How to tell the difference between venomous and poisonous in 2 easy phrases; Venomous -> If this bites me, I may die. Poisonous -> If I bite this, I may die.
Always interesting. That platypus is an odd one. Mammals that lay eggs, venom, as well as the crazy bill. I would love to learn more about them. Have a great day.
A friend of mine has Gilas. One bit him while he was feeding them back when he first got them. He felt like he had a hangover from hell for a few days and was puking his guts out a lot. The initial bite was bad enough painwise but then having to deal with feeling like crap for a week or so was the cherry on top.
It's like an was angel trying to meet his quota for new species and had 1 more to go but ran out of ideas and just cobbled something together from the spare parts box
@@badoem5353 its a class of drugs, they do a range of things, such as reducing appetite, promoting weight loss and improving insulin sensitivity. it was found in the saliva of the gila monter I believe. Notable examples are exenetide, liraglutide and semaglutide.
Can you make a top 5 helpful venomous animals in health care where the animals venom is used to make medicines. I don’t know but the Gila monsters venom sounds like it could be used to lower blood pressure.
That would be a great video. I don't know of the top of my head what if any medications are made from gela monsters, but I do know they make a vast array including BP medications from snake venoms.
Add. The Mexican beaded lizard 🦎 The shrew. Garter snake 🐍Scientists recently discovered that this snake is venomous! 😖 But its venom hardly hurts humans. 😃
Poisonous/venomous debate looks absolutely silly from the point of view of a language which has just one single word for both. While languages are instruments with the same purpose, they can perform differently in special cases.
That's very interesting I have always been taught the difference, but I never thought of how difference language breaks down meaning. As I am no linguist, and barely understand my native English lol. I find that super interesting. I must admit I have never considered the linguistic difference between them.
@@reptilesrodents there is an issue of a similar kind in regards to the struggle for egalitarism. An English speaking female doctor would like for everyone to call her "doctor" just like her male colleagues are addressed. Same rights, same representation. While Russian feminist female doctor would ask you to call her "doctoress" (something like that) because otherwise it's easy for anyone to assume she's male bc the word "doctor" is masculine, so her gender becomes invisible, and she doesn't want that. In English you can swap pronouns however you want, it's he, she, vir - whatever, invent you own flavour of pronouns. Russian language is permeated with grammatical gender (masculine, feminine, neutral, similar to what French or German has), and you can't just throw one gender away or invent a new one bc it's words govern other words' morphology, including their gender forms. Russian is synthetic and agglutinative like that. English is an analytical language. Same societal issue, different expression because languages are different. TL:DR so many peculiarities of languages are expressed socially. Just like in English there is an issue of venom/poison. But Russian same idea can not be conceived as a grammar issue. But we bicker whether "coffee" is masculine or neutral. I'm so sorry for long-windedness, it must be the influence of many essays we were required to write as students. If you can't beat it, enjoy it, and I enjoyed that a bit too much...
"Just like real vampires, these bats are nocturnal..."
Dying 😂😂😂
they're real i promise haha
lol, I didn't understand that but now I am laughing
glad someone else caught this :P
I've been watching for a long time... Still love your intro
haha thanks man :)
How to tell the difference between venomous and poisonous in 2 easy phrases;
Venomous -> If this bites me, I may die.
Poisonous -> If I bite this, I may die.
Always interesting. That platypus is an odd one. Mammals that lay eggs, venom, as well as the crazy bill. I would love to learn more about them. Have a great day.
A friend of mine has Gilas. One bit him while he was feeding them back when he first got them. He felt like he had a hangover from hell for a few days and was puking his guts out a lot. The initial bite was bad enough painwise but then having to deal with feeling like crap for a week or so was the cherry on top.
Welp I aint getting one anytime soon
That must have sucked did he get them from the wild? Because I believe the ones born in captivity don't have any venom?
The bat hopping is surprisingly cute. I never knew that these bats and moles are venomous. I would add shrews to the list
I remember hearing about platypuses being venomous, didn’t know that only the males actually carried any venom
yeah it's strange but they only carry venom during the mating period
Can they be anymore more strange?
It's like an was angel trying to meet his quota for new species and had 1 more to go but ran out of ideas and just cobbled something together from the spare parts box
Platypuses is like god goofing around in the game spore
Wow never heard of the slow loris. Thanks for the cool info.
No problem :)
Great video and educational as I didn't know about the European Mole being venomous. I wonder if its American cousin is venomous as well?
7:37 I saw one once. I have no clue by it was on the surface, but it was at the side of a forest road.
They have very soft and fluffy fur.
One day these will find the viewers they deserve. Thanks for the content!
thank you i really appreciate it :)
0:59 a platypus? Perry the platypus!
That Phineas & Ferb reference tho.
"Just like real vampires"
That was gold
Just found your channel! Instant sub, I love your content! Keep it up mate :)
I love your videos thank you for conserving the consistent interest of viewers
thank you that means a lot :)
Don’t forget about the northern short tailed shrews.
Thank you for explaining the difference between venomous and poisonous. Great video
Wow!
Venom is more common than I thought!
Fun fact: one of the new anti diabetes drugs were basically discovered in the Gila monster (glp1 analogues)
Wich compound is used to do what and Wich type?
