They're Breaking the Species Barrier

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2024
  • There are wild hybridizations happening all the time! Here are five weird and wild hybrids that aren't just cool but could teach us something too.
    Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him)
    0:00 Intro
    1:06 Arctic Oddballs
    3:43 Bouncing Baby Bears
    6:01 Iguana Mermaids
    8:31 Combo Sharks
    10:25 Mallard Merger
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    ----------
    Sources:
    Bears
    www.jstor.org/stable/40512895
    www.jstor.org/stable/26379758
    onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/p...
    news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/na...
    Sharks
    pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27774...
    link.springer.com/article/10....
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    Iguanas
    peerj.com/articles/6291/
    zslpublications.onlinelibrary...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
    galapagosconservation.org.uk/...
    galapagosconservation.org.uk/...
    galapagosconservation.org.uk/...
    galapagosconservation.org.uk/...
    Mallards
    www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/M...
    avianres.biomedcentral.com/ar...
    link.springer.com/article/10....
    www.utep.edu/science/lavretsk...
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    www.utep.edu/science/lavretsk...
    www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/M...
    Whales
    www.nature.com/articles/s4159...
    www.washingtonpost.com/scienc...
    IMAGE SOURCES
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wh...
    www.nature.com/articles/s4159...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Na...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gr...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ul...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.flickr.com/photos/lissjas...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    inaturalist.ca/observations/1...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.inaturalist.org/observati...
    www.uq.edu.au/news/article/20...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    bit.ly/3BwS8yI
    bit.ly/3uTsUqh
    These Animals Can Hybridize?!

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @TheRogueWolf
    @TheRogueWolf Год назад +5750

    UPDATE: After hearing the term "pizzly bears", polar bears and grizzly bears have agreed to just be friends.

    • @Gildedmuse
      @Gildedmuse Год назад +297

      What about grolar bears? Of course that requires the opposite pairing

    • @PRDreams
      @PRDreams Год назад +142

      Pozzly bears would have made more sense... but sound less funny.

    • @TalsBadKidney
      @TalsBadKidney Год назад +78

      They're called grolar bears damnit!

    • @ericdew2021
      @ericdew2021 Год назад +36

      Oh heck. How about Fozzy Bear?

    • @deGoomyan5538
      @deGoomyan5538 Год назад +26

      @@Gildedmuse grolar bears exist and the actual term

  • @TomYourmombadil
    @TomYourmombadil Год назад +597

    It would be so infuriating as a researcher to hear about a hybrid and then be told that they were all just killed

    • @error.418
      @error.418 Год назад +94

      No kidding... each time "cool hybrid! oh, you hunted them all... rip."

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад +18

      Well, not really, Max. Because of how those hybridizations can negatively affect one of the original species involved - pay attention to the end segment, about the Mallard and what it's doing to other distinct species for clarification on that. How do you think that having Species A completely wiped out because a second Species, B, wiped out Species A's genetic lineage would feel to someone researching Species A?

    • @DulceN
      @DulceN Год назад +1

      Just what I thought.

    • @DulceN
      @DulceN Год назад +53

      @@MaryAnnNytowlAnd what tells you that hasn’t happened for millions of years ans that’s how we have the species we see now???

    • @buddyzilla4557
      @buddyzilla4557 Год назад

      Also there is the fact that information gathered would typically be limited and situational. They could gather some general understanding about this hybrid pairing however the hybrid of two seperate species results in an infertile offspring. If the genetics are close enough to produce a fertile offspring, it means they do in fact belong to the same species and are this both a subspecies. The genetic line will always and with the hybrid. That is why hybrids are so rare, even form captivity. You don't get family lines of mules, you have to breed them from a horse and donkey each time. Ligers and Tions are a hybrid of a lion and tiger with witch species the male is determining which the hybrid is classified as. If a Liger had a child it couldn't be defined as a Liger by this naming method and the proportions it now has. If it mated either another Liger, then it would still be 50/50 but all Liger amd Tion are going to be inheritantly sterile anyway. I'm not sure what is going on with the Pizzleybear story. If they are truely seperate species, the offspring can't be fertile. Either these bears have been missclassified, the info in this video is wrong or this is a groundbreaking exception that requires more info. I am honestly starting to question the validity of this channel though. I saw a vid earlier about hybrid fetus being produced of dolphins and cows as well as dolphins and mice through artificial insemination. I notice they tend to leave out details and sources however. I don't want to say they aren't reliable yet, but it feels likely to me..I would research any claims form this channel first myself. It would not be the first time a channel presented itself as a credible science fact one but published junk stories was fact without proper research.

  • @KAZVorpal
    @KAZVorpal Год назад +105

    Four million years isn't unusual at all in hybridization.
    It is the time between donkeys and horses, and between lions and tigers.
    In fact, the really amazing one is that camels and llamas can be hybridized, though they're separated by more like 17 million years.

    • @shartsmcginty8056
      @shartsmcginty8056 10 месяцев назад +12

      And now, I am uncontrollably chanting "camellama, camellama" to the tune of Rock Me Amadeus.

    • @KAZVorpal
      @KAZVorpal 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@shartsmcginty8056The Vice President appreciates your support.

  • @hopeadler507
    @hopeadler507 Год назад +131

    As an inuk hearing John accurately use the term made me cry. I rarely hear people use the correct term!
    If people didn’t know:
    Inuit is a group of people
    Inuk is one person
    Inuuk is two people!

    • @netpackrat
      @netpackrat Год назад

      And you all live in the Juneau area....🤣

    • @hopeadler507
      @hopeadler507 Год назад +6

      @@netpackrat what does that even mean? I’m not even from that region.

    • @netpackrat
      @netpackrat Год назад +1

      ​@@hopeadler507 Sorry. At 4:55 when the narrator was talking about where polar bears live, they showed a map of southeast Alaska featuring the locations of Juneau and Sitka. That's completely on the other side of Alaska from where any Polar Bears (and most Inuit) live. So, he may have gotten his terminology right, but the people who made the video have no clue whatsoever about the geography they are trying to describe.

