all modern extinctions have been in some way caused by humans, something needs to be done and fast
Awesome video tsuki
Thank you i appreciate it :)
I really love your channel, it's one of my favorites, but it this was truly a sad video. We've lost so many species because of humans.
💯😟
thank you I really appreciate the support and i know it's such a sad topic but hopefully with more awareness we won't loose any more iconic animals
Definitely a warning sign for all of us. The tapestry of nature is getting very thin.
If you ever do a part two of this video you should make one of them the Newfoundland wolf it was a very unique animal that I think would be cool and it only went extinct recently
We need to do more about invasive species, cats are a very common and huge issue as most love to let their cats out of which the cats hunt for sport over hunting..As well as people in general letting go pets into the wild, and the red foxes as you mentioned. We should do our best to cut down numbers of invasive species in areas so we can limit their damage and hopefully raise the populations of the native species.
We also need to take WAY better care of the ocean, it's super important, and we should try our best to save the little tigers left in the wild along with the many other big cats struggling in numbers..Big cats these days are rare in the wild but SUPER common in captivity which is incredibly sad to think about as they're too big for captivity and deserve to be out in the wild free to play, breed, hunt, and live.
I know people would be against it but I would love to bring these animals back
Depends how long ago they went extinct
It's theorize that thr stellar sea cow could be found all over the Northern Pacific but the extensive hunting of Sea Otters caused them to have to compete with sea urchins for kelp, since Sea Otters love eat sea urchins.
never change your intro my guy 🤟
It’s iconic.
💯💪
if all this has taught us anything, it is this: no species lasts forever. -Kenneth Branagh
Yeah, but that's because of natural things. Humans call animals man eaters and monsters but in reality we are the monsters.
The first would have been cool af to see
This is sad I'd love to see all of them😰
7:00 not going to mention Feral Cats?
Your thumbnail reminds me of a music video by Miracle Musical called Isle unto Thyself. The music video features the animals similar to the thumbnail and the line "Gone not forgotten" is in the lyrics.
7:48 My man got payback for his cousins being slaughtered
It would be nice if we brought these animals back to life from extinction and give them a second chance.
Exactly this is what cloning should be used for but first we need a program to rebuild habit, the over all environment and address the other cause of the extension or the new population won't be able to tack hold and thrive
@@reneeburtness1526 Don't even care about habitat first, just clone the animal for the sake of it and put it in some zoo for a global spectacle
@@iSyriux We should repopulate it not make it to be put in a zoo
I can't find the Intro/outro
can you provide a link ?
thanks
Fun fact that picture of sea cow’s skeleton is actually in a museum in city called Helsinki.
Thanks for these videos they’re wonderful. May I have a link to the beginning and intro music you use?
Hey nice vid
Thanks i appreciate it
Can you go over almost the extinct birds? I feel like the kakapo doesn’t get enough recognition. There’s only 200 left
Stelllar's sea lion was name by him as well.
Yep, binging this channel tonight
Glad we still got Manatees here in Florida thriving
Not all humans are bad, but a lot of extintions come from sport hunting. Caspar tiger died because of sport hunters. I believe the same is happening to wolves because of farmers and sport hunters.
I dont get it.... Hunting for fun is almost murder? No, it IS murder. I get hunting for food, but hunting for sport is an excuse to kill for fun. I swear, these "sport hunters" are psychotic. The guy who killed the worlds famous lion was a trophy hunter. A serial killer of sorts.
Sport hunting should go illegal. Its just an excuse for people with murderous tendencies to kill...
If per say, there are a lot of wolves killing your sheep, buy donkeys. Donkeys will protect your cattle and you wont need to run over wolves like a psycopath. Humans have no need to control the ecosystem themselves.... Animals who are prone to almost go extinct after protection should just... not lose protection? I am using wolves a lot as an example. People have grudge for animals (especially apex predators). its depressing.
Saving endangered species is such a monumentally complex endeavor…
It’s a process that requires the coordination and cooperation of nearly every person and community on earth. In addition to the education of nearly every population on earth, that covers a whole variety of topics that are endemic to the success of mass sustainability.
