The Story Behind Australia's Weird Animals

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Moth Light Media

Moth Light Media

Ай бұрын

To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/MothLight You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
sailing south through the maze of tropical islands across Malaysia and Indonesia will lead you to an invisible barrier between two worlds. What in reality is a relatively small distance, is a huge gulf between two vastly different ecological regions. Why are the animals so different on either side of this line?
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Sources:
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www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
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This video was sponsored by Brilliant.

Пікірлер: 306
@mothlightmedia1936
@mothlightmedia1936 Ай бұрын
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/MothLight . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
@Carlos-bz5oo
@Carlos-bz5oo Ай бұрын
A recent study has shown multituberculates produced developed young. Also, Deltatheridium and Thylacosmilus aren't marsupials but related metatherians
@crockstonyt
@crockstonyt Ай бұрын
Goth Light Media
@mishistern
@mishistern 29 күн бұрын
do you live in Frankfurt?? recognised that U4 at the immediately haha. Thanks for the awesome vid !!
@JoshuaBond121
@JoshuaBond121 21 күн бұрын
@mothlightmedia1936 What is the best way to contact you for other sponsorship opportunities?
@BugsandBiology
@BugsandBiology Ай бұрын
Always a refreshing treat to see a video about Australian wildlife that isn’t rife with sensationalism.
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 25 күн бұрын
Agreed!
@James-kv6kb
@James-kv6kb 21 күн бұрын
Or crocodiles in wildlife parks out of their region so they can't react quickly lol
@shaddonon
@shaddonon Ай бұрын
8:39 man, tasmanian tigers were so beautiful. didn't realize footage existed
@erichtomanek4739
@erichtomanek4739 Ай бұрын
They became extinct in the 1930's; the footage is from Hobart's (Tasmania) Beaumauris Zoo, now closed.
@rizkyadiyanto7922
@rizkyadiyanto7922 Ай бұрын
overrated.
@gamecheatmaster123
@gamecheatmaster123 28 күн бұрын
@@rizkyadiyanto7922 id trade you for a Tasmanian tiger
@CrowHavenPastures
@CrowHavenPastures 26 күн бұрын
The grainy footage existed for many years and was only recently remastered and colorized.
@ninjaskeleton6140
@ninjaskeleton6140 Ай бұрын
Apart from the monotremes, the weirdest creatures in Australia are the birds, but for some reason they don’t seem to attract much attention. Australian birds are exceptional in many ways.
@erichtomanek4739
@erichtomanek4739 Ай бұрын
Have you read the book: Where Song Began, by Tim Low?
@kerianhalcyon2769
@kerianhalcyon2769 27 күн бұрын
Yeah, people talk about the big ones (Emus and Cassowaries) a lot, but not a lot about kookaburas, australian magpies, and various other birds that are unique there.
@Freshbott2
@Freshbott2 24 күн бұрын
The main ways being how not like birds they sound.
@kam.b3574
@kam.b3574 15 күн бұрын
Very Vocal!
@Wnick1996
@Wnick1996 Ай бұрын
Australia is truly a weird place
@arthurmartin4616
@arthurmartin4616 Ай бұрын
And we still love it. From a distance.
@ecurewitz
@ecurewitz Ай бұрын
But Australia thinks the rest of the world is weird
@Crocy
@Crocy Ай бұрын
​@@ecurewitzWe as well as the rest of the world find the US weird lol
@maniacram
@maniacram Ай бұрын
Kangaroo tail has a lot of meat 🍖 😳😅.
@raclark2730
@raclark2730 28 күн бұрын
As are some of its Human inhabitants. 😎 👍
@TenOrbital
@TenOrbital Ай бұрын
That was a pretty sick wombat. They are badly affected by endemic mange, introduced with European settlement. It kills them eventually.
@Nicholasmcgadden1
@Nicholasmcgadden1 Ай бұрын
Wake up new moth light media dropped
@mutemiz
@mutemiz Ай бұрын
am up, am up
@yoshihammerbro435
@yoshihammerbro435 Ай бұрын
AHHHH
@luudest
@luudest Ай бұрын
I miss the intro!