    • @cryptidofthemarshes1680
      @cryptidofthemarshes1680 11 месяцев назад +5

      This is Hank. Haha

    • @hopeadler507
      @hopeadler507 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@cryptidofthemarshes1680 whoops right. My brain knows this but somehow I still wrote this. Probably because I was watching a John video right before this video 😅

  • @justayoutuber1906
    @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +1319

    The biggest example of this is the eastern coyote or coywolf. I was surprised this wasn't in here. This is a mix of the small western coyote and gray wolf. In 2014, a DNA study of northeastern coyotes showed them on average to be a hybrid of western coyote (62%), western wolf (14%), eastern wolf (13%), and domestic dog (11%)

    • @katrianem2124
      @katrianem2124 Год назад

      Yeah coyote wolf hybrids are a real nuisance for conservationists. I’m surprised they aren’t mentioned.

    • @codyh.5102
      @codyh.5102 Год назад +31

      I think they’ve done an episode on coywolves

    • @borrellipatrick
      @borrellipatrick Год назад +29

      Heard about them, live in New England. But haven't seen one. Heard about them because it's our fault 🥴
      Human settlement expansion and their habitat destruction is pushing their territory to be closer and overlap.

    • @juliaf_
      @juliaf_ Год назад +57

      The Canis genus as a whole is a massive mess lol. Is the eastern grey wolf a gray wolf? Red Wolf? Coyote hybrid? Its own species? Are red wolves a hybrid, gray wolf subspecies, or its own species?
      The entire genus can interbreed and and form fertile offspring, completely screwing with the definitions of the species

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад +14

      @@wasidanatsali6374 I wonder if that was an instinct to keep the kill less noticeable to other predators or scavengers, maybe, so they'd be there to eat later. I mean, not that 12 calves would be needed before they were inedible to anything but the buzzards, but instinct is weird.

  • @lordtachanka903
    @lordtachanka903 Год назад +2798

    Am I the only one that thinks Grolar bear sounds way cooler than pizzly? Pizzly sounds like a name you’d call your annoying cousin when you’re in front of grandparents and can’t swear 😂
    Edit: fixed spelling mistake

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад +220

      Well, the odd thing is, the case listed here should be grolars, since the male was a grizzly. The naming convention is that the sire makes the first part of the name, and the dam makes the last part. So when a male Polar bear is the father, then offspring would be Pizzlies, and when a male Grizzly bear is the father, then offspring would be Grolars.
      I'm not sure why they called the lineage here Pizzlies. 🤷‍♀️

    • @lordtachanka903
      @lordtachanka903 Год назад +50

      @@MaryAnnNytowl that makes sense, I remember there was a similar thing with ligers where the lineage is what defines the name. Thanks for the info tho kind stranger ❤️ much love (sorry if that sounded passive aggressive I’m autistic and I didn’t mean it to sound rude I’m just legitimately thanking you lol)

    • @Tdx21
      @Tdx21 Год назад +70

      Bi-polar bear is right there! such a missed opportunity!

    • @antarbenson9328
      @antarbenson9328 Год назад +18

      Grolar bears are a thing too. Like Ligers and Tigons.

    • @KOKO-uu7yd
      @KOKO-uu7yd Год назад +10

      GROLAR FOR THE WIN!!

  • @brianorr308
    @brianorr308 Год назад +53

    Neat video! Couple updates for this video. 1. Asiatic Lions and Tigers used to have an overlapping range quite recently in the past, so hybrids could have occurred naturally, although still infertile I assume. 2. There is a male Narwhal that has been raised with a pod of Beluga. This year he has been spotted having courting behaviour with the Beluga females in his pod. So, researchers are looking for signs of pregnancy and a hybrid calf hopefully.

  • @mamarutnielsen1380
    @mamarutnielsen1380 Год назад +8

    i’ve seen a beluga in a flock of narwhals and the flock follows the beluga, it’s such a weird site to see even for us Inuit, i’ve heard few hunters had caught narlugas before and the description of them are really similar in this video

    • @trapperjohn6089
      @trapperjohn6089 Год назад

      Do they taste different?

    • @mamarutnielsen1380
      @mamarutnielsen1380 Год назад +2

      @@trapperjohn6089 most of people who eats them can’t tell the difference of taste of their skin, it’s an Inuit delicacy around Alaska, Canada and Greenland, it has same name but pronounced differently depending on the region “maktat” “mattak” “muktuk”.
      but to me yeah, they taste different, the meat of beluga is more tender and they dont have fat as much as narwhals.

  • @richards3648
    @richards3648 Год назад +1600

    It is a shame we do not call marine iguanas merguanas.

    • @haharmageddontv6581
      @haharmageddontv6581 Год назад +52

      seaguana hehe

    • @DPAE-xc4ph
      @DPAE-xc4ph Год назад +92

      How about 'mariguana'?

    • @dantearias2182
      @dantearias2182 Год назад +28

      @@DPAE-xc4ph mariguanas is perfect

    • @MisterCynic18
      @MisterCynic18 Год назад +19

      I mean we can. No one can stop us.

    • @nathanlevesque7812
      @nathanlevesque7812 Год назад +9

      If we did then I'd have yet another reason to pick marine iguanas as my top pick for hypothetical reincarnation to another species.

  • @anonymouscausethatshowirol828
    @anonymouscausethatshowirol828 Год назад +504

    If you think the hybridization of the iguanas is hard given the time spent distant, you’ll like the sturddlefish, the paddlefish sturgeon hybrid with parent species separated by like 70 million years

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Год назад +23

      also tigers and lions diverged millions of years ago and still can hybridize and donkeys and horses split like 4 million years ago and still can hybridize so clearly it's not that surprising

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +26

      I remember being floored hearing of an elephant hybrid that was born in a zoo once, they aren't even considered the same genus, with Asian elephants thought to be closer to mammoths. The paddlefish and sturgeons sound even wilder than that, not even seen as sharing a family, though taxonomy isn't always consistent in terms of ranking, so I'm not sure if that means they diverged earlier than the elephants, but I wouldn't be surprised.

    • @ambrosianapier7545
      @ambrosianapier7545 Год назад +7

      I am not sure if Ligers are fertile themselves(I don’t think they are) But Mules are definitely infertile. One mule can’t have kids with another mule or a horse or a donkey, it’s a dead end.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +9

      @@ambrosianapier7545
      Apparently there have been extremely rare cases of mules giving birth (only giving birth, male mules are absolutely infertile). I think if it against all odds produces an egg which just bears genetic material from its mother, it can foal. There's a MinuteEarth video about it.

