@Sacred Rebel Animals aren't ideological about their diets. Herbivores mainly eat plants and are adapted to that, but can still eat some meat if they get the opportunity (ie watch?v=sQOQdBLHrLk). Idk if they measured calories, proteins, vitamins or minerals, but the vole is going to be massively more nutritious on all of them, even after the buffalo have fermented the grass.
@Sacred RebelWoah what!? Really hurt my brain reading this. First off the vole is going to be more nutritious than a quantity of grass of equal weight and thats an objective fact the matter whether or not the animal can access that said nutrition is a completely different matter. Second why are you making a comparison between hormones in men and women to diets and lifespans of animals?? It's a completely different biological process that has nothing to do with each other and the way you mentioned it makes no sense whatsoever. Yes, men and women both have hormones but the same hormones in same quantity? Uhh no absolutely not. And having hormones isn't solely responsible for reproductive processes, a man pumped full of estrogen and progesterone can't menstruate and have babies for the same reason why a woman pumped full of testosterone can't produce sperm and semen....they don't have any of the organs or more accurately the organ systems in place to do so. Third, while true that larger animals do typically live longer than smaller ones, the comparison between the lifespans of two completely different species is irrelevant when it comes to diet. A crocodile is completely carnivorous and yet it lives longer than the buffalo. If you want another example tortoises like buffalo are herbivorous but the tortoises have lifespans that are at least 3 times that of buffalo but tortoises are significantly smaller does that just mean that tortoises are overall healthier? (You can GOOGLE this if it makes you comfortable) No it doesn't. Lifespan is heavily based on genes and diet helps but not to a ridiculous degree as you might suggest. In the case with humans we're omnivores meaning plants and meat so eliminating meat completely can be detrimental to our health because doing so eliminates a good amount of vitamins and minerals from our diet (ex: iodine, B12, zinc, iron). So what we should be striving for is a balanced diet if you really want to be healthy. Next time leave your ignorance if you ever want to be objective otherwise just keep your mouth shut. Logic so flawed I wanted to kill myself 🙄
Yes, I'm going to guess they played outside (what tier zoo calls it) for a long time I think they are the same players who evolved into Anomalocaris during the beta stage of the game
I know; weird he approved that script. Different digestive systems have evolved to utilize different foods; bison can get a lot more energy out of the grass
@@michaelvonreich74 It would be enough, if the bison did not have to work so hard for it. A healthy bison will put on a thick layer of fat each summer and this fat, coupled with what forage it can obtain sustains it until spring.
@@ImPovii Right, but you stretched out the silent letter "e", so it sounded like you were saying "Sam-EEE", which sounds like "Sammy" when read out loud.
2:53 rewatch how it takes this step there was so much thought put into into First it almost steps to the left Then he moves his foot farther to the left before stepping to trick the mouse into thinking the fox is farther away Then the fox stomps his foot on that step to ensure the mouse will move
As pets, they have the bad features of both cats and dogs. Pee everywhere, dig holes, can jump over fences, dig tunnels and chew on everything. But they are normally quite good with humans if they are bought up as a pet.
I stayed at a hotel in Hokkaido in winter, and was lucky enough to watch a fox do this dive into snow over and over right from my window. It was the cutest thing ever. 🦊
Nature is so incredible. So perseverant. The life cycle and evolution of animals and their true improvisation and will too survive is truly a marvel of life.
@@Hacktheplanet_ I'm British and it's a fair question. We do indeed use Celsius and have done for decades now; the only people who might use Fahrenheit are now very old. As for other things, we are still far from completely "metric". There is a bit of a generational divide since schools do not teach/use imperial measures and have not done for decades, but there are still some things for which we tend to use imperial units, regardless of our age: human height is always in feet and inches, not metres; human weight in stones (rather than pounds); road distances in miles not kilometres and speed in miles per hour, not kilometres per hour - but we buy food/drink in kilos and litres (apart from beer in a pub, which is still served in pints, although if you buy it in a bottle in a supermarket the bottle will generally be 500ml.) P.S. maybe the reason for the use of Fahrenheit here is that the BBC makes money exporting these wildlife programmes to US TV channels - I don't know that, but the BBC never uses Fahrenheit these days in domestic programmes - and certainly not in weather forecasts/reports.
