@@ultimateloser3411 heard of this one animal I think it's name is a qualot, they throw their babies if predators are chasing them. In turn, the baby is bait.
Most animals gauge whether or not their offspring are equipped enough to survive the wild. The mother was probably acting on instinct, "If it can't come back to the nest it's too weak to live."
@@loveless8241 It wasn't even realising that chick is in danger. In nature, if you are out of nest, then you are on the ground. Thus, mother thought that chick IS in the nest because it was still around.
bestamerica you messed up your own grammar and spelling way more than he did, all the op forgot was a comma after the first ‘he dies’. Also why are you triggered over the gender of the bird?
Just so you know, the description is wrong!! Its "NOT AN ACCIDENT" Mama birds have been known to selectively kill their hatchlings when they cannot take care of all of them. They will remove what they consider as the weakest hatchlings and kept the stronger one.
It died 100% regardless because there were too many chicks for all of them getting enough food and the specific chick was already one of the tiniest and weakest. It died during the following days. Guaranteed.
@@hiibillymayshere4238 I just find it really amusing. How ppl get triggered or emotional about something that insignificant? Not clear but still amusing.
Is it just me or is he a lot smaller than his siblings? I hope he made it to adulthood, especially with all the competition for food from Mom with so many hungry mouths.
@@TheLithp clearly it wasn't weaker though, the lil sucker lived longer than its siblings probably would have in the same scenario. there's probably some reason, but it's most likely not that.
What a Warrior spirit that tiny baby bird has to have pushed himself back to his nest with his siblings. I just wish mama bird would have helped him out a little. Nature never ceases to amaze.
That's the perfect combination of a lot of willpower and a lot of luck. Without high determination, you'll never know how far you can actually make it in life. Lesson from this chick taken.
While watching this I realized I was tilting my phone as if this would help the chick fall back into the nest! I so wanted to help him! Hope he recovered well!
I saw this bird last week, and it mentioned that despite its tough upbringing and struggles at an early age, it is now doing fine and thriving in life. It thanks everyone for their comments of support.😀
I thought for sure mom had done that on purpose as I have seen other birds toss out one or all of the newly hatched 'babies'. Someone had said it had to do with them knowing if they could feed them, or having enough resources in the area to feed them or even if the one, or ones tossed may have had some defect. I think most humans secretly root for the little one to make it back. Nice.
@@FeatheredCreature If the mom didnt know that it was in danger then why does the mom sit on them to give them heat? Why would the mom even stay? Why would she stay to feed and keep them warm? Wouldnt she just fly away thinking everything would be fine? What i think happened is the mom knew the little bird would realize the danger it was in and it would instintually be drawn back to the Heat of the nest.
David Spicer>> The actual answer is that small birds like these blue tits are not very smart. They go by instinct, not intelligence. The parents were unable to understand the concept of the chick needing help back into the nest. Their simple mindset is, "if it's in the nest, feed it and keep it warm. If it's outside the nest, it doesn't exist." Birds are triggered by certain things, and if those triggers aren't set off, they will not react. If they see an open mouth in the nest and hear the begging sound, that triggers them to feed that mouth. They will ignore a baby that is not begging even though it may be starving. The only thing that keeps them sitting on eggs and feeding the chicks are hormones. In late summer, when the breeding season is ending and their hormones are declining, they forget about laying eggs and feeding youngsters. Even birds that are sitting on eggs will generally not roll an egg back into the nest if it rolls more than a few inches away from the nest chamber, even though they can plainly see it right next to them.
She's an old school momma. He said something smart, got outta line and she said, "Go on out into the free world and see if you can make it without me!" He learned his lesson and now he's humble. I'm just kidding. I'm so glad he made it back. I'm sure that happens more often than we realize. He was determined to get back home. Glad you made it back, little buddy.
actually, this was a really hard fight for life and that little bird might have lost it. You can see that fight for survival even between siblings is immense. The siblings push him down to get favored in feeding time. The little fella found back into the nest, but if he isnt able to open his mouth due to fatigue and signal mom to feed him he is lost. How did it went out, did it survive?
I was feeling so sad for the wee little baby bird and was relieved when she made it back to her siblings in the nest. I guess mama bird knew what she was doing by giving her her first lesson of survival but I really expected mama bird to help some but I guess mama knows best even in nature. Cheers to the little champion!🏆👍
Oh, I knew a chick who also got back in the warm nest and was happy. Sadly said nest was my frying pan. Sorry, Beakie, baby birds like you are just too yummy to live.
