A Seagulls Unbelievable Eyesight | Nature's Boldest Thieves | Earth Unplugged
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- Does seagulls eyes being on the side of their head allow them to have a wider view ?
Subscribe: bit.ly/Subscrib...
Animal Slow Motion: bit.ly/EarthUnp...
Expeditions: bit.ly/EarthUnp...
Big Questions with Maddie Moate: bit.ly/BigQuest...
Wilderness Sessions: bit.ly/Wilderne...
Nature's Boldest Thieves
Seagulls and other animals are learning to adapt to the urban environment and steal from humans. They're crafty, courageous, and coming for your food. No longer afraid of humans, seagulls have moved in to live amongst, and steal from us. They have adapted perfectly to life in the world's growing cities, and are terrorising anyone that comes between them and their food.
Welcome to Earth Unplugged! We make films about the incredible natural world, we investigate the conundrums, quirks and beautiful science of our amazing planet, delving into the BBC vaults and mixing it up with our own stuff to take a brand new look at Earth.
Want to share your views with the team behind BBC Earth and win prizes? Join our BBC Studios Voice: www.bbcstudios...
This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes.Service information and feedback: bbcworldwide.co...
Seagulls adjusted the FOV slider to max.
And uses 2 super ultra-wide 32:9 curved monitors.
I must say seagulls are very beautiful, if u throw food in the air they will catch it, a free bird of prey show!
They also know how to soften a hard bread roll with salt water so they can swallow it.
Boy: *Tells joke.
Gull: I see what you did there.
😁😂😂😂😂
Owls are the ONLY birds on Earth who have forward facing eyes. Because they cannot see behind themselves, they compensate this by being able to turn their heads backwards.
0:11 0:13 0:14
0:35
I think this applies to every animal with divergent eyes so practically every herbivorous animal.
most herbivores have an even broader field of view because their eyes are actually at both sides of the head while seagulls eyes still face kind of forward (which is the case with most predatorial animals). Also herbivores don't see colours most of the time while birds see even more than we do.
VholeblastforyournansVajineAndRaipeHerAHole
Finally it makes sense to me why they seem so stupid to get past glass doors/windows. If they have such a broad sight it's probably not easy to be focused/or make sense of what they are looking at, except for just kind of feeling themselves around
Seagulls are intelligent, charming sentient beings.
They don't call them See Gulls for nothing.
My peripheral vision is so unusual, I can see nearly everything behind me, including my past.
when i was 10 i tried to trap a seagull for 2 days
he avoided the trap everytime
they are smart cookies
Or maybe your traps were dumb.
Geese can see incredibly good too. I once saw a big flock of geese on a floodplain happily going about their business when hawks and buzzards flew over and came in to view from the size of being a dot in the sky to being in plain view and therefor identifiable. No reaction of the geese. Then later nothing to see in the sky and all of the sudden there is big alarm among the geese and they all start flying in a big circle above the floodplain. "O" said an older gentleman sitting next to me " the eagles are coming, they can see them. Same happened yesterday." It was a clear sky on the middle of sunny day and I didn't see anything approaching. That stayed like that for a minute and I started doubting whether eagles would arrive. "Ah there they are" some bloke with big binoculars said and pointed in a direction. Hmm nothing to see, so I point my binoculars. Still nothing to see. "Yeah they are tiny dots even in my binoculars, but there are 2 of them." "How you know they are eagles?" I asked. "I don't, but its the only 2 dots I currently see flying and the geese are scared of something." he answered. It took another minute before I could see them in my binoculars, still not more then moving dots. Could have been flies just some meters away. Took another 2 minutes to identify them really as birds, another minute before they would become identifiable as bird of prey. And the geese still alarming and flying circles. Then another minute or so to identify them really as bigger then a hawk. They took a minute to arrive clearly visible and clearly eagles, flew some circles above the circling geese then flew a little further and landed in a tree. The geese settled down. Flying right up anytime the eagles would fly a little just to go sit in another tree.
Moine,moine,moine,moine,👀👀👀
🦅❤️Love seagulls!
terrific eyesight!
How much zoom do they have
What a Creation of God
Great for stealing food or divebombing people just trying to walk under where they chose to nest to get home… and the fact that a baby gull is stranded on the ground as well. If I sound bitter it’s because that’s my life right now. Having to dodge gulls whenever I leave the stairwell of my building and wherever that baby (who is somehow surviving) decides to wander.
Just throw them some old bread
eagles will sort that out
I'm surprised that even BBC Earth uses the incorrect Sea Gull term
interesting! and nice sunny Ilfracombe
Amazing info
Amazing
yo mama??
Got a feeling that seagulls cant see very well at night as they ignore food thrown for them at night. They look in my direction but can't seem to see the food getting thrown down for them.
I once saw a seagull try to eat a glove. And another was trying to eat duct tape.
the best is watching them eat starfish as they wrap their arms around the gull's head
I love the accent they speak 😍
birds dont speak
they only scream
Idiots i wasnt talking about seagulls
@@mhmdkhairy4423 but u said u love their accent
@@josh-pn5mc do seagulls have accent ?? I was talking about those english people
Nice
Pretty much every herbivore/prey animal has this eye socket placement. There's not much special about our flying friends.
They can also see very very far away. «My» seagull can see me inside my house from the shore that is like 200-250 meters away.
you have your own seagull?
damn bro ok
@@antty3380 Late answer but hell yeah. He still lives like a wild bird though.
@@antty3380 It's just random seagulls coming to the same shore, and they all look the same. Every day there's a new seagull but this guy thinks it's the same seagull over and over again.
@@twentytwo138 Definitely not, I can tell the difference between him and his mate for example. They sit on the same place by the shore all the time, and no completely wild seagull would eat out of my hand.
Amazing video. I Was born in the uk. I think that was somewhere in cornwall. Watching this video made me realize that the view of seagulls is not accidental but well designed and planned by a maker who is full of wisdom and might, and thats Almighty Allah who created everyone and everything for a purpose.
Even cannabis, right? Which humans made illegal.
You don't know where you were born?
imagine playing life on quake pro
Where this was recorded,looks likes swanage,?
song name?
It
Seagulls may have amazing eyesite but they are such @$$holes!
I'd love to hear that accent of her's right in my ears.
ehhh
Click bait all yap and no seagulls !
Bunch of rats with wings stealing my beach food!
Technically they are not rats they are birds.
Oliver Thank you Oliver, I never would have known that if not for you. My hero.
Sharing is caring.