Sure, it looks a little silly when a fox swan-dives face first into three feet of snow, but it gets impressive really quick when they come back up with a mouse in their teeth.
@@kpNov23 Carnivores solely eat meat, omnivores both hunt and gather plant material. Herbivores eat plants but are opportunistic “carnivores”, meaning an animal like a deer would eat a mouse if it was able to catch it. Or eat some carrion from a carcass. Not all herbivores can consume meat, koalas certainly can’t but most herbivores can. Meat is far simpler to digest, that’s why. And many herbivorous animals had ancestors that ate meat.
TE DIERON CAPACIDADES COGNITIVAS, QUE NI SIQUIERAS SABES USAR. DÓNDE ESTÁN LOS DEMÁS SENTIDOS ...????? HAY ANIMALES COMO POR EJEMPLO LAS LECHUZAS QUE SE GUIAN POR CAPTACIÓN DE ONDAS ELECTROMAGNÉTICAS. LÉELO QUE SOIS MUY JOVENES E INECPERTOS.....
I use to run every morning and on my sandy rocky trail in az. I saw a fox on the dirt road and went off trail. I slowly walked towards and hid and ive seen it jump like this into the base of bushes. I dont know if he it got a mouse but what a sight to see.
3:39 "But a hundred times more nutritious than a mouthful of dried grass." Okay now cut to the bison looking jealous while he eats a mouthful of dried grass.
"A vole. Small, but a hundred times more nutritious than a mouthful of dried grass."
Bison: The Hell are you trying to say?
He is trying to say - "sometimes brain beats brawn"
@Dhananjay Kavoor 𝓁00000000𝓅𝓁0𝓁00 𝓃𝓋
*vegan rage commences*
@Sacred Rebel Animals aren't ideological about their diets. Herbivores mainly eat plants and are adapted to that, but can still eat some meat if they get the opportunity (ie watch?v=sQOQdBLHrLk). Idk if they measured calories, proteins, vitamins or minerals, but the vole is going to be massively more nutritious on all of them, even after the buffalo have fermented the grass.
@Sacred RebelWoah what!? Really hurt my brain reading this. First off the vole is going to be more nutritious than a quantity of grass of equal weight and thats an objective fact the matter whether or not the animal can access that said nutrition is a completely different matter. Second why are you making a comparison between hormones in men and women to diets and lifespans of animals?? It's a completely different biological process that has nothing to do with each other and the way you mentioned it makes no sense whatsoever. Yes, men and women both have hormones but the same hormones in same quantity? Uhh no absolutely not. And having hormones isn't solely responsible for reproductive processes, a man pumped full of estrogen and progesterone can't menstruate and have babies for the same reason why a woman pumped full of testosterone can't produce sperm and semen....they don't have any of the organs or more accurately the organ systems in place to do so. Third, while true that larger animals do typically live longer than smaller ones, the comparison between the lifespans of two completely different species is irrelevant when it comes to diet. A crocodile is completely carnivorous and yet it lives longer than the buffalo. If you want another example tortoises like buffalo are herbivorous but the tortoises have lifespans that are at least 3 times that of buffalo but tortoises are significantly smaller does that just mean that tortoises are overall healthier? (You can GOOGLE this if it makes you comfortable) No it doesn't. Lifespan is heavily based on genes and diet helps but not to a ridiculous degree as you might suggest. In the case with humans we're omnivores meaning plants and meat so eliminating meat completely can be detrimental to our health because doing so eliminates a good amount of vitamins and minerals from our diet (ex: iodine, B12, zinc, iron). So what we should be striving for is a balanced diet if you really want to be healthy. Next time leave your ignorance if you ever want to be objective otherwise just keep your mouth shut. Logic so flawed I wanted to kill myself 🙄
That bison at the end was going through an existential crisis
Clever camerawork
@@elbo7755 so funny 😂
😂😂😂
The Old You lol yes.
He was just like “bruh”
These Snow Foxes clearly have mastered their minimap skill.