"More body heat from mom.. Happy ending!" Idk.. I'm not totally convinced she wasn't down there pecking his eyeballs out. I mean she made it pretty clear that he's not her favorite
@@al3x4nderthegreat80 Why it checked its cloaca, then? Nests never were intended to be built in nextboxes. Evolution simply never wired bird brains to copy with situation like this - there never was need.
Compared to the other chicks, that one looked much smaller, so its likely just sickly. The mother knew it wasn't worth investing her resources into it or she risks losing her healthy offspring.
@@user-xz8id3ob8x ох уж эти америкосы. Проклятый запад, какой же он империалиастичний, ещё возомнили о себе что то😡. Вот Рассия - эта сила, с которой надо считаться 🤡🐷
@@user-xz8id3ob8x You’ll be speaking English soon, Vlad. Perhaps your country shouldn’t have taken on Ukraine - doesn’t have enough military might to do much of anything anymore and your country has gone for broke… No money left in Daddy Putin’s bank account. That’s okay, you’ll get to experience what a REAL supermarket is when we setup shop and free you all from a poor existence. 👍🏻
Mama Bird : now, my child, this is nature you should know how to survive I cannot interfere as it can destory this world and other worlds and possibly the universe please understand the threat."
Omg I could NOT handle the anticipation and had to skip to the end to see of he/she made it first , but the way it just fell in amongst the other babies made me laugh, to say it barely had a face, I could see the relief as it sunk in 🤣 poor little thing. The resilience to live was both heartbreaking and incredible.
@@casndsccwd2956 that's not that bad dude, I hear that all the time, they simply just don't know the gender It's would've been bad if they said him/her/they
There's a video of a mother goose who takes her babies down a 3 foot waterfall in this river. At the top of the waterfall there were 6 babies. At the bottom there were only 3, and the mother goose just went on her way....
The mother knew what was happening yet ignored it, this is clearly a severe case of child abuse and I hope to god that the person who recorded this called child protective services and got these children away from this monster
In all seriousness, they normally don’t have the safety of a box house. The nest is ALL they have to protect babies with in every other environment. They simply aren’t equipped to help them anywhere else outside the nest bowl, so have no instincts compelling them to try even where an exception is possible. As opposed to a chicken hen, which are a ground nesting bird in the wild, so are well compelled to seek out and nudge a stray chick back into her nest .
Damn, was already feeling like it was going to end badly. Thank god he made it back. Those parents have their work cut out for them, so many birds!!!!!
Después de tanta angustia, desesperación y ansiedad viendo a este pobre polluelo tratando de reingresar al nido. Dudando de su tenacidad para lograr, tenía que haber un desenlace de valentía. Me gustan los finales felices
@@alfredo_jr7914 It's deaf. Baby snacks use vibration for orientation, that's why without moving mother nearby poor living yolk went in wrong direction.
It amazes me that it is programmed to know where the nest is. It tries to survive :) It is a survivor and I hope it makes it as its mama has too many to feed. All those eggs were healthy to produce baby birds!
I had the fun of watching Ginny wrens grow up sadly I didn't get to see their first flight but everything else I did but I did get to watch Cardinals first flight sneaky devil's both we never noticed the Cardinals had made a nest till day of first flight and the wrens while we went in to eat decided then to do fly
That was heart crushing. My heart is so sensitive and these kind of things stay with me for a while even to the point of dreaming about them. I need to stop watching them but I never know what's going to happen until I've watched.
The bird is literally an anime protagonist, gets abandoned, embarks on a journey to return back, returns and is extremely weakened, slowly sinks, prolly thinks it's his game over and replaying essential moments of life in his head, when the curtains are about to drop, thx to the power of Friendship he stands back up, the happy end
Probably why they can afford to be such sloppy parents, it is expected not all will survive. Some birds are even worse and kill their siblings or the parent only lets the stronger one survive.
Yeah I counted 8.. some of them will die over not getting fed.. and what looks like the runt/hatched last and who was out of the nest cup here may be one casualties, maybe not today but later on. :/
@MasonIsMissing 64 Maybe they see if it died, or due to scientific interest, or take sadistic pleasure in watching it desperate attempts to get back to the nest? You have no right to speak for everyone, nor even for most.
@@theonlypinky It's up to you. I don't remember why exactly i watched this videya, i was just annoyed by how much ppl were rooting for baby bird despite millions die every year without anyone caring. Emotion-driven, hypocritical approach.
@@keikihaniyasushin8574 Hopefully not but we will never know for sure since the baby bird was weak. I was a parks gardener in San Jose, CA. for 20 years and sometimes, I would find dead baby birds on the ground that either fell out of nests above or were pushed out by their mothers for whatever reasons. Such a VERY sad sight, indeed, but all a part of Mother Nature.