Wow they are fighting back! Wow. What type of birds are these?? Usually when I see this, the youngest would put it head down and let the oldest beat it.
@@liznm-natur-channel" thank you for your response. Sorry for the late response back.. I Just never heard of this type of bird/ nor seen it.. But, I just realized that you did put the names within your title.. Sorry for that stupid question.. [ What type of birds are these??]. I've been learning more about birds. I have learned that sibling rivalry happens when there isn't enough food within birds of Prey.:? I hope I worded that correctly.. Thank you again for all of the videos you post up btw, Very educational. Again, Sorry for the late response & Asking what type of bird of prey these was..
@@crazyfx5242 it happens even when there is enough food with a lot of birds. The osprey nests I watch sometimes by my house are brutal!! Almost always the small one doesn't survive
Wow, woW, WOW! I'm not familiar with nor have I ever heard of the Black Kit. They seem so amazing! I'm happy to finally see a video where the smallest sibling fights back, instead of allowing the oldest sibling to beat them to a bloody pulp. I hope all 3 of these amazingly beautiful Black Kits made it to fledging, and I hope they're living beautiful lives.
Look again: the smallest sibling *isn't* fighting back. He only uses one move: grabbing the beak of his attacker, which is completely defensive. When the attacker's beak is free, it pecks away at top speed. Still, he's only taking half as many pecks per minute, and the attacker should tire quickly, so he's quite a bit better off. (I suspect that actually pecking back and inflicting damage would escalate the fight to a lethal degree, with the bigger sibling killing the smaller sibling. The smaller sibling's only chances for survival are a big increase in the food supply, or one of the bigger siblings dying.)
This is clearly over food. Normally, the oldest chick eats first, then when full the mother feeds the younger ones. For whatever reason this isn't happening which is causing this.
Liznm. This is my new nest and I never watched Black kites before, is this the first aggression towards the younger ones? It seems to me the older one is in a very bad mood 😒 I have never seen in other nests both fighters spreading their wings like this and the youngest caught in between 😂 as long as their crops full I can take it because that’s their nature. Greetings from Hong Kong 💝
they all have fight! I think it is a learning process. Between the feeding, they were very nice to each other. In the afternoon all were calmed down :-)
Haha!!! The look on the runts face!!!😂 He actually wanted to kick the larger sibling off the nest but unfortunately the larger was able to squeeze in, mostly because the youngest was just shocked that he hadn’t dropped off!! He looks to the sibling, the. To his feet than out past to the drop and beyond where the bigger one should’ve went!!! Hilarious!!
Even though the youngest is small, he has a good sense of combat. My brother is very good at timing to attack. His toenails were less developed due to slow growth, so he was a little behind his brother, but when he grows up later, he will fight better than his brother. In 10 days, you can't touch that youngest member.
Been watching eagle videos and have never seen young eaglets be so cruel to each other hope it stops hard tp watcht T such young age eagles be so cruel i giess is survival of the fittest in nature problaby it just has to be one eaglet per family so it can survive the attacks of sibling rivarely my opinion thats it all the best to those eaglets and they survive those amazing creatures