Like 100. Congrats bro
+25 +1 comment congrats
Is it a snow fox? Not always change the hair color?
Yes, I'm going to guess they played outside (what tier zoo calls it) for a long time I think they are the same players who evolved into Anomalocaris during the beta stage of the game
Foxen are smart.
The form was a 10/10
Fine form, the precision!
Iwanna see him do a triple axle before he dives next time!
@@cappystrano1 would be pretty cool if he did a tail grab just for the style points. 😁
Nope......it's legs were apart on the landing, but still a strong 9/10
Sir Attenborough: "... sometimes brain beats brawn."
Buffalo: "David I'm right here!! I can hear you!"
Bison"
Cue a Bison nose diving into the snow
I know; weird he approved that script. Different digestive systems have evolved to utilize different foods; bison can get a lot more energy out of the grass
@@eschwarz1003 but it's dried, dead grass. Probably not enough to sate the bison, considering its huge energy expenditure.
@@michaelvonreich74 It would be enough, if the bison did not have to work so hard for it. A healthy bison will put on a thick layer of fat each summer and this fat, coupled with what forage it can obtain sustains it until spring.
I never get tired of watching foxes nose dive into the snow....
Sameee
@@ImPovii
Are you saying "same" or are you trying to spell "Sammy"?
@@JanetStarChild that's not even the same amount of letters ya dingis
@@ImPovii
Right, but you stretched out the silent letter "e", so it sounded like you were saying "Sam-EEE", which sounds like "Sammy" when read out loud.
@@JanetStarChild bro... please...hop off of me
Me, sitting on the couch and watching this, can never estimate the amount of hardwork these animals have to do for their survival
Just as much as a mentally ill person😢
2:53 rewatch how it takes this step there was so much thought put into into
First it almost steps to the left
Then he moves his foot farther to the left before stepping to trick the mouse into thinking the fox is farther away
Then the fox stomps his foot on that step to ensure the mouse will move
Davids voice makes everything complete..a legend in naration..no match
The camera crew and the animals are equally gifted.
It's the careful step that gets me! Intelligent fox!
That fox was very cute though 😍
Super cute
Very feminine looking too! Guessing it’s a girl?
@@jasonantigua6825 I think its a male.. 3:34
Foxes are amazing animals! Attenborough is amazing narrator! What to say, excellent video!!!
I know right they’re so great! So Precious and fluffy
My dog did the same thing in 1-foot of snow and came up with a shrew.
Shut it karen!!!
@@degnur3442 in.
@@degnur3442 Do you have IDIOT tattooed on your forehead?
If I didn't know better I would say that fox is 50% cat 50% dog and equipped with modern radar. Lol. Amazing
Nice comment
As pets, they have the bad features of both cats and dogs.
Pee everywhere, dig holes, can jump over fences, dig tunnels and chew on everything. But they are normally quite good with humans if they are bought up as a pet.
Cat Software wrapped in Dog Hardware.
It's just adorable to watch foxes noes dive into snow
I stayed at a hotel in Hokkaido in winter, and was lucky enough to watch a fox do this dive into snow over and over right from my window. It was the cutest thing ever. 🦊
yeah, you were lucky
amazing footage. smart fox with the hearing and pin point accuracy.
Looking at the fox and bison together made me remember scenes from Narnia
This fox is so beautiful. Look at that shiny gold ish fur dude
One of the finest documentary I have ever come across
That vole looked deliciously chewy, like a fuzzy Gusher.
"hello sir, tonight we're serving a deliciously chewy fuzzy Gusher, a hundred times more nutritious than a mouthful of grass. Dip right onto the snow"
That fox jumping head first into the snow was like something out of Disney. 😅.
Tell that to the vole.
Mate your a legend all over the world...
How many people can say he's a world treasure
At the end the big cow is like Whatever.
it is a buffalo or a bison! but big cow works when high :)
it's neither a mouse nor a cow but other than that spot on Sherlocks
@@leanonymous486 it's not a buffalo, buffalo live in Africa and Asia and they're very distinct to bisons which live in Europe and North America
Bison at the end just looked like: DAMN.