@black999c
@black999c Ай бұрын
Hold on I need to pee first
@ristane6849
@ristane6849 Ай бұрын
Hold my beer MLM is up.
@Paxility
@Paxility Ай бұрын
Sometimes, I wish the continents were more disconnected. A world full of Australias would give so many different animal groups a stage to diversify. Imagine a continent dominated by monotremes or only rodents. I love every video. From the voiceover to the production they are brilliant. I clicked after 29 seconds:D
@stevenkelby2169
@stevenkelby2169 Ай бұрын
Rodents, carried by men on ships, would soon conquer all.
@teguhlg
@teguhlg Ай бұрын
Imagine if every continent but 1 are dominated by diversed version of 1 species we know today. Sounds like a video game world to me. XD
@jacobscrackers98
@jacobscrackers98 29 күн бұрын
​@@stevenkelby2169As well as our dogs and cats, and of course us.
@ManicMercurianAstrology
@ManicMercurianAstrology 29 күн бұрын
Raise the sea levels!
@scunge2667
@scunge2667 28 күн бұрын
South america was so much more unique before it joined north america. HUmans killing off all its unique megafauna didnt help either
@6099x
@6099x Ай бұрын
I am very happy that you’re being sponsored! I have always wondered how such a large continent‘s fauna and flora remained so isolated, even though there were potential land bridges in the past
@vilisveidis
@vilisveidis Ай бұрын
A 20 minute MLM episode? And it's only Tuesday??!! Truly we are blessed
@arminmadari4808
@arminmadari4808 Ай бұрын
Thank you for keeping this videos music free and soft in the ears
@erikm8372
@erikm8372 Ай бұрын
New World marsupials (opossums) are so interesting. Once you reach central Mexico, more or less, there are more species & genera present than only the common Virginia opossum. So they blend in a lot more, I think, than here in the US, where people call them “giant rats” and stuff. 🙄Yeah, a giant rat with a pouch and 75 teeth instead of gnawing buck teeth…lol. They’re so misunderstood. I wanted one as a pet as a kid. And in a way, nearly got one! Not really. But on my seventh birthday, something told me to look out into the backyard; I watched as a female opossum, with five babies on her back, came clambering down the tree and proceeded to walk RIGHT UP to my window (on the ground floor). Keep in mind my family has had at least three cats at all times, too, which apparently were gone at that time. I was so shocked that this mama opossum would walk up, lay down and take a nap with her babies, RIGHT THERE in front of my window. She slept, but the babies were playing and staring at us. Best birthday gift ever. Hahaha.
@AifDaimon
@AifDaimon Ай бұрын
That's so cute
@obibraxton2232
@obibraxton2232 Ай бұрын
Keep the frequency coming!! Love your take on Paleontology and the images you use to illustrate such animals 🙌🏾 Wish there was a Paleontologycon or something like that for nerds like me who find exotic animals and dinosaurs fascinating.
@lalehiandeity1649
@lalehiandeity1649 Ай бұрын
The evolution of squirrels
@angelobrinkord2204
@angelobrinkord2204 Ай бұрын
Why?
@Crocy
@Crocy Ай бұрын
Why not? That's something this person is interested in. ​@@angelobrinkord2204
@PunishedFelix
@PunishedFelix 29 күн бұрын
​@@angelobrinkord2204because squirrels are awesome 🐿️
@angelobrinkord2204
@angelobrinkord2204 29 күн бұрын
@@PunishedFelix Fair enough, to each their own
@SR-lm1jx
@SR-lm1jx 28 күн бұрын
Please yes do this I am obsessed with squirrels, especially marmots and Asian giant squirrels
@tiagolopes184
@tiagolopes184 Ай бұрын
Damn fine content
@FranKoPepez
@FranKoPepez 29 күн бұрын
I love when Monito del Monte is mentioned
@stupidmango4036
@stupidmango4036 Ай бұрын
Aw sweet! MothLightMedia talks about subjects I never stopped to think about
@hilliard665
@hilliard665 Ай бұрын
Yeah rodents and bats are our only native placental mammals. Dingoes are a strange middle ground as they arrived before European colonization
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 25 күн бұрын
Good way of putting it.