    • @sapphirII
      @sapphirII Год назад +1

      @@ambrosianapier7545 The males are sterile but females are fertile. The same with their tigons cousins(one has a mother tiger and a father lion and the other was has the opposite)

  • @alexanderx33
    @alexanderx33 Год назад +128

    5:07 Once you go grizzly...
    Also I like how the diagram makes it clear where (specifically) all her offspring came from.

  • @jeffeppenbach
    @jeffeppenbach Год назад +13

    There was a mallard mixed threesome that hung out at the port area I work much of the time, for a few seasons running. A male and female mallard, and their domestic goose third. I haven't seen them for about half a decade, but each year for a while, they would be together. They would swim in a wedge shape, with the male in the lead. I never saw if they had any babies with them, but the area really wasn't to conductive for that.

  • @wretched560
    @wretched560 Год назад +58

    OMG A NARLUGA??? As someone who wants to become a marine biologist this is crazy to me!!!! I want to find out more about this animal hybrid, the fact it was searching the floor for food sent shivers up my spine! Maybe it was using it's teeth to help it find food? The fact that a new species may be in the making is so amazing to me! If no one is researching about this hybrid by the time I'm done all my schooling I may just start researching myself!

    • @mirishikibacchus6862
      @mirishikibacchus6862 Год назад +5

      Wow good luck!! I hope you're given the chance to carry out this research, I'm totally curious about this new chance to learn about a new species in the making🙌💖I also love Marine Biology ❤️ but I dont really want to become a Marine Biologist anymore

  • @TheJake76
    @TheJake76 Год назад +454

    Actually, tigers and lions still have one last overlap in distribution, which is the Gir forest.

    • @gabrielrangel956
      @gabrielrangel956 Год назад +55

      Went to the comment section to say exactly this

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +34

      Grrrrrr

    • @jman360co
      @jman360co Год назад +23

      @@justayoutuber1906 meow

    • @SuperDjwasabi
      @SuperDjwasabi Год назад +42

      Tigers haven't been seen in that area in 25 years and even that was a single individual.

    • @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708
      @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708 Год назад +27

      @@SuperDjwasabi That's kinda sad if they lost territory

  • @RobotAnimals
    @RobotAnimals Год назад +3

    Dang that hunter with the whale skull really just accidentally ended what could’ve been a new species assuming survival of the fittest wasn’t going to end them themselves later down the line

  • @valen-shi3753
    @valen-shi3753 Год назад +42

    I'm surprised that no one has mentioned that narlugas may come back! Since that narwhal who was adopted into a pod of belugas around 2016 is reaching that age and scientists have observed the right social interactions within the pod, there's a possibility he may end up reproducing with a beluga

    • @Eriorguez
      @Eriorguez Год назад +5

      Belugas and narwhals will socialize whenever they meet, even if it is a pod of each. Social cetaceans aren't really concerned with species, and we end up with stuff like bottlenose, common and spotted dolphins making a menage a trois wherever all 3 lineages are present.

    • @AllegedlyHuman
      @AllegedlyHuman Год назад +2

      @@Eriorguez yo, that's adorable! Thank you for blessing me with this knowledge

  • @hcn6708
    @hcn6708 Год назад +135

    I'd like to point out that the reason lions and tigers don't normally mate in the wild isn't because of habitats (lions and tigers did overlap a decent amount before the former got exterminated from almost all of South Asia), but probably because of different mating habits.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +22

      I guess that makes sense, I've heard leopards are supposed to be closer relatives of lions than tigers, so they should be able to interbreed, and they share a habitat, so they aren't prevented geographically, yet they seldom do, presumably because their very different lifestyles leave few opportunities for it.

    • @asmith8692
      @asmith8692 Год назад +25

      Scientists did an analysis to track feline DNA and found lion DNA in snow leopards. So there was some hybridization happening at some point.

    • @thesjkexperience
      @thesjkexperience Год назад +13

      Yes, tiger culture and Lion culture is very different from each other. It’s why you seldom see trained lions because they act as a pride and out number the trainer.

    • @leroilapue15
      @leroilapue15 Год назад

      @@thesjkexperience haha that's awesome, lions are perculiar!

  • @rossplendent
    @rossplendent Год назад +307

    The situation with mallards and mottled ducks is exactly how I've always pictured the ultimate fate of the neanderthals. They weren't killed or outcompeted by humans--their gene pool simply got folded into the much larger human population over the course of thousands of years.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Год назад +5

      That does make sense.

    • @Vugtis_El_VillaVODS
      @Vugtis_El_VillaVODS Год назад +8

      Sam O'Nella did a video about this

    • @ambrosianapier7545
      @ambrosianapier7545 Год назад

      Yep, Neanderthals even had culture, we’re found buried with other human races and such. They were human.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Год назад

      @@ambrosianapier7545 All members of the genus homo are generally considered to be human as a general rule.

    • @a.i.a3949
      @a.i.a3949 Год назад +14

      Sorry to nitpick but neanderthals were technically also humans, just a subspecies different to homosapiens. I totally agree with your point though.

  • @Go4Noctis
    @Go4Noctis Год назад +4

    Sounds like the mottled duck might be going through a similar experience to the neanderthal and sapiens

  • @katelynwoodworth9989
    @katelynwoodworth9989 Год назад +20

    Loved this video. Some humans today are hybrid with various other extinct humanoids. Crazy when you really think about it. Humans, in a way, were like those mallards.

    • @murilo7794
      @murilo7794 Год назад +2

      Pretty much anyone who isn't 100% african is a hybrid

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody Год назад +3

      ​@@murilo7794
      Even Africans usually are.

    • @murilo7794
      @murilo7794 Год назад +1

      @Alias_Anybody true, they usually have at least one european ancestor. But an african that was, let's say, from an uncontacted tribe that never interacted with europeans, should be 100% homo sapiens.

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody Год назад +3

      @@murilo7794
      Not really. Significant "re-migration" from Eurasia back to Africa already occurred in pre-history, and effects basically everyone down to the Sahel. The people in South and southern central Africa however seem to have admixture from another ancient hominid native to Africa below the Congo. So there might be no "pure" homo sapiens left at all.