Nature is so incredible. So perseverant. The life cycle and evolution of animals and their true improvisation and will too survive is truly a marvel of life.
3:28 Notice his precision although jumping off three feet!!
Imagine just being a mouse minding your own business and a massive fox just smashes through your roof and eats you
Were I a fox I know I'd end up diving my head straight into a stone...
Fox are one of my favorite critters on the planet 👍🐾🐾👍
Excellent animal story plus Sir David Attenborough narration can make anyone's day.
It is Incredible that the fox can somehow pinpoint where the mouse is.
Vole, not mouse
@@Julia.Taunton-Clark99 They are sometimes known as meadow mice or field mice in North America , en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vole
They use the Earth's magnetic field of all things. Those creatures are amazing.
@@gabrielcastillo9745 No they don't - they use their noses, eyes and ears - in this case, mostly their ears.
@@adolforodolfo6929 If that were the case, then why do they have a higher success when they are facing North?
Mr.Ox : We have "grass" fox, what do you have?
Mr.Fox: Hold my Mouse
whats a grass fox
@@xrt8297 they meant “we have some grass, ‘fox’ , what do you have?”
@@xrt8297 also nice izuku midoriya pfp
I think this might be a really trash comment but I’m not 100% sure
out of all letter combos..
bbc🔥
cute fox, great narrator, amazing footage- AND the video length is 4:20. can’t get much better than this. thank you youtube recommendations
this fox has clearly x-ray enabled
Thank you Sir David.
The quick brown fox jumps over the massive snow.
The Fox is so clean and beautiful
BBC's videos are something special..
Somehow I can see the beautiful side of the Fox in this video.
-20 fahrenheit is about -29 celsius,
-40 fahrenheit is -40 celsius and
3 feet is 90 cm for the rest of the world.
Oh yeah why is it those measurements, britain uses Celsius
@@Hacktheplanet_ I'm British and it's a fair question. We do indeed use Celsius and have done for decades now; the only people who might use Fahrenheit are now very old. As for other things, we are still far from completely "metric". There is a bit of a generational divide since schools do not teach/use imperial measures and have not done for decades, but there are still some things for which we tend to use imperial units, regardless of our age: human height is always in feet and inches, not metres; human weight in stones (rather than pounds); road distances in miles not kilometres and speed in miles per hour, not kilometres per hour - but we buy food/drink in kilos and litres (apart from beer in a pub, which is still served in pints, although if you buy it in a bottle in a supermarket the bottle will generally be 500ml.)
P.S. maybe the reason for the use of Fahrenheit here is that the BBC makes money exporting these wildlife programmes to US TV channels - I don't know that, but the BBC never uses Fahrenheit these days in domestic programmes - and certainly not in weather forecasts/reports.
Just lovee the narrator's voicee❤️❤️❤️.... The way he narrates the scene makes me feel like m already there
Sure, it looks a little silly when a fox swan-dives face first into three feet of snow, but it gets impressive really quick when they come back up with a mouse in their teeth.
Wow, that's an awesome video supported by Sir David's spellbinding narration
Love foxes! They are amazing and beautiful.
Those squinting eyes staring at the snow ground.
Fox Snow: Diving to hunt, mm Finally!
Bison: Diging grass..mm yummy! 😀
Incredible!
2:08 this is the scene you're looking for
Nope
This earth and wildlife is so beautiful when one steps back and observes our world outside of humans it's a wondrous site
How that fox leaped so high & far with only 3 of its legs on the ground impressed me. 👏
Hs⁹
It’s an arctic fox.
Why would anybody hit the dislike button? This is the most adorable thing I've seen a fox do 🥰😂.
they cant dislike anymore so😂
Rodent rights activists....
@@tinknal6449 F.L.M. 😂😂😂
a brit disliking and undermining the American Bison's intelligence just because they don't eat meat is a good way to start.
Brits don't even have any cool animals... they think their national animal is a Lion... lmao.