@pedrogabrielduarte4544
@pedrogabrielduarte4544 Ай бұрын
Do a playlist about Australia
@nkg___5172
@nkg___5172 Ай бұрын
"Babe wake up, Moth Light Media just dropped a new vid"
@rizkyadiyanto7922
@rizkyadiyanto7922 Ай бұрын
said someone who doesnt have a babe
@bentucker2301
@bentucker2301 28 күн бұрын
The internet has made everyone unoriginal
@nkg___5172
@nkg___5172 27 күн бұрын
@@bentucker2301 both of you guys just sound like bitter people, please see a therapist
@bentucker2301
@bentucker2301 27 күн бұрын
@@nkg___5172 still unoriginal. Next you're going to use the word underrated and become an even bigger cliché
@acey457
@acey457 17 күн бұрын
​@@bentucker2301 ahh high and mighty! i bet you dont even piss in a tray
@stephendalby836
@stephendalby836 27 күн бұрын
They are no more weird than giraffes, rhinoceroses, polar bears, llamas, bison or elk. They’re just different, not weird.
@Epidombe
@Epidombe Ай бұрын
Always happy to see a new MLM video
@temple1111
@temple1111 Ай бұрын
I live here in Australia and studied ecology in Tasmania. If you ever visit I'd love to meet - I love your videos. I could show you some amazing places.
@SmittenandBitten
@SmittenandBitten Ай бұрын
Such high quality documentary. Ty ❤️
@distinctdipole
@distinctdipole Ай бұрын
Thanks for another excellent video. Always get me thinking.
@jt-zo5vm
@jt-zo5vm Ай бұрын
God bless he has returned
@yahwea
@yahwea Ай бұрын
Great analysis. Very interesting.
@Zzz-qc5qg
@Zzz-qc5qg Ай бұрын
was really happy seeing that Brilliant ad at the start, you deserve it
@sciencetroll6304
@sciencetroll6304 Ай бұрын
Very informative. Many thanks.
@HisameArtwork
@HisameArtwork Ай бұрын
love your vids, thanks for sharing.
@simonprecheurllarena
@simonprecheurllarena 27 күн бұрын
Brilliant video, as always!
@vinniepeterss
@vinniepeterss 28 күн бұрын
great video as always!
@ecurewitz
@ecurewitz Ай бұрын
Fascinating. Thank you
@MrMemelord00
@MrMemelord00 Ай бұрын
I absolutely love the way you make your videos you're one of the best channels of this genre of video if I have the choice I watch this channel over nearly all others
@areasevenpro
@areasevenpro 22 күн бұрын
"My national bird is the Emu, and it's a pest. Also bloody delicious."
@zaubergarden6900
@zaubergarden6900 28 күн бұрын
Such a fully researched and wide-ranging across topics episode 🥰
@ellie8272
@ellie8272 29 күн бұрын
Humans can certainly ditch their young pre-birth, but certain people aren't particularly happy about it
@dm70
@dm70 29 күн бұрын
Great video. Thank you! I still miss the little intro branding, though, and would welcome its return. 😊
@Biff11235
@Biff11235 28 күн бұрын
My FAVORITE channel to fall asleep to. I mean this in the best way. Keep it up!
@matthewtopping2061
@matthewtopping2061 28 күн бұрын
2:10 I hope that poor wombat with mange got the necessary treatment 😢
@JeanOlaf
@JeanOlaf 29 күн бұрын
Still one of the best science channel on KZfaq
@rursus8354
@rursus8354 Ай бұрын
Fantastic!
@nicholasgarrett8594
@nicholasgarrett8594 Ай бұрын
Top notch educational program! You deserve more subscribers!
@kanealoha
@kanealoha Ай бұрын
Great video!
@94marci
@94marci Ай бұрын
This is just brilliant!