    • @murilo7794
      @murilo7794 Год назад

      @Alias_Anybody I did not know other human species had existed in Sub-Saharan Africa. In that case, there are probabably very few, if any, pure Homo Sapiens.

  • @lotgc
    @lotgc Год назад +140

    Humans: "no, you can't make hybrids between two completely different species and have it be viable!"
    Nature: "shut up, nerd. Watch this!" 🤓

    • @Bleepbleepblorbus
      @Bleepbleepblorbus Год назад +17

      Swap it around and you've got genetic engineering

    • @doraspoljar697
      @doraspoljar697 Год назад +9

      Honestly most of these should have been originally considered the same specise from the start, just a different subspecies.

    • @leogama3422
      @leogama3422 Год назад +9

      @@doraspoljar697 No, actually not. That's why the "current" definition of species (there's no consensus) states that two individuals are of different species if they had diverged genetically and won't generally mate for whatever reason, i.e. because of geographical barriers, mating preferences, physical incompatibility or whatever (even if their offspring would be fertile).

    • @TrineDaely
      @TrineDaely Год назад +1

      Sometimes even Mother Nature just has settle and make the best of a bad situation.

    • @lotgc
      @lotgc Год назад +1

      @@TrineDaely I think we don't give her enough credit. She could probably wipe us off the face of the planet in a heartbeat if she wanted to.

  • @daniellen3263
    @daniellen3263 Год назад +67

    I wonder if hybrids occurred in dinosaurs and some of the fossils we find are actually hybrids and that's why they're so weird

  • @Vizhonary
    @Vizhonary Год назад +2

    It's a Grolar Bear. That term has been used for a while. Only recently heard them being called Pizzly Bears, which sounds so much cuter and less dangerous than they actually are.

  • @Misshowzat
    @Misshowzat Год назад +20

    A great man once said "Just because you *can* doesn't mean you should"

  • @Lisargarza
    @Lisargarza Год назад +55

    “A highway on-ramp” not only describes mallard duck gene flow into mottled duck populations but also accurately depicts male mallard duck courtship rituals as well.

    • @evalopez1454
      @evalopez1454 Год назад

      The absolute rapist duck.

    • @CWZimba
      @CWZimba Год назад

      Yeah absolute r*pists

    • @kevinthiago413
      @kevinthiago413 Год назад

      im prety shure we humans did this with neanderthals

  • @andyjay729
    @andyjay729 Год назад +296

    1:07 Narluga
    3:49 Pizzly bear
    6:05 Iguamibian
    8:35 Australommon blacktip shark
    11:09 Mexicallard duck, spot-ballard duck, red-mested pallchard, greyllard guck, mottlard duck, Amallardican black duck...

    • @DragoNate
      @DragoNate Год назад +16

      lol here's mine :D
      beluga + narwhal = beluwhal (blue wall)
      polar + brown bear = power bear or growlar bear but pizzly is fine too
      mallard + mottled = matt

    • @melorawr1608
      @melorawr1608 Год назад +5

      @@DragoNate I like "Matt". Should be the official name!

    • @Graytail
      @Graytail Год назад +5

      Red-mested pallchard? that sounds like a species of fish.... DONT give those malards any ideas!

    • @DragoNate
      @DragoNate Год назад +1

      @@melorawr1608 I agree. We need to call all naming scientists immediately & tell them!

    • @theman4884
      @theman4884 Год назад +1

      Somewhere on youtube is a video about a man who was arrest for shooting a Prizzly Bear. He had a license to take a Polar Bear but the warden saw brown and assumed Grizzly. After a very long legal battle the kill was deemed legal.

  • @boeingnz
    @boeingnz Год назад +1

    "Dude, what are you doing to the chimp?"
    "It's for science !!!"

  • @Farmerdabrown85
    @Farmerdabrown85 Год назад +3

    Another Montana addition would be the 'Blueseed' or other hybridizations between bluegill and pumpkinseed (and other) sunfish, very pretty fish!

  • @Nick-Lab
    @Nick-Lab Год назад +13

    A small correction to the naming convention is needed. The 1st name piece is from the father by convention. So the bears were actually grolar bears. It is important to distinguish because the sexe of the parents changes the offsprings phenotype drastically.

  • @ericwright8592
    @ericwright8592 Год назад +58

    Red wolf and coyotes have also hybridized. Red wolves are nearly extinct in their home range in the Eastern US, but some reached as far west as Texas and bred with coyotes. IIRC they now constitute the largest reservoir of red wolf genetic material.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +7

      Maybe those red wolf genes will provide adaptations to improve the coyote's ability to catch road runners.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +3

      I thought the red wolf turned out to be a wolf/coyote hybrid in the first place.

    • @macaronsncheese9835
      @macaronsncheese9835 Год назад +8

      @@jaschabull2365 nope! One of my college professors was a wolf expert, and actually that claim usually comes from anti red wolf propaganda. Unfortunately it's pretty successful propaganda because in the 2010s they lost some state-level protection and the nonhybrid wild red wolf population went from being in the 200s to being in the 30s...

    • @fjccommish
      @fjccommish Год назад

      You mean Wolf/dog/coyotes are all the same kind?

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад

      @@fjccommish
      They aren't distinct enough to produce infertile children when they interbreed a la mule, at any rate.

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 Год назад

    Always interesting, thank you.

  • @tedalexander6592
    @tedalexander6592 Год назад

    Loved that y'all used a shot of a Mallard on Carroll Creek in Downtown Frederick Maryland!!!

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +15

    We have a very spoiled Black East Indies duck named Emma (short for Emerald, her breed is typified by being similarly colored to a male Mallard's head...all over. She's gorgeous)
    BEI ducks are almost certainly descended from either a Mallard melanistic variant or a hybrid.

  • @coasterblocks3420
    @coasterblocks3420 Год назад +128

    Great episode. I’d love to see an episode on the most indiscriminately promiscuous family of life on earth - orchids. There’s a crazy amount of natural hybridisation in this plant family, even between very distantly related genera.

    • @emilysmith2965
      @emilysmith2965 Год назад

      Wait. So you’re telling me that the flower that looks like genitals IS the sluttiest flower?! Amazing

    • @Marewig
      @Marewig Год назад +9

      I'll raise your orchids with my citruses. Talk about indiscriminately promiscuous, that's definitely one family that's been hybridising themselves everywhere

  • @sonyasandoval1477
    @sonyasandoval1477 7 месяцев назад

    There are several Mallard hybrids at one of the parks in my town. Some also show varying degrees of melanism-quite striking!