@@badoem5353 its a class of drugs, they do a range of things, such as reducing appetite, promoting weight loss and improving insulin sensitivity. it was found in the saliva of the gila monter I believe. Notable examples are exenetide, liraglutide and semaglutide.
Thank you for this very informative video, cheers from Australia :)
Your videos are some of the most interesting on RUclips.
Gila monster: I am the most toxic creature!
Black mamba: No it's me!
Amateurs!
Both: What was that punk?
Humans: Amateurs!
Us!?
@@godzillaboy011 Yes.
Is anticoagulant in siliva considered venom? Then leaches and ticks are venomous too? 🤷♂️
yeah i think that would apply to ticks and leaches too, I know that mosquitos are considered venomous
Yes you wouldn't think of it like that, but as far as breaking down the classification your correct they are considered venomous as well. Crazy.
i dint know about the mole, thanks for the info.
This was a good video
not gonna lie, the entry of the European Mole on this list surprised the heck out of me.
Shrews are venomous too. To bad, they're awfully cute
awesome video
Will we be seeing a list of 5 surprisingly poisonous animals too? Would be cool to see the Queen Alexandra's Birdwing Butterfly and the Hooded Pitohui
Amazing animals scenes...👌👌
Can you do all species of crocodilians including subspecies ?
Can you make a top 5 helpful venomous animals in health care where the animals venom is used to make medicines.
I don’t know but the Gila monsters venom sounds like it could be used to lower blood pressure.
That would be a great video. I don't know of the top of my head what if any medications are made from gela monsters, but I do know they make a vast array including BP medications from snake venoms.
YOU FORGOT THE MONITOR LIZARDS
Now I know what is the difference between venom and poision thx I really didnt knew
video idea : the five fastest animals in the world ? have to include peregrine falcon or sailfish
Good Channel
good job tsuki
Slow loris and platypus weren’t very surprising for me. I thought it was a well known fact they are venomous. Apparently not
Week finally back to normal 😌🙌🏽
Mann Arnie looks like such a good boi😭
Do Weirdest Dinosaurs for next video
Why chose the common mole over shrews?
fascinating!
Are there any venomous bird species?
Not sure, they haven’t found them yet.
can you make a video on the status of the western ghats riverine ecosystems?
you should make a discord called tsuki cove or tsuki something
why are there no venomous birds?
Are you British or Japanese?
Add. The Mexican beaded lizard 🦎
The shrew.
Garter snake 🐍Scientists recently discovered that this snake is venomous! 😖 But its venom hardly hurts humans. 😃
How about 5 invasive species in the iberian peninsula?
Poisonous/venomous debate looks absolutely silly from the point of view of a language which has just one single word for both.
While languages are instruments with the same purpose, they can perform differently in special cases.
That's very interesting I have always been taught the difference, but I never thought of how difference language breaks down meaning. As I am no linguist, and barely understand my native English lol. I find that super interesting. I must admit I have never considered the linguistic difference between them.
@@reptilesrodents there is an issue of a similar kind in regards to the struggle for egalitarism. An English speaking female doctor would like for everyone to call her "doctor" just like her male colleagues are addressed. Same rights, same representation. While Russian feminist female doctor would ask you to call her "doctoress" (something like that) because otherwise it's easy for anyone to assume she's male bc the word "doctor" is masculine, so her gender becomes invisible, and she doesn't want that. In English you can swap pronouns however you want, it's he, she, vir - whatever, invent you own flavour of pronouns. Russian language is permeated with grammatical gender (masculine, feminine, neutral, similar to what French or German has), and you can't just throw one gender away or invent a new one bc it's words govern other words' morphology, including their gender forms. Russian is synthetic and agglutinative like that. English is an analytical language. Same societal issue, different expression because languages are different.
TL:DR so many peculiarities of languages are expressed socially. Just like in English there is an issue of venom/poison. But Russian same idea can not be conceived as a grammar issue. But we bicker whether "coffee" is masculine or neutral.
I'm so sorry for long-windedness, it must be the influence of many essays we were required to write as students. If you can't beat it, enjoy it, and I enjoyed that a bit too much...
Platypuscand slow loris are tricksers because there so cute
So how are vampire bats venomous? No venom was mentioned.
I think it's the draculin
the convergent evolution of venom in short.
Top 5 largest birds
solenodon I would add
2:49 "But there's little reason to be scared of them" except that they spread rabies
2:56 "Just like real Vampires..."
wait wut
REAL vampires??!?!?!?!?
AGENT P
Man I hate when my parents call copperheads or rattlesnakes poisonous it is my pet peeve
The only thing that i didnt know was venomous it was the bat
nobody: ......
slow lorises: 🥺🥺🥺
Hello
After 1930? Lol what happened before 1930?
OREWA OCHINCHIN GA DAISUKI NANDAYO
2:55 *Just like real vampires?* lol
Are you of the opinion vampires are real?
Pretty sure the bats are the *real* ones
hi
The intro music sounds like ad music so I find myself looking for that skipad button
Dawg u gotta stop giving away the animals in the thumbnail you’d get so many more views
Half of your video is your intro lol
Invasive species în ROMANIA MAN , DON T IGNORE ME AGAIN
Hi