Hate videos like this. Just a bunch of random photos but no distinction between the breeds while talking. This is total GARBAGE. Stop wasting your TIME AND LIFE watching this crap.
These look like the same size as the 3 Black Panthers we saw in April 2024! We had been in far NorthEast Texas, Sulphur Springs, for the April Solar Eclipse. Going home, my wife used Google to plot out the fastest route to take us from I30 to Vicksburg, MS on the first day. It was raining - more like a “drown-pour”. Google was sending us through Northwest Louisiana to all these ultra-rural roads, some without visible names or Route numbers. The rain kept pouring non-stop and the rural roads were beginning to show signs of flooding soon. We were directed to take this “farm” road with no homes on it. Left turn, turn to the Right, turn Left. Suddenly, we were driving down this narrow road that was beginning to flood. And, at the bottom of the hill were 3 huge black cats in a row - a mother, followed by her almost fully grown daughter and son. I suddenly panicked at the thought of hitting a large 150+ pound black wild cat. Mom and daughter were off the road by the time I got there. And, fortunately, the son turned his head to notice our headlights and speed in the driving rain. He hesitated and then stopped just before the asphalt, avoiding us from hitting and probably killing him. My wife and I saw the 3 massive black cats with twitching tails almost as long as their bodies.
The Guanaco (Lama guanicoe) is a small camel native to South America, it is one of the only two extant camel species within the genus Lama, the other being the Llama (Lama glama).
The Yak (Poephagus grunniens) is a large cattle native to Central Asia, it is the second largest living cattle species, the second largest living bovine, and the second largest living bovid in the world, it is the only extant species of the genus Poephagus and the closest living relative of both the European Bison (Bison bonasus) and the American Bison (Bison bison), the scientific name of the yak means "grunting grass-eater" in latin, there are two recognized subspecies of yak: the Himalayan Yak (Poephagus grunniens grunniens) and the Kunlun Shan Yak (Poephagus grunniens kunlunshanensis).