Hey guys😄 I make content about animals, mainly reptiles🐢 My favourites are monitor lizards. You'll also find content about many other animals, some are even prehistoric🦕
Yes sea kraits are amazing! The just aren't in the Bungarus genus, so not kraits if you consider the kraits all the members of that genus. You see it a lot where members of other genera have the same name as members of a completely different genera
Good info. You would improve your presentation by increasing the image size, and cutting way down on how much space the text occupies on the frame. Maybe 50/50, or full screen image with text appearing line by line. Look at Living Zoology. Or no text since you narrate. Use one or the other. We want to see the snakes, not a screen full of text!
Thank you for the suggestion! I don't use videos because I'm worried about copyright plus for some of the animals I cover videos don't exist because they are too rare. My style is kind of like a teacher in school, presenting a PowerPoint, but that being said, I'll make the images bigger in future.
That could very much be true. As far as I could tell, with all of the research for this video I didn't find any sources claiming that there was a fatality. But it is definitely possible that there has been a single, or maybe 2/3 etc. fatalities, but, definitely not as many as some other venomous snakes. This is the point that I was trying to prove, even though it has the most potent venom, it doesn't kill many, if any people.
I looked at a variety of sources and they all said that there has not been a recorded fatality. But if the number of deaths is 0, 1 or maybe a few more, it doesn't change the fact that the most venomous snake on the planet has not killed many, if any, humans at all!
A few corrections (1.)Boas and Pythons are not in the same family, they are in two separate families, they also aren’t related with colubrids which are totally different family from boas and pythons, who belong to the colubridae family! In fact, colubrids are actually closer to vipers and Elapids because they all belong in the colubroids family, as the boas are in Booidea family and pythons are in the Pythonidae family (2.) The biggest snake belongs to the Boidae family, which is the green anaconda. Which is not a colubrid, other than these two, you got it correct, watch Clint’s Reptiles, really informative!
Hi thank you for taking the time to write this! I have added these corrections into the description and my next video is also going to be correcting these and it is about the actual families of snakes, I don't know how I messed up this badly. Ps. Clint is awesome isn't he! Have a good day❤️
Lovely video. Minor correction. While the non-avian dinosaurs are extinct - avian dinosaurs are not. Birds are dinosaurs - not just descended from dinosaurs - which is an erroneous distinction. This is because they belong to clade Dinosauria and no animal can evolve to fall outside of their own clade. Birds are a specialized subgroup of theropod dinosaurs that have been around, in one form or another, for well over 100 millions years. This means birds were already birds (and by extension, dinosaurs) well before Tyrannosaurus Rex ever walked the earth. To put a finer point on this, most or all of the characteristics that you might consider bird-like, are exclusively dinosaur characteristics, such as feathers, wishbones, hollow bones, and double respiration (breathing through the use of air sacs - though technically other archosaurs likely did this too). For what it is worth, just about any relevant vertebrate paleontologist will tell you as much (though this appeal to authority shouldn't be needed - the sources are a google scholar search away ;) ). So again, the birds in this video are dinosaurs - saurischian theropod dinosaurs to be exact. Thank you for your time in making the video.
Wow. Thank you for this, the way you worded it was perfect! Yes I was aware of this, and when I put Argentavis in I knew that technically it was a dinosaur. I should have specified that I was talking about animals that were specifically not non-avian dinosaurs. I will add a disclaimer in the description. Thank you so much for your feedback it is greatly appreciated. You must have spent so long writing this comment. Have a great day!❤️
Please don’t read your slides verbatim. Condense the typed information and flesh it out as you speak. Otherwise, we might as well just read it and you can cut out all your audio.
Thank you for the suggestion! I will try to condense the information on the slides in my future videos. Feedback is always appreciated. Have a good day❤️
Yes I definitely take requests! This is a great idea thank you. I have a few videos that I have already started working on but after those go out I will definitely make this. Plus isopods are really cool anyway. Have a great day❤️
Yes they are, they are 2 different families and not in the colubrids. I made a mistake while researching this video so when I realised I updated the description and put a pinned comment correcting myself. Please forgive me for the confusion🙏 Thank you for watching and for your feedback❤️
Hey guys, I made some super obvious mistakes in this video. I added the message below to the description a while ago, but I wanted to add this to the comments as well to make extra sure, especially because I know that people are more likely to read the comments section than the description. Please forgive me guys😭🙏 A few major corrections: Colubrids, boas and pythons are 3 separate families, not all part of one. There are far more families of snakes than 3, but, the vast majority of species fall into these 5 families (5 with the addition of boas and pythons). Please forgive me for these huge glaring mistakes, they should've been super obvious to me when making this🙏 In future videos I have tried to eliminate nuances like this💚
Nice video, it gave a great overview. I’m a bit confused why you listed the mandrills between the new world monkeys though. Not that it’s wrong, because you did explain that they’re old world monkeys, but I think it would have been more clear if they’d been listed between the other old world monkeys. Otherwise you did a good job.
Thank you for your advice! When I was making the video I went through the list of new world monkeys first, decided which ones I wanted to include and then I looked at the old world monkeys after that. I realised that having a separate section for new and old world monkeys would be better but I already put "these monkeys are from the new world' for half the video so changing it would take a long time😂 Thank you so much for watching! Your feedback is greatly appreciated❤️
Yes great idea👍 Right now I want to finish the Caniformia (the "dog-like" animals such as red pandas and otters), all of the animals that you have mentioned are in the Feliformia, which I would also like to cover. Thank you for your feedback!
@@dinohunter16 I've had a big interest in Felids and how the relationship work between them and the Priondon and that they are the sister taxon of cats, so.ething I've had arguments online about what they are exactly. I have actually seen them listed as the actual name asPriondon (felis) so it's saying they are cats, or how does that work out lol.
Good question😂 I looked into it and I found that Prionodons are in the Feliformia, so yes, the family with cats. But, the Feliformia is a family of "cat-like" animals, not just cats, it also includes hyenas and fossas, which I think we both know aren't cats. So the prionodons aren't cats, they are just closely related, just like how bears are in the Caniformia (dog-like animals) even though they definitely aren't dogs. You picked wonderful animals to have an interest in, they're awesome👍 Thank you again for the support and feedback❤️
Hi! No, raccoons and coatis are in the procyonidae. The musteloidea and the mustelids are two different things, they mustelids are a family in the musteloidea, and so are the procyonidae. Regardless, thank you for watching!
omg I love that there is information all around about everything, and how you say, "here you go", like its a journey of sharing info, way to go, and happy belated birthday
Omg thank you so much for all of your kinds words, this means the world to me😭❤️ Thank you so much for watching, I can see what kind of animals you like to see from your profile picture😂 Also, thank you for the wish. I hope you have a wonderful day!💫
Yes for sure, I think I just want to focus on finishing the living members for now but in future I'll definitely try to include a few extinct members of the family. Thank you for watching and for your feedback, I really appreciate it❤️
Yes that is true, I probably should have said it in the video. Like you said there are many more families of snakes but the vast majority of snakes fall into these families. At some point in the future I'm sure I'll do a video featuring all of the families. Regardless, thank you for pointing this out and thank you for watching👍