Gabon' Jungle: An Elephants Family Refuses To Share A Big Mirror With A Leopard (Short Version)
𝐑.𝐈.𝐏. 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐩𝐡𝐨𝐧𝐞 𝐔𝐬𝐞𝐫𝐬 Please read the following description:
𝗧𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗶𝘀 𝗾𝘂𝗶𝘁𝗲 𝗻𝗮𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗹 𝗮𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗺𝗮𝘁𝗿𝗶𝗮𝗿𝗰𝗵 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗵𝗲𝗿 𝗼𝗹𝗱𝗲𝗿 𝗰𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗱𝗿𝗲𝗻 𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗲 𝘁𝗼 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝘁𝗲𝗰𝘁 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗱'𝘀 𝗯𝗮𝗯𝗶𝗲𝘀 𝗳𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝗮 𝗹𝗲𝗼𝗽𝗮𝗿𝗱, 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗶𝗿 𝗺𝗮𝗶𝗻 𝗽𝗿𝗲𝗱𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿 𝗮𝗳𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗽𝗼𝗮𝗰𝗵𝗲𝗿𝘀.
𝗔𝘁𝘁𝗮𝗰𝗸 𝗶𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗯𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗱𝗲𝗳𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗲! 𝗣𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗶𝘀 𝗯𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝗻 𝗰𝘂𝗿𝗲!
In a remote area of the Gabonese forest, 12 km from the equator and 10 km from the Atlantic Ocean, outside a national park, Anne-Marie et Xavier Hubert-Brierre have been observing the reaction of wild animals as they catch sight of themselves in large mirrors (250cm x 120cm) with motion sensors camera traps the couple installed 9 years ago. This innovative idea attracted the attention of primatologists, behaviour specialists whose studies on self recognition have, until now, been carried out in laboratories, on wild animals in captivity who are accustomed to the presence of humans. Wild animals come and go as they please in front of our mirrors and stay as they like both day and night.
For humans self recognition is not immediate: in the case of the very young child a period of “mirror training” guided by the reassurance of the mother is necessary.
For wild animals who haven't had this mirror training, nor possess the use of language to guide and reassure their child, self recognition is much more difficult.
Let's take the example of a gorillas family: Adult males see their reflection as a stranger come to seize his females. Young animals, on the other hand, see their reflection as a friend and companion. They don't hesitate to touch the surface of the mirror or reach behind the mirror in an effort to touch the image. Rebekah, a young student of Professor Jim Anderson, of the University of Sterling in Scotland, concluded her researched, based on our videos of a young male gorilla in front of our mirrors by stating, “this gorilla has demonstrated the ability to recognise himself.” Translated by Robin Alcorn
In felines, while lions are programmed to live in large family groups (pride), male leopards are genetically programmed to live alone, to live without any female (except during mating periods) and without their own offspring and therefore to be single throughout his life. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He occupies a territory that overlaps a few smaller female territories. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend, any lifepartner. These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them This male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. This leopard was clearly drawn to and interested in the mirror, rubs himself on the mirror because may be a female leopard in estrus did it earlier leaving her scent? He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain: • Leopard’s sawing call,...
For leopard fanatics, (Panthera pardus and not Panthera onca (jaguar) only found on the American continent where no elephants are found on this continent) I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM
• Gabon' Jungle: Elephan...
Also a second short version taken by another trap camera of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, have already been published on my channel, • In the Gabonese jungle...
On our KZhead channel kzhead.info... are published more than 180 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description in english attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
"Confused"! "Upset"! "Stressed out"! "Poor animals"! Come on people. These animals encounter other opponents in the jungle constantly. And those opponents (or prey) have actual claws, fangs, tusks, and horns to fight back with and shed blood. They fight or they flee or both. My gosh, they fight amongst themselves within their own herds and prides regardless of species for food, status and territory and one or both might die in those encounters. Now that would be real stress. I am betting not one creature in all these years of study have fought their mirror image to the death attempting to establish dominance. And I'm absolutely sure none of them retreated to call a therapist to say they've been emotionally traumatized by their strange confrontation. Humans are the species that look in the mirror everyday and fail to recognize themselves or are dissatisfied with the image looking back. Humans are the species with REAL meltdowns in front of their mirrors. Poor humans. Good job Xavier.
Yawwwn yawwwn yawwwn
Blah blah blah
@TheTibetyak *_WHAT A BIG COMMENT! Its content, perfectly written, is a great help against all the opponents of our mirrors._* Do you allow me to use it to reply to their next comment? Its a great reward for my wife Anne-Marie, my friend Michel and me. We are not comfortably sitting in our armchairs, to publish without any description, pieces of videos copied from the Internet and put end to end. But we maintain our trap cameras facing huge mirrors set up in a remote area of the Gabonese virgin forest and collect their memory card. Then we do the editing with for each one a description in English which is not our native language and then put them online to show the beauty of Gabonese fauna, talk about poachers, show how elephants who have managed to get away from a wire snare trap, treat the deep cut made by this trap, show how elephants pick mangos, self recognition in mirrors that is not innate both among humans than among primates and other mammals and so on... Keep watching the other videos on my channel kzhead.infovideos Please read the description attached to each of my videos!
@@XHB06400CANNES - Thank you so much for the reply Xavier. Absolutely feel free to use any or all of it. I saw that my comment failed to resonate with a couple of people who gave me some big yawns. I deeply appreciate the work you, Annie-Marie and Michel perform and THEN going to the trouble to translate it into English... that is alot of effort. Many thanks.
@@TheTibetyak Merci beaucoup for your help.
Leopard: ''Hmmm, wow, Im so hot!'' Elephant: ''WAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH''
😂😂😂
Lol Yaar 😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
"OH NO, HE'S HOOOT"
😂🤣
I love how the leopard goes from trying to kill his reflection to making out with it
Me when I go from drunk to reallyyyyyy drunk
Average uk resident
The leopard never realized how handsome it was until it saw itself in the mirror.
My life
Anpadh .. this is jaguar not leopard
@@RajeshSharma-ks1vb If you click on "see more" at the top and read through the description of the video, you will see that it is a leopard. "For leopard fanatics, (Panthera pardus) and not Panthera onca (jaguar) only found on the American continent where no elephants are found on this continent)." This video was made in Gabon, which is in Africa, and jaguars (the big cats, not the sports cars that they inspired) are found in South America. In response to someone else, the scientist added, "The jaguar looks like a leopard, but it is more massive and has a wider head. Its tail is shorter. The spots (rosettes or eye-spots) on its coat are not completely empty because there are small black spots inside. In the leopard these black-edged spots are empty on the inside and only very exceptionally contain a black point."
@@RajeshSharma-ks1vb Chutiya hain kya? South America mein Elephant kaise ayi genius?
@@RajeshSharma-ks1vb easier to say it's a big cat
Damn he fell in love with himself. Talk about a narcissist
It'ss leopard.. . I can understand that
10/10 username
@@eyeconqueror1185 lol
If “fell in love” means ‘wants to kill’, yeah sure. He really ‘loved’ himself.
Dude stop working out, your arms might explode.😆
Didn’t realize until now how freaking loud elephants are.
Exactly
It says rip headphone users in the description lol
I wasn’t wearing headphones ;=;
Bruh my grandpa had a male one it was huge
Elephants must put