  • @ethanhoard7738
    @ethanhoard7738 Год назад +2

    I’m glad we’re finally breaking these beariers

  • @sminthian
    @sminthian Год назад +111

    And there's another kind of Grizzly, the Kodiak Bear. It's a larger kind of Grizzly, that eats more meat than a normal Grizzly. Which would make a supersized Pizzly Bear.

    • @wasidanatsali6374
      @wasidanatsali6374 Год назад +21

      @@Dr.IanPlect Grizzly can be used to describe any brown bear in North America. The term grizzly originated with French trappers in NA who used the French word griselles, which means sliver tipped fur, to describe the NA brown bear.

    • @TheAgaskins
      @TheAgaskins Год назад +7

      @@wasidanatsali6374 when you're speaking in a scientific setting, using colloquial terms only serves to confuse. It's also incorrect in that setting, even if it may be understood by some others. Grizzlies are a specific type of bear

    • @Gildedmuse
      @Gildedmuse Год назад +2

      @@TheAgaskins But then they should have used the scientific name only. They were already using the common name, and in fact Hank says, "Brown bears.... Also called Grizzly bears in America"

    • @minimm2013
      @minimm2013 Год назад +8

      THE PODIAK!!! THE KOLAR BEAR!!!

    • @vi9763
      @vi9763 Год назад +4

      @@minimm2013
      I like PODIAK, Has a nice ring to it

  • @glenngriffon8032
    @glenngriffon8032 Год назад +11

    My high school science teacher: Hybrids are always sterile. Two species cannot make viable offspring.
    Science: Life, uh, finds a way.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Год назад +4

      Check out the book Wild Animals of North America. It talked of polar/grizzly hybrids over forty years ago, and that they were fertile!
      Your teacher oversimplified it far too much.... though the simplest definition of a species says it can only breed with itself.
      Also, look up Prezwalski's horse (pronounced Shevalski).

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Год назад

      @@Svensk7119 Przewalski. Properly pronounced more like p'shevalski. It's a Polish surname. The R isn't pronounced, but it does separate the first and second sounds, the same way that the sound in the middle of 'hotshot' isn't a 'ch' but a 'tsh'.
      That's ignoring the fact that the 'sh' represented by a Z here isn't actually a 'sh' at all, but since English doesn't actually have the correct sound, you probably can't hear the difference anyway. Not sure why the starting P tends to get dropped by English speakers though, maybe just cause that pair of sounds can't really go together in English.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Год назад

      @@comradewindowsill4253 Interesting. I hear t-sh in hotshot regardless. If I heard ch, I would presume (automatically) that Engelsk was a second language.
      The p is dropped for were it not, our reading instincts would take us down the wrong path completely. Prez-wall-skee, instead of p-shavalski (pzhavlski?) I cannot count the number of times I looked at it and said that first one, though I knew it was wrong. Pzhavalski. The p is hard to add. Thought it was Polish.
      Thanks. How many tongues speakest thou? May I ask?

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Год назад

      @@Svensk7119 Well, yes, you hear the tsh in hotshot, because English distinguishes between a t and sh next to one another and a ch, which is analogous to the situation in Polish for pz and prz. the first pair is like the 'ch' pair, an affricate, while the second is like 'tsh', a stop-fricative combination. The two are always different phonemes in Polish, and can be the only thing distinguishing two words from one another. I figured it was worth explaining what the silent R was about. I'm not a Polish speaker, but I speak a language in the same family and I've looked a bit at how their phonology differs from the one I'm used to. I'm a linguistics student, so this is how I entertain myself.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Год назад

      @@comradewindowsill4253 Ah. I thought you meant ch in hotshot....
      I love languages, but affricate and all those other terms are things I have a hard time remembering.

  • @HavasuHorror
    @HavasuHorror Год назад +2

    That polar bear had a grizzly kink!

  • @epsilonius9063
    @epsilonius9063 8 месяцев назад

    I live in the NW USA. We actually have many cases of cross breeding between subspecies of aquatic garter snake. Often times you can find a cross between an Oregon garter and a Santa Cruz garter snake. These hybrids often have the signature dorsal stripe of the Santa Cruz garter, but often that stripe fades away as it goes down the spine, resulting in up to 3/4 patternless snakes. These hybrids are also found across the range of both species, from northern California to Southern Washington

  • @jarms99
    @jarms99 Год назад +15

    Great topic! As an Alaskan, this caught my eye … The map at 4:53 shows Southeast Alaska. Lots of brown bears there, especially on Admiralty Island, but ZERO polar bears. They’re limited to the high arctic in AK, so would have been better to show Arctic coast or better yet NWT, Canada, which is where the observed hybridization occurred.

  • @jpe1
    @jpe1 Год назад +27

    A hybrid I’ve seen take over since I was a child is the hybrid between the golden-wing warbler and the blue-wing warbler. When I was a child, living in northeastern Pennsylvania, I would hear, and occasionally see, both species in the forest, but the last time I saw or heard a blue-wing was 2003, and it’s been even longer since I’ve seen the golden-wing, but the hybrid does show up on occasion.

  • @Patrick_The_Pure
    @Patrick_The_Pure Год назад +2

    "If there's a hole there's a goal" - Mallard Ducks probably.

  • @marachime
    @marachime Год назад

    Hank i really appreciate the quotation marks you vocally put around 'unicorns of the sea'. I feel this indicates you are quoting the Weebl song about it, and this makes me happy.

  • @diegop2311
    @diegop2311 Год назад +63

    I was hoping the hogs where going to show up . The wild boar in Northern California are a cool hybrid

    • @MaryAnnNytowl
      @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад

      Wild × feral boars for the most part are an awful, dangerous, destructive invasive species, and here we are required by law to kill them when we see them if we are hunting.

    • @rockinbobokkin7831
      @rockinbobokkin7831 Год назад +10

      They probably didn't cover that because pigs are invasive and all originally came here with colonists. Pigs go feral and revert quickly back to hog form and though farm pigs can be different breeds, in the wild they tend to take on the dominant traits of black hogs.
      The closest native species to pigs in the Americas is probably the javellina , and I don't think they can mix with pigs.