Everything from economics, conservation, city/town infrastructure, sanitation, responsible hunting/fishing/resource management, health, nutrition…and most importantly, the very, VERY difficult (and sensitive) task of trying to change centuries (even millennia) of deeply rooted traditional medicine, cultural practice and religious ceremonies.
It’s easy to point the finger and say *”those jerks should just hunt less and use less plastic!”*
While yes, that’s absolutely true (to a degree) in most cases-and I wish it was as simple and superficial of a solution as that….
Sadly, it is SO much bigger and more complicated of a problem than just trash and responsible hunting. 🥺😞
We used to have caspian tigers here at Georgia, but they were extirpated in 1922 after the last one was killed after it hunted livestock
"Recently" proceeds to show 5 from like what the last 100 years I thought this was going to be more recently like just animals that went extinct within the past 5 years
My favorite extinct animal is definitely the Tasmanian tiger/thylacine!
If we ever do figure out how to time travel I hope it’s to fix things like this. These poor souls are many that we failed to save. Hopefully there are others we can save and get our act together
good video but also a warning sign if humans don't save other animals they also be a endangered species
I feel sick.. Awesome job with these videos, though.. God..
Please do a top 5 coolest crabs
how many more have got to go before we all say enough.
Wow I didn’t know that that Wilderbeast was involved with ancient Egyptians.
Is there some kind of weird background noise in this Video or am I losing my mind?
Great video but very sad as well.
suggestion:
animals that never existed.
not cryptids or mythological beasts, but misclasifications and misunderstandings by scientists
Its sad how the species you mentioned went extinct and nobody cares 😢😢😢
More people would care if more people would know about it imo
@@gabriellafleur2020 if we won't die by climate change, we will probably try to clone some animals imo
Manatee or Sea Cow have not gone extinct, but are protected animals, because they are endangered. Similar to the Siberian Tiger. Also this video is well put together otherwise.
@Kris De Roo I see that after looking it up. Apparently all species related including the dugong are considered vulnerable or endangered. I am sorry for misunderstanding. Apparently the manatee and this one in the video are both commonly known as Sea Cows.
Nice vid
I still can't believe how many beautiful animal extinct but there is some hope for this extinct animal
All these beautiful animals I didn't get to lay my eyes on how sad that there all gone now
That what I like to hear
We spend so much money to save the(admittedly cute) kinda redundant panda when we could use that money to save dozens of other species
Back home we learned about how good sea lion oil was but the meat of the animals were not so good. Apparently it was not only not good to eat but difficult to cook, they seemed to be really cute. I wonder with the similarities of their evolution with only an ocean separating them if bribing them back at least in theory would be possible.
Hunting animals for their fur is despicable!
Depends why. Is it for style or practicality.
Don't forget the blue parrot species from the movie Rio
I’m starting to see a trend of who’s mainly to blame for making all of these great animals go extinct
Of you do another list of resent extinctions you could talk about the Cuban macaw
The Tota Lake Duck 🦆 went extinct very
recently it deserves a video.
By the way that guy who offered new subscribers to Tsuki in exchange for a Colombian 🇨🇴 invasive species video 🦛.
Be safe
Oh that’s me
Man extinction sucks but dinosaurs among other animals are an perfect example that it's inevitable and just destiny for pretty much all species. We will have our day too.
But the dinosaurs weren’t killed by man’s stupidity and the decisions that everything belongs to us, we need to learn to live along wildlife and how to care for them so they can thrive instead of having their day
@@nensig8243
That won't happen until we get to a technological level where we can build artificial space stations capable of supporting large populations indefinitely and mining all the resources we need from uninhabitable planets, meteor, comets or moons once we have those we basically could just leave garden worlds as vacation destinations and/or nature reserves.
@@Kakarot64. A simple, faster fix is to lower the human population so that we don't consume a mass amount of resources that increases every single day. But there's no way to do that without being cruel in some way or form. But even if we found a way we'd have to adapt to the lower population too.
