"How could birds have possibly anything to do with dinosaurs? They are so small and cute and fragile..." Actual birds: cold, unblinking monster that snaps your neck, waits for you to suffocate, then swallows you whole.
This has been going on a long time 😊 I went and looked how long. Morganucodon is usually considered the first mammal but its oldest fossils, only represented by isolated teeth, date from around 205 million years ago. Based on the age of the specimens that we do have, that first dinosaur may well have lived in the early Triassic Period. The earliest dinosaurs for which we do have well-documented fossils are found in Late Triassic Ischigualasto Formation in northern Argentina. Skeletons discovered in these rock layers include the meat-eating dinosaurs Herrerasaurus and Eoraptor, as well as the plant-eating dinosaur Pisanosaurus. Some rock layers from this formation are composed of ancient volcanic ash, which has yielded a radioisotopic age of 228 million years ago. So it looks 205 million years of mammal-dinosaur warfare.
I mean better than Pelican death I guess. I've seen instances where those just swallow squirrels and whatever else can fit in its mouth whole while they are still very much alive. That would be like getting swallowed by a Titan in Attack on Titan.
Yeah once I started getting into birds ... And really it's just been the last few months where I've kind of gotten the bug, they are just Savage. Siblings killing siblings, parents killing siblings, Intruders and cuckoo brood parasites and so. And just their hunting prowess, even when things are relatively normal is insane. The way a kestrel and a barn owl can just go out and grab a rodent in 10 seconds and come back is so impressive.
Yeah it was. I felt sorry for that gopher but I also felt happy for the bird. This particular bird, unlike most night herons, goes after prey that provides massive calories but big prey is hard to dispatch quickly. It seems to be this heron’s expertise.
Thanks. Honestly I think the best secret for photography is finding a subject that lets you get close and lets you move around for the best angle. This bird lets me be its paparazzi.
Thanks. I think this heron’s level of big game hunting is unusual for his species. I saw this particular heron hunting gophers a couple years ago. Also I saw one with all its toes trying to catch gophers but it wasn’t until this week did I actually document one catching one.
gopher: ok you got me. just do it quick. heron: i promise i will do it as speedily as i can. 10min later gopher: surely you can't be serious? heron: i am and don't call me shirly.
Yes they do. I love how they stalk gophers. I have a couple videos where they stalk fish too. They use similar tactics for different prey but they smart and adaptable if they need to be.
Here in California they primarily hunt Botta’s Pocket Gophers. The vast majority of my videos are Great Blue Herons hunting gophers. They are really good at it.
Nice Footage. Good written (silent) commentary as well. Much appreciated. We have Night Herons here in Hawaii. I live on Maui and on occasion have tried to approach them to observe. They are very wary. Gophers... that's amazing. I'm sure the Night Heron would be a welcomed guest on many people's yard. 😉
As painful and suffering it is for the gopher, the heron is also struggling a lot in this hunt. The need to keep the prey in a choke hold, maintain that choke strength with its beak, and constantly keep the beak firmly on the neck is a lot of commitment and energy. That is energy that the heron can not waste, so when it drops the gopher, it only does so to maintain a quick break to regain some energy and redo the process all over again. If this were a more inexperience or younger heron, I can imagine the gopher slipping away by catching enough air to make a quick sprint. Unlucky for the gopher, this heron was experience enough to not allow the gopher to gain that breath of air when it drop it.
There is no such animal, I’m not sure what you’re even talking about? Do you mean terror birds? Because the largest known species reached 10-11 ft tall max, and they were extinct before humans ever made it to the Americas
Yes it is interesting how the very different preys have similar strategies to hunt. I have videos of this type of heron hunting fish and in both cases they are very stealthy and use similar techniques.
It's almost supernatural, the way the bird can weld its head in space, so that its body moves but its head suddenly appears to be painted in 3-D on a background. I note that this heron does not spear the gopher like the Great Blue does. What gorgeous video you've taken. That bird looks incredible.
They really are adapted to short gass habitat. When I watch GB herons in PNW, the height allows an advantage, but the distance does not (and speed) always cooperate.
Yeah I agree. Great Blue Herons are better at taller grass. I found the ones around here are reluctant to go into tall grass maybe because predators might hide there.
Super common in Venezuela, we call them "chicuaco" because of the sound they produce at night. I've seen red tiger herons doing this exact same thing but while hunting blue tanagers.
@@jimzenor9148 We had a couple of dozen chickens, not little ones, Chochins, BIG fighting chickens. Mice and inexperienced rats would come to take the spilled grain. Never twice. Them girls could move faster than you could see, literally so fast that you had to work out what they had done after the fact. And they would RACE each other for the mouse, and just VICIOUSLY peck and peck and then fight to be the one who swallowed it whole. Half grown rats were too big for them to swallow whole, so they would crowd around it, and grab a part each and just pull it apart, "pop". And two of them even would try to take sparrows out, I didn't see them ever succeed because the sparrows knew the story too, and would be SUPER on edge once they were in the pen trying to steal grains.
@@uncletiggermclaren7592wow cool story. I’ll bet your chicken eggs are really good compared to what we can get here in the store. I have watched turkeys being really predatorial eating large snakes and rodents. Some birds are so fast.
@@jimzenor9148 Oh, yeah the eggs were pretty good. We used to have a sign on the gate "Pick your own eggs !" :) Lots of people in the neighbourhood sold their eggs to a company that supplied vegetarian restaurants, and we did that too on occasion, but we ate so many of them, they would ring up and we would say "Yeah, we have a couple dozen" and they would flag driving down our long road, wasn't worth their time..
amazing that it would continue to hunt after such a large meal. Does the night heron ever impale the gopher's head like the other herons or does it have to grab by the neck every time?
I think it generally does a grab but I took another video the next day (yesterday) where the bird did seem to impale a gigantic gopher. I’m not sure when I’ll have time to process it but I hope to post early next week. It quickly dropped it and then did the neck grab and shake for nearly a half hour.
Have you noticed? They become more active at dusk, flying out to feeding sites, calling 'pan' as they pass overhead in the darkness. Next time you're out at dusk, listen for their distinctive call!
You guys know that old American saying? “It was grizzly” it stems from the fact that a grizzly bear, neither have the skills, nor the need to kill you swiftly. Unlike a mountain Lion who’ll go for throat, after mauling you, a grizzly bear goes straight for your fat, then your liver, that’s it. It’s big enough that it doesn’t need you to be dead, to eat your liver. This bird neither have the mean, or need to end it early.
Deus é Maravilhoso, Perfeito nas sua Criações, tudo tem o equilíbrio natural criado por Deus, basta nós respeitar a natureza e viver em harmonia com ela
Could you imagine their dinosaur ancestors doing the same thing birds and other reptiles of now days are the closest thing to them we are ever gonna see in our live time.. who knows maybe scientists will find a way to bring dinosaurs back