    • @wasidanatsali6374
      @wasidanatsali6374 Год назад +2

      @@rockinbobokkin7831 Eurasian boars were imported to various hunting lodges in the US back in the 1800’s. Mostly on the East Coast. I grew up in the Smoky Mtns were quite a few Eurasian boars were imported and released. Hog hunters in this area like to argue and/or brag about how much “Russian” is in some hog they killed. When I was a kid there was a one hog limit per year in NC and hunters came from all over to hunt the “Russian” hogs. It’s hard to believe now because it’s pretty much open war on all wild hogs here now.

  • @lillianreid1878
    @lillianreid1878 Год назад +1

    I didn't know all the Grolar bears were hunted down. That's a bummer. But it is pretty cool when they discover a hybrid species that's well underway and pretty well established like those sharks.

  • @Dr3amW1zard
    @Dr3amW1zard Год назад

    Duck mating being described as a highway on-ramp is downright hilarious lol

  • @FlyingFish766
    @FlyingFish766 Год назад +14

    Interesting topic, awesome video. One mistake right at start though. Lions and tigers lived together in Gujarat (western India) up until the 20th century (when urbanization drove tigers extinct in the region and confined lions to Gir National park. They did prefer different habitats and I know of no record of a wild Liger but it’s not impossible just based on regions they inhabited.

  • @rsmzm2000
    @rsmzm2000 Год назад +14

    If anyone here has ever had ducks... You'll understand. Male ducks mate with ANYTHING that moves. Period.

    • @massimookissed1023
      @massimookissed1023 Год назад +6

      They'll even mate with things that *_don't_* move, as in _dead_ female ducks.

    • @FleshWizard69420
      @FleshWizard69420 Год назад +1

      The ducks invented duck Viagra

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 Год назад +1

    🎶 If you can’t be
    with the bear you love,
    Love the bear you’re with.
    Love the bear you’re with 🎶

  • @The_Slavstralian
    @The_Slavstralian Год назад

    Also in Australia we have another natural hybrid in our carpet pythons
    In northern NSW. We get the Diamond python habitat overlapping with the Coastal carpet python and nothing being Morelia they can interbreed. We call them integrades in the reptile hobby

  • @Gizathecat2
    @Gizathecat2 Год назад +12

    Brown bears and polar bears are very closely related. The polar bear branches out from the brown bear somewhat recently. I'm certain this new species will take hold eventual. Adaptation is a wonderful thing.

  • @washkabe9179
    @washkabe9179 Год назад +142

    I always heard them referred to as "grolar bears", not "pizzly bears"

    • @TheOverproof151
      @TheOverproof151 Год назад

      You are correct….. they are known as Grolars and only uninformed idiots refer to them otherwise.

    • @shadow81818
      @shadow81818 Год назад +33

      It's based on which animal is the mother! In this specific case, we know that the mother was a polar bear, so her species name is put first in the hybrid name

    • @JaxxVs
      @JaxxVs Год назад +9

      Depends on the father mother sich.. but you are correct as that would be a grolar bear as a pizzly bear is a male polar bear and a female grizzly

    • @washkabe9179
      @washkabe9179 Год назад +20

      @@shadow81818 Oh, so it's like ligers and tygons

    • @thelonesage3146
      @thelonesage3146 Год назад +6

      Grolar sounds better to me.

  • @vonie94
    @vonie94 Год назад

    “Grizzly loving polar bear” is wild 😂😂

  • @kevinjordan6677
    @kevinjordan6677 Год назад

    Cool video hank referenced " arctic islands" the map shown was of southeast Alaska Juneau and Sitka thats pretty far south for a polar bear

  • @nebulan
    @nebulan Год назад +4

    NARLUGA! That's gonna be my next d&d characters name

  • @orchardhouse9241
    @orchardhouse9241 Год назад +32

    The really weird part is that some of these animals that hybridize aren't in the same genus.

  • @serinadelmar6012
    @serinadelmar6012 Год назад

    I’ve photographed a cross Canada Goose with a Greylag in the Wetlands centre in Arundel UK

  • @LizardTheMonitor
    @LizardTheMonitor Год назад

    There is also the Clymene dolphin, a species descendant of the hybridization between the Spinner dolphin and the Striped dolphin.
    Also the Daphne Major finch, one of the few examples of human observed speciation!

  • @rmdodsonbills
    @rmdodsonbills Год назад +10

    I thought it was pretty remarkable to see hybridization not only outside their species but outside their own Genus. The shark example especially made me think we need to rethink our definitions of species, or at least our criteria for determining when two populations are a separate species. Another fascinating example is macaws. I'm not convinced that all of these birds are, in fact, separate species since there is so much hybridization between Blue and Gold, Greenwing, and Scarlet Macaws.

    • @ambrosianapier7545
      @ambrosianapier7545 Год назад

      Agreed. The scientific community doesn’t agree on what defines a species. Some are lumpers like what you mentioned and others are splitters where the smallest difference makes them consider it a new species. I’m a lumper myself.

    • @lashedbutnotleashed1984
      @lashedbutnotleashed1984 Год назад +1

      Macaws only hybridize in captivity when humans keep the different species together. They are definitely different species, and do not hybridize in the wild.

    • @sparking023
      @sparking023 Год назад

      I think the distinction occurs based on statistics. it's clear that these species have enough genetic compatibility and the potential to hybridize, but if that happens 1 in 500 matings of the species as a whole, I don't think it should weight that much in determining a species. as it is the case for the iguanas and the bears, the environments some specimen are gives more chances to hybridization, but it doesn't seems to be a rule

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 Год назад +11

    In Australia dingo x dog hybrids are more common now than pure dingos

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +2

      Do they still eat babies?

    • @frogz
      @frogz Год назад

      in america, we have our own dingo dogs, my friend bas a BEAUTIFUL carolina dog(american dingo) coyote hybrid, i've never met her but she is such the goodest of girls!

    • @cassieoz1702
      @cassieoz1702 Год назад

      @@frogz oh Carolinas are so beautiful and definitely have the same 'look'

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Год назад

      What kind of dog is the Mbabaram dog? What kind of dog was the gudaga?

    • @tehkaihong5328
      @tehkaihong5328 Год назад

      @@SimuLord normal domestic dogs do.