The problem with living on other planets and such is then there may be new "countries " in space that identify separately from earth, and over time they could (once earth is unnecessary) separate completely from earth due to new politics and essentially leave the planet to rot while they enjoy their new lives. (once science advances enough for it to be possible in the first place.). Think america or the birth of any new country. Eventually, they will demand "freedom".
Even if we found a way out of our own cruel cycle, it'll just start all over again in a different place once we settle. Because that's how humans have always been. Unable to handle eachother. Sometimes running from a problem isn't a solution, but rather delaying the inevitable
Itll be impossible to leave garden planets. There will always be someone who will forcefully claim ownership over land and use it to their own gain. Besides, imagine telling every human to pack up and hop into space when the planet is still green. That's about 50 wars worth of effort. Just takes one person to get tired of it and use a nuke.
If only politics was that simple..
@@sinny5404 i think banning creating humans should be enforced until the population goes under 1 billion, killing humans seems bad
Heartbreaking to see the devastation humans have caused. 💔
Animals have been going extinct before humans even existed...
@@MrCow579 and? We have caused too much extinction and destruction.
@@MrCow579 True, but humans have drastically sped it up.
What are some almost extinct animals that are now thriving in captivity?
I think once endangered animals are bred successfully in captivity the first thought is to release them into the wild and reintroduce them but i could do a video on species that have comeback from the brink of extinction
The most famous example I know off would be the Père David's deer, which has been extinct in the wild for more than a century, but is really commonly kept in captivity (although efforts to reintroduce them are currently being made).
Pandas, they’d be extinct without humans
@@msghia5252 Not necessarily, if their huge bamboo forests were still around, they’d be okay. People cut down the forests.🎋🎍🐼
@@yvellebradley2502 But thats not what he asked. Panda's went from endangered to vulnerable thanks to human conservation efforts.
If we lose tigers and/or orangutans I'm going to be very sad 😥...
I see no harm in replacing an extinct animal with a similar species🤔like caspian with siberian tigers.it can save many critters in threat of extinction..those desert pup fish that are disappearing could easily thrive in other places i'm sure💯💪🇩🇴
@Nelon and? there may be endangered animals in OPs country.
I can’t keep watching this. It makes my heart ache. Especially the one about the sea cows. It’s so freaking sad. Humans are the worst
Gone, but i’ve forgotten
I like the generic PSA at the beginning never change
good job tsuki
New drinking game: every time he says “species” take A shot. How drunk are you? Shit faced right? lol
I'm happy some are still alive in captivity..I still got hope.
I saw the thumbnail and thought "manatees aren't extinct?"
At this point de-extinction could really come into play but only if we really learn from our errors and don't let history repeat itself.
Are there also being new animals made/born ? Of that we know
If they are ever brought back and recover we should take care of them like we would with our own. We owe them that much...
I wonder how many species lived and died directly because of humans, without humans ever knowing they existed?
Though I _DO_ appreciate the video, it's _IMPOSSIBLE_ to click "Like" because it saddens me. *Thank you for memorializing these amazing creatures.*
4:26
A Russian Minuteman
,,Another Settlement settlement needs your Help comerade..."
I keep forgetting I have thalassophobia D: I should start taking any mention of marine animals as a warning
At least we still have the "Brazilian Sea Cow"... It was endangered some years ago, but still here.
Probably sea cow is the hardest to breed I saw another video a sea cow in an ocean park and the keeper said It cost more to feed it than the largest aquarium even though it only eats vegetables. So if its on the wild probably can eat all the kelps in the area in a month.
2:40: look at the size of that otter poet!
I WANT A PART 2!! 😐
Name of music?
Was wondering why a hartebees was in the thumbnail
Talk about the 2 recent extinct species of elk in America
The Caspian tiger actually roamed even further.They used to live in Ukraine and other parts of Southern east Europe.
Do the Tasmanian tiger
This video made me sad
Norwegian Wolf just went extinct, or was just declared extinct. 🐺
Nuce
So there's only one species of sea potato left... dangit
No, there's more. :D While there's only one species of *dugong* remaining, their close relatives, the manatees, still exist. Though manatees face some danger as well.