@n00b2b3r
@n00b2b3r 29 күн бұрын
It's always a treat when I see a new Moth Light Media video in my feed.
@turbotreehouse9780
@turbotreehouse9780 17 күн бұрын
I truly enjoy your channel. Its incredibly helpful to my understanding that you give timelines, geographies, common ancestry. The full spectrum really solidifies these concepts. Wild about the ostrich and the emu lineages splitting before T Rex existed. That one is gonna sit with me. Just how many bird lineages actually made it through the KPG? Man, nature and life is so amazing.
@cashel1111
@cashel1111 18 күн бұрын
holy crap i have never seen that tassie tiger video in such high resolution that is crazy love your channel, i have tried a few other biology channels and none of them shine a light (hehe) to your top tier quality
@davidtatro7457
@davidtatro7457 Ай бұрын
Wonderful video. Probably the most interesting l have ever seen on marsupials!
@hughmongus6191
@hughmongus6191 Ай бұрын
I got here as soon as I got the notification. 👍
@JM-kx7dh
@JM-kx7dh Ай бұрын
Another great video. I hope your voice is okay. Thanks for the content as always.
@Piperdogloveshats
@Piperdogloveshats 28 күн бұрын
A longer video!!! Yesss
@_Wombat
@_Wombat 28 күн бұрын
My relief when the original music has come back 😭 thanks Moth.
@ajoneill6290
@ajoneill6290 26 күн бұрын
Fascinating I've heard about the Wallace line but this really explains it
@carlosguimaraes624
@carlosguimaraes624 Ай бұрын
Excellent!
@lucasotis9525
@lucasotis9525 Ай бұрын
Calming voiced, ancient fauna expert is back ^.^ Great topic of choice!
@leightonolsson4846
@leightonolsson4846 Ай бұрын
Mercifully within my lifetime Australia's marsupials have stopped being referred to as 'primitive' mammals
@Freshbott2
@Freshbott2 24 күн бұрын
Your videos give just the right amount of depth. You and some others on KZfaq give us these great pieces on animals. Please consider doing some on plants too. It’s just as interesting, and it’s an untapped niche on KZfaq. Better still, plants are very well represented in the fossil record and archaic species represented in modern flora. It wouldn’t go unappreciated ❤️
@ayzekpie9432
@ayzekpie9432 Ай бұрын
Great video! It reminded me to reread the way we count by the DNA separation from a common ancestor.
@Pabturo55
@Pabturo55 29 күн бұрын
It’s a good day when Moth Light drops a new video :)
@Chrismas815
@Chrismas815 Ай бұрын
MOTH LIGHT MEDIA RAAAAAH
@Andy_Hendrix_9842
@Andy_Hendrix_9842 Ай бұрын
It gets weird down under.
@SMHman666
@SMHman666 29 күн бұрын
@Andy_Hendrix... Yeah, I've really let the hair grow out too much.....sorry. 😅
@eacalvert
@eacalvert Ай бұрын
Oh hell yeah new video!!
@cosmo6122
@cosmo6122 24 күн бұрын
I love this channel
@morthim
@morthim Ай бұрын
'like the philloso-raptor' yes. aka raptor sapien.
@pumaconcolor2855
@pumaconcolor2855 Ай бұрын
Sparassodonts are stem-marsupials.
@jacko0394
@jacko0394 29 күн бұрын
Loved the video! Just so you know though, at 11:16 you should Emu habitat not including a lot of Victoria (that southern bit), but Emus actually come all the way down to the outer reaches of Melbourne. The only reason they're not actually on our streets is because they're pretty skittish.
@JulioCesar-ez6wf
@JulioCesar-ez6wf Ай бұрын
Man your content is SO GREAT!!!!! How come you don't have more subscribers!?!?! Thanks for the Great info and images!!! 🙌🙌🙌🦘🐊
@skeletonviolin3221
@skeletonviolin3221 17 күн бұрын
I'd love to see a video on the convergent evelution kelp had with plants. I only just learned kelp aren't plants and am now obsessed with this fact
@GallowglassVT
@GallowglassVT Ай бұрын
Aus wildlife focus? Say no more. I'm invested.