  • @indridcold8433
    @indridcold8433 Год назад +1

    There was a guy at school that tried to hybridize with a goat. He was caught an mocked relentlessly.

  • @Tirryna
    @Tirryna Год назад +1

    Was fully expected the coywolf to be here...Those guys are interesting and a bit intimidating. Wolves and Coyotes have started breeding in Eastern Canada (odd since Coyotes are usually KOS for Wolves). Coywolves also breed with each other and have started migrating south into the USA. Scientists say human activity most likely caused them to do this.

  • @NatTalyx
    @NatTalyx Год назад +14

    We have a big issue with praying mantis hybridizing in New Zealand. Our Native Mantis have pretty blue markings which the invasive species are attracted to and are breeding them out of existence 😭

  • @undrsk0re
    @undrsk0re Год назад +42

    I love it when the pizzly bear said "it's pizzling time" and pizzled all over the place

  • @BlackReshiram
    @BlackReshiram 7 месяцев назад

    hybridization is so damn interesting, then again, i think all of genetics and its intricacies are x)

  • @TheStarlightKing
    @TheStarlightKing Год назад

    For the longest time, the only duck I ever saw in South Florida were Muscovy Ducks. It's only been recently (past 3 years) that I've Mallard ducks there.

  • @tamaradavis2276
    @tamaradavis2276 Год назад +39

    Count on humans to hunt anything unique and unusual and mess things up with domestication. I'm a huge fan of feral Rock Pigeons because they are a prime example in North America of domestication fighting back.

    • @oogabooga6346
      @oogabooga6346 11 месяцев назад

      Have you met the feral chickens of Hawaii?

  • @samkochevar983
    @samkochevar983 Год назад +7

    Hybridization is so common in ducks that many of the hybrids have their own names (mallard + gadwall = brewers duck). It’s not always mallards either. Common and Barrow’s goldeneye, American and Eurasian wigeon, blue wing and cinnamon teal, etc. Most duck hunters have either bagged a hybrid duck at some point or know someone who has. It’s always fascinating to see how different traits of each species display in the hybrid since they’re so unique

  • @tundralily7876
    @tundralily7876 Год назад +2

    These are actually called Groler Bears. I lived in the area these bears are being discovered Canadian Western Arctic) and they are called Groler Bears.
    The baby Groler bears have been seen with mother Grizzley, so the fathers are Polar Bears.

  • @user-mj3hf7lg3j
    @user-mj3hf7lg3j 10 месяцев назад

    I once saw a mallard-pintail hybrid when my dad shot it down with a shotgun when I was on a duck hunting trip in Juneau, Alaska. It was likely female and looked like a normal small female mallard with a pintail beak. We called it a pin-mallard.

  • @victornoname7269
    @victornoname7269 Год назад +32

    Animal hybrids is a super interesting topic to me. It just shows so much cool stuff about genetics when it happens. I'd love to here you guys talk about some of the weird stuff salamanders do where there's whole species complexes. If you haven't already. It's confusing and weird.

  • @sunnijo
    @sunnijo Год назад +14

    Lots of snakes with overlapping ranges hybridize, too! Cottonmouths with copperheads and gopher snakes with fox snakes are great examples. I recently learned that a lot of different colubrid snake species are capable of hybridizing, and I think that’s really amazing.

    • @douglasgriffiths3534
      @douglasgriffiths3534 Год назад +1

      Some pythons can too. Example--Burmese python with Indian rock python. They are subspecies of each other. Another is the Burmball-- Burmese x ball python. Still another is a Reticburm---Burmese x reticulated python. I've seen all 3 hybrids. The Indian rock x Burmese is fertile;the other 2 are sterile. (Jan Griffiths).

    • @douglasgriffiths3534
      @douglasgriffiths3534 Год назад +1

      And all subspecies of boa constrictor can hybridize, and produce viable and fertile offspring. (Jan Griffiths).

    • @comradewindowsill4253
      @comradewindowsill4253 Год назад +1

      Cottonmouths and Copperheads... I wonder if the venom is as potent as the parents', or more?

  • @atlien1988
    @atlien1988 9 месяцев назад

    That Polar Bear was getting busy. She saw them Brown bears and felt a little frisky LOL

  • @peridotqueen26
    @peridotqueen26 Год назад

    Warming temps are also pushing Carolina and black-capped chickadees to hybridize more often and farther north where their ranges overlap in the northeastern US! Their hybridization zone is fairly narrow, which makes it easier to study their hybridization than many species in this video.

  • @SciShow
    @SciShow  Год назад +5

    Thanks to Bespoke Post for sponsoring this video! Head to www.bespokepost.com/scishow20 and use code SCISHOW20 to grab your “box of awesome” and get 20% off your first box.

    • @shivpatel5413
      @shivpatel5413 Год назад

      ❤Hmmm.😌♥️😢Love me sim BEAR MEAT AND GREET MEAL HVBPUB ÿt@hoO csl🎉

  • @linkfain1
    @linkfain1 Год назад +3

    Man.... Mallard ducks are just crushing it.

  • @Happ1ness
    @Happ1ness 11 месяцев назад +1

    10:59 "A whopping 39 hybrid mallard combos have been duckumented" 👀

  • @dirtpathart
    @dirtpathart Год назад +9

    Love your show! Keep putting out good content.
    I did a deeper dive and…In India, both lions and tigers can be found in the same general areas. Though currently, not much interaction has been seen. Historically, tigers and lions did overlap more extensively in parts of southern and Western Asia. So hybrids were a remote but not entirely impossible scenario in the wild.

    • @petitio_principii
      @petitio_principii Год назад

      There has been a long history of hybridization between multiple big cats. In the scientific article "Genome-wide signatures of complex introgression and adaptive evolution in the big cats" the researchers report to have found that lions have had the most admixture, with multiple other big-cats. The research also includes stuff from when the lineages were first diverging and so forth, so not only "not so recent" admixture in India, but something that's, while rare in short term, "common" in the long term scale.

  • @huldu
    @huldu Год назад +10

    It's good to know that we humans are on point eliminating everything out of the ordinary.

  • @willowmoon7
    @willowmoon7 Год назад

    I've also seen mallard/American Pekin hybrids in parks around here (central VA)

  • @michaelhowell2326
    @michaelhowell2326 Год назад +7

    Lions and tigers do overlap in the wild. There are a few places in India that they mate naturally.

