Seeing how that poor lonely animal was kept,alone & on concrete in the most unnatural surroundings imaginable,broke my heart when I first saw this clip yrs ago.Humans have done so much wrong to nature, flattering themselves that they r Earth's top species,that any wrong they can right,will be a very small step in making up to the beautiful animals people are lucky enough to share this poor illused planet with.
@@NotDocStupid I didn't know that story.Poor,poor lonely animal.I hate the cold,I can relate.Were those responsible punished?I am not holding my breath.
@@susanmccormick6022 if punishments were a thing, colonial european countries wouldn't exist in the 21st Century. Their prior generations did more inhumane things in a couple of centuries than all other civilizations put together for thousands of years
Such a strange creature. I hope that Forrest Gallant finds one. If anybody can, its that man. He has already found a couple animals that were said to be extinct.
We thank abt it like this tasmania has a lot of trees and stuff and if tasmanian tigers are really out there , why would they trust us after what we did ?z
No. Are you people really dumb enough to not think about what that would do to the environment you can’t just introduce a new animal from almost 100 years ago it would throw the food chain and balance way off when there are already issues with overpopulation of animals we already have. It could have catastrophic effects to the environment.
No. Don’t bring back animals. So you people really not think about the catastrophic environmental damage bringing back an extinct animal could cause? The food chain would be thrown even more out of balance than it already is with certain animals being over or under populated. They could be very destructive to the environment. There’s a reason they were hunted and nothing says anything about it being for their fur so you gotta think about why.
@@raegenarmer2351 Sometimes they’re not hunted for food, they’re hunted deliberately for fun, or because damaging farms. Either way, its still baffling that they are going extinct. BTW animals that were recently extinct the food chain can adapt but for those that were extinct a really long time ago like wooly mammoths It's not good for the environment
@@ladee_tkvlthey are still alive today, most of Australia and Papua New Guinea is undiscovered by men, and there are reports of tribe members having Tasmanian tigers as pets, which is why there are expeditions going there now to find them
what's sad is that even if we managed to bring the back into existence, it's not 100% the original thing. it's hard to explain and i'm no scientist (duhh), but i've read somewhere before that bringing the original thing back to life is impossible. which is why they had to mix its dna with another animal's dna, thus not being 'original'. it's like buying a pants from the ralph lauren store, that makes it 100% original ralph lauren pants. but if you changed the buttons to a generic brand, then the pants isn't 100% original ralph lauren anymore because of the difference in parts. but correct me if i'm wrong because i probably read something different with a different science.
They're probably still around in New Guinea, the natives talk about seeing an animal that exactly fits the description and have a name for it that means something like "big mouthed dog". And they don't seem to think it's a rare animal (though they have superstitions about it and claim it "has magic" and should be avoided) Also keep in mind that much of New Guinea is inaccessible except by foot and has not been explored saying that it's extinct in New Guinea for two thousand years is the equivalent of landing on the beach looking around and saying "yeah none here guess they're all gone". NOBODY ever talks about this the only person I've ever heard mention it is Clint Laidlaw over on Clint's Reptiles here on RU-vid and that guy is an actual zooologist not some kook.
I only want dodo 🦤 mammoth 🦣.. and bring back that dinasour fish and I feel pretty sad 😭 on this tasmanian tiger it's so dipressed until PTSD post traumatic stress disorder. he probably got a lot of trauma..it's lead him to dead by sadness..
The worst part is that park rangers were sighting them from time to time up into the late 90's long after they were declared "extinct" and everyone just sat on their hands and did nothing. The rangers KNEW they were still alive and kept trying to get a sanctuary declared and everyone just ignored them until it was too late. This is highly suspicious and may have been behind the scenes politics connected to ranchers.
It dosent. Even if it was still around past the point we considered it extinct, so much of the habitats were destroyed the numberswouodve declined rapidly If it was gone then it definitely is now
@@Dizzyj360 it is still here and no one on earth would ever know, there probably staying away from humans because back then that was our chance to domesticate them or treat them neutral like hyenas, if they are around we should let them exist and stay out of sight.
Whatever we can bring back to restore our environment, we should. They went extinct because people hunted them to extinction, it wasn't "thier time". Almost nothing passes the human extinction filter and thats lame to say something should be dead because some dumb farmers were bored with guns.
No one one earth would ever know truly if they’re alive or not. If they are we should let them exist and repopulate because only 2 percent of our oceans have been expired even with our LIDAR technology and subs and advancements, the world is so expansive we may have almost everything down, but not all of it. If they are still here they should be left at peace. I believe they’re out of sight avoiding the humans because back then that was our chance to domesticate them or be neutral with them but we failed
@@Caparco71did u just say we haven't found living Tasmanian tigers because we've only explored 2% of the ocean...? You know these are not aquatic marsupials right?