@pedrogabrielduarte4544
@pedrogabrielduarte4544 Ай бұрын
Do a a video about both the evolution of the kagu and the hoatzin respectively
@gogolometro235
@gogolometro235 Ай бұрын
awe sweet, my favourite youtuber posted
@grokeffer6226
@grokeffer6226 Ай бұрын
Interesting Stuff!!! 🦘🦤🐨
@aaronlaluzerne6639
@aaronlaluzerne6639 27 күн бұрын
Could you please do a video on the evolution of parrots?
@keegannoble1809
@keegannoble1809 Ай бұрын
That wombat with mange b-roll got me like 😢
@Jopmasselink
@Jopmasselink Ай бұрын
That was awesome
@reggiefurlow1
@reggiefurlow1 Ай бұрын
I love learning while I sleep
@takenname8053
@takenname8053 26 күн бұрын
SUPER NICE Congrats on the sponsor (If that something to be proud of?)
@rogerfricke1785
@rogerfricke1785 Ай бұрын
Can you do the evolution of electric eels?
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 25 күн бұрын
Well done for pronouncing "emu" correctly! :D
@JohnyG29
@JohnyG29 Ай бұрын
Please bring back the old intro screen. It was really cool, and without it your videos seem somewhat diminished.
@p3pable
@p3pable 28 күн бұрын
Those first dogs founded the dingo empire of today. Are they still good boys and girls?
@___Kelli___
@___Kelli___ Ай бұрын
Your videos kick ass!
@uncleanunicorn4571
@uncleanunicorn4571 10 күн бұрын
I believe it was a scientist named Zinsmeister in the 80's who predicted that we should find proto-marsupials in Antartica from 40 mya, one of the great successes of evolutionary theory and biogeography.
@reecec626
@reecec626 25 күн бұрын
...I think you'll find dingos being native is still a question to be answered.
@allosaurusfanboy3897
@allosaurusfanboy3897 Ай бұрын
Correct me if I'm wrong but weren't Sparassodonts proven to be a sister clade to Marsupials? They were basal metatherians but not Marsupials
@Ozraptor4
@Ozraptor4 Ай бұрын
His definition of marsupial seems to encompass all of clade Marsupialiformes (which includes sparassodonts and other extinct clades) rather restricting it to the crown-group (clade Marsupialia)
@luudest
@luudest Ай бұрын
Now let‘s place a single pair of tigers into Australia.
@rewild6134
@rewild6134 Ай бұрын
We did if you're a small Australia mammal like a bettong or bilby. Feral cats are wreaking havoc here.
@WORLDCRUSHER9000
@WORLDCRUSHER9000 27 күн бұрын
I think a video about the fauna of prehistoric India when it was an island subcontinent would be very interesting, it is difficult to find information about.
@toni4729
@toni4729 8 күн бұрын
It's nice to know that Noah didn't leave them behind.
@colerosenthal4738
@colerosenthal4738 28 күн бұрын
Please never stop making videos
@leonardoalfonso7080
@leonardoalfonso7080 Ай бұрын
Excellent video! Please do one about the domestication of chicken throughout different cultures.