Seems like the fox possesses super hearing. 🦊 2:37
bison 4- bro why did evolution made us herbivores? that bunny looks so tasty
bison 12- shut up and help me dig this 5 tonnes of snow
Omnivores
they can eat meat, most herbivores can
@@Tatusiek_1 then pray tell, what's the difference among carnivores, omnivores and herbivores?
@@kpNov23 Carnivores solely eat meat, omnivores both hunt and gather plant material. Herbivores eat plants but are opportunistic “carnivores”, meaning an animal like a deer would eat a mouse if it was able to catch it. Or eat some carrion from a carcass. Not all herbivores can consume meat, koalas certainly can’t but most herbivores can. Meat is far simpler to digest, that’s why. And many herbivorous animals had ancestors that ate meat.
@@Tatusiek_1 lol, right
These are spectacular shots
Best wild nature video I've seen in a while
It's IMDB's top rated TV show in any category. The 6 part series took 3 years to produce.
Such a beautiful fox 🦊
Foxes nose is so small but fox is so cute ❤❤❤❤❤
The Bison: dat ain't brain brah. Ya see them hops? Imagine the 'ish I could do with them hops!!
"My ingenious snow measuring tactic didn't work brilliantly."
I could listen to Sir Attenborough all the day
2:23
Bisons: Who the hell is making noise??
3:26 At this point i genuinely felt anxious like "Bruh! Hurry, the video is about to End" 😅
That is a wonderful thing. The special thing is that the fox finds the exact target...
2:09
the fox jumps so cute!!
I'm here for sir David's voice 💕
That fox deserves an Emmy award
@3:25, that camerawork, that narration topped off with a suspenseful music. Just amazing content.
Our school teachers need this kind of students who listen and be attentive
That is a great adaptation
A creature that can hunt you without even seeing you is truly deadly, even though it does not look like so.
TE DIERON CAPACIDADES COGNITIVAS, QUE NI SIQUIERAS SABES USAR. DÓNDE ESTÁN LOS DEMÁS SENTIDOS ...?????
HAY ANIMALES COMO POR EJEMPLO LAS LECHUZAS QUE SE GUIAN
POR CAPTACIÓN DE ONDAS ELECTROMAGNÉTICAS. LÉELO QUE SOIS MUY JOVENES E INECPERTOS.....
3:33
Difficulty: 3.5
Execution: 9
Glorious hops, sir
There are few times when I root for the predator but this is definitely one of them.
Лисичка - сестричка ловит мышек.
I have dealt with a little digging animal, a gopher, so I definitely approve the killing of that vole.
@ThePark 627 wow, thanks for clearing that up
One of my favourite actions from wildlife
That mouse was like " searching needle in the haystack" for the fox.
Brilliantly done..
Fox reminds me of my high school days
Fox: Oh I hear something YEET
What a Photography!!!
Love the thumbnail!
Fox the clever and also amazing hunter!
I often cant believe that Im sharing something with these amazing creatures
very cute
It's like a puppy 🥰
I love foxes🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊
Fox: oh I hear something YEET
A fox exhibits an incredible ability to hunt a vole from underneath the snow.
*vole
@@IndoraptoadThanks for the correction.
Technically, the fox is hunting a vole from above the snow
Don't go where the vole has been, go where the vole will be.
'brain vs. brawn' is the wrong way to thing about this. Rather, each animal uses tools at its disposal to survive.
Yeh, I mean they got their grass, he got his vole.
I use to run every morning and on my sandy rocky trail in az. I saw a fox on the dirt road and went off trail. I slowly walked towards and hid and ive seen it jump like this into the base of bushes. I dont know if he it got a mouse but what a sight to see.
Its cute and beautifully intelligent
Finally, the vid that makes sense of fox's pointy nose 💯
3:39 "But a hundred times more nutritious than a mouthful of dried grass."
Okay now cut to the bison looking jealous while he eats a mouthful of dried grass.
One of my favorite animal moments! 😊
I luv foxes! Especially the snowy ones. They’re so cute and fluffy uwu ^_^
Action at 3:08
They are so clean
With this thumbnail the title should better read"Fox hovers like a harrier jump jet"
Brain always beats brawn
2:03 fox diving into snow.
Just WoW!