  • @0011peace
    @0011peace Год назад +4

    the best known hybrid is the Mule/Jenny Hybrid of horse and donkey. There is some speculation of possible hybris huma/chimp humanzee/chuman

    • @lashedbutnotleashed1984
      @lashedbutnotleashed1984 Год назад

      The words "speculation" and "possible" are not very scientific. There is not one shred of evidence that humans can produce offspring with chimps. And it's not for lack of trying. There's a lot of sickos in this world.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace Год назад

      @@lashedbutnotleashed1984 actually. specuation and prosiile are sicncetific is surities thay are unscienctific. Scince work by trying to fiprove theories tht are believe to be the truth. And, about the asoluteness of anything. YOu have more chance of getting a ybrid in a labthan by sickos but still no proof. But lack of evidence dorsn't dis[prove anything. For a long time we though cpolefiush were exticnct becaus we seen them in the ancient fossile record but found no living or recently dead. But then they one them aliveand doing well. The giant oc\topus was once thought to be a myth until discoverd.

    • @lashedbutnotleashed1984
      @lashedbutnotleashed1984 Год назад

      @@0011peace How did you get so many misspellings in one post? That must be some kind of record. Most people have spellcheck. You must have MISspell check. It makes sure your words are all spelled wrong.
      At any rate, the existence of an animal previously thought to be extinct has nothing to do with the possible hybridization of different species. Humans and chimpanzees cannot hybridize. That is a proven fact that has nothing to do with speculation. That is science.

  • @colehalford1893
    @colehalford1893 Год назад +1

    To quote Jurassic Park “Life uh finds a way.”

  • @user-mj3hf7lg3j
    @user-mj3hf7lg3j 10 месяцев назад

    I once saw a mallard-pintail hibrid at Juneau, Alaska. It was likely female and looked like a normal, small female mallard with the beak of a pintail. I saw it when my dad shot it down with a shotgun when I was on a duck hunting trip with my father. We call it a pin-mallard.

  • @ki641
    @ki641 Год назад +7

    Glizzy bear 🐻

  • @puchoshmateo
    @puchoshmateo Год назад +4

    amazing

  • @tbullock79
    @tbullock79 Год назад

    That polar bear had jungle fever ❤️.

  • @Underpantsniper
    @Underpantsniper Год назад +1

    I catch hybrid bluegill/green sunfish all the time

  • @Shria9
    @Shria9 Год назад +10

    I have seen and photographed a snow goose and Canada goose hybrid with it's parents in a flock of Canada geese at a local park. It had some faded Canada goose markings on a mostly gray body.
    Also, I wonder if randy ancient human males getting it on with Neanderthal females on the side could have contributed to Neanderthal extinction like randy mallard boys are pressuring the gene pools of spotted and black ducks in Florida.

    • @lashedbutnotleashed1984
      @lashedbutnotleashed1984 Год назад

      Some scientists think it's possible the Neanderthals were simply bred out of existence by Homo Sapiens.

    • @Shria9
      @Shria9 Год назад +1

      @@lashedbutnotleashed1984 I believe that makes a lot of sense and deserves some research.

    • @AmythefirstA
      @AmythefirstA Год назад

      That's racist.

    • @819driver
      @819driver Год назад

      i thought the same thing, watch someone make a video about that in 2023

  • @luismurcia1702
    @luismurcia1702 Год назад +7

    i wonder if other humans disappear in a similar fashion to how the mallards ducks are taking over other ducks

    • @819driver
      @819driver Год назад +2

      your comment made me think of the neandertals... maybe that's what happened

  • @Qbgarden
    @Qbgarden Год назад +1

    Bobcat + different lynx are more common than most people think.

  • @loviswild
    @loviswild Год назад +1

    I am Not 100% Sure but I think the problem of the interbreeding of ducks is also a problem of the black bee(apis apis) in Northern Europe because of the cultivation of the bees of Austria because of more honey producing.

  • @danielm.1441
    @danielm.1441 Год назад +6

    "When you think of hybrid animals, there are a few examples that probably come to mind, like mules or ligers. But both of those hybrids couldn't exist without humans. For example, lions & tigers, they do not live in the same places..."
    Well they don't _anymore_ - historical ranges of both lions & tigers used to encompass the majority of the Indian subcontinent & regions around the Caucuses & southern Caspian sea, so historical hybridisation was _possible_ in principle. Similarly horses & donkeys (well, their wild ancestors) used to have overlapping ranges in north Africa. Potentially humans merely reinvented hybrids that nature previously dabbled with...

  • @8sanks
    @8sanks Год назад +5

    We don't have lions and tigers in one place today, thanks to hunting, but they have co-existed in jungles of India and ligers have been known to naturally occur in rare instances.

  • @blackpanda7298
    @blackpanda7298 Год назад

    I believe everything is a hybrid of something ❤

  • @patmcgrowin3414
    @patmcgrowin3414 Год назад +1

    Polar Bear mama had to raise her mixed bear cubs on her own.

  • @calladricosplays
    @calladricosplays Год назад +4

    I'm surprised that Clymene dolphins, a true breeding hybrid of spinner and striped dolphins, weren't mentioned

  • @sapphirII
    @sapphirII Год назад +29

    I was wondering if you talk about the chain of seven species of lizard that can interbreed with the lizards before and after them, except for the one at the beginning and the end of of the chain.

    • @amandajones661
      @amandajones661 Год назад +2

      I really want to see a video about this. 😃

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +4

      I've heard of a similar chain of bird species in which each one can interbreed with the adjacent population, except for one pair which seem to constitute the "ends" of the chain.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Год назад +1

      @@Dr.IanPlect
      Ahh yes. I think the instance I heard of was songbirds instead, with each population having a slightly different song until the 2 end species had songs unintelligible to each other, meaning they wouldn't interbreed.

    • @sapphirII
      @sapphirII Год назад

      @@amandajones661 I found the mention of the ring species. (What makes a species a species from SciShow)
      ruclips.net/video/dnfaiJJnzdE/видео.html

    • @3ron
      @3ron Год назад +2

      Ring species

  • @RandomNooby
    @RandomNooby Год назад +1

    This hybridisation is a direct result of us forcing Polar bears south, and grizzlies north.