@jungtothehuimang
@jungtothehuimang 11 күн бұрын
"five meter long amphibians" TAKE ME BACK TO THAT TIME NOW
@user-fm6cf1tk1t
@user-fm6cf1tk1t 28 күн бұрын
Sorry babe can't come over new. New moth light media just dropped
@theace8502
@theace8502 Ай бұрын
Babe, get up. New mothlight media video just dropped
@alexanderstone9463
@alexanderstone9463 28 күн бұрын
The most fascinating aspect in the history of Marsupials (and their close Metatherian relatives) is how on earth they got to South America in the first place. Because by all accounts they weren’t there in the Cretaceous. I have an idea regarding this, but it’s a little outside of the box. We’ve known for ages about the phenomenon of “rafting,” wherein “rafts” of trees and vegetation bring land dwelling animals to new islands and continents. It’s very wildly accepted but since such events are so rare how they happen is up to more speculation. One idea thrown around is that Tropical cyclones dislodge the vegetation during the storm surge. Indeed, the one example possibly witnessed by humans, of some Iguanas colonizing the island of Anguilla, was caused by a Hurricane. But while that might account for most dispersals, it can’t account for all of them, the Canary Islands for instance do not lie in the path of any Tropical Cyclones and given their location I have difficulty believing that would’ve been different in the past, though for the Canaries the currents are favorable for such “rafting” events in general. However storm surges are not the only thing that can sweep plants and animals out to sea, Tsunamis can do that as well. That is where I think South America’s marsupials and metatherians came from. I do not know how dangerous ground zero would have been a day or two (or a week) after the disaster, but even if it was a death zone, the vicinity, and especially the island arc directly to the south of North America, would have been relatively “safe” insofar as anywhere was in the immediate aftermath of the disaster. Their are other reasons why I think this. The origins of the “South American Native Ungulates” or Meridiungulata, has always been controversial. At first glance they appeared to be exactly that, ungulates. However many paleontologists were absolutely convinced that most of them, but especially the Notoungulates, were Afrotherians, indeed some still cling on to that notion despite its original problems and the recent compelling evidence against it. Everyone seemed to agree that the group was a polyphyletic waste basket taxon. However this controversy was not destined to remain solely in the realm of cladistics. For more than one group of South American Native Ungulate survived into the late Pleistocene, and they have sub fossils with DNA. Since 2015, not only have the Notoungulates and Litopterns been demonstrated by DNA and collagen testing to form a monophyletic group, but they have also been proven to be genuine ungulates, pretty much blowing up the Afrotherian hypothesis of their origin (much to the distress of various ego driven paleontologists who believed that hypothesis as is always the case for these things). With the fossil record of Litopterns stretching back to the earliest Paleocene, any new theory of their origin must account for how they got to South America. My own theory, though I am not a paleontologist, is that Laurasiatheria began diversifying well before the extinction event (just like the molecular clock says). When the asteroid struck, huge tsunamis swept across the globe, not just caused by the asteroid itself but also by the gigantic earthquakes it caused. Those tsunamis struck North America particularly hard and many animals were swept out to sea. Ironically the heat shock caused by the shower of meteors coming from the impact, often alleged to be a major killer in the extinction event, could have been less severe for anything surviving on the rafts. The rafts carried with them not just North American Marsupials and Metatherians, but also the ancestors of the South American Native Ungulates, amongst other small creatures, and maybe even some non-avian dinosaurs doomed to die through starvation and/or oxygen deprivation. Given the shear amount of sea-born debris created in the disaster, it was probably inevitable that some of it would end up on nearby South America, despite the gaping burning hole in the middle of the ocean between them. After the dust had settled in the beginning of the Paleocene the newly rafted animals underwent explosive diversification in South America, as one does in the aftermath of such a large extinction event. But the ancestors of the South American Native ungulates, despite being supposedly “superior” placental mammals, did not dominate all the niches. Instead they convergently evolved to resemble the other ungulates of North America and Eurasia, in much the same manner as the Ratites evolved flightlessness on every landmass to which they originally flew.
@luudest
@luudest Ай бұрын
I miss the intro!
@Dapstart
@Dapstart 14 күн бұрын
Dank
@mikeycbaby
@mikeycbaby 29 күн бұрын
I still miss the old intro ❤
@Phownk
@Phownk 29 күн бұрын
Very nice tie-ins with previous episodes. Good work as always!
@jacobscrackers98
@jacobscrackers98 29 күн бұрын
I would have liked if he put a link to the previous episode in the description because I usually use a client that doesn't do annotations.
@mennobot3884
@mennobot3884 29 күн бұрын
So were placental mammals around in Australia when the marsupials arrived? Or was Australia fully devoid of mammals after the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs? (besides the monotremes). If the latter is true, do we know of a possible explanation as to why placental mammals did not reach Australia while the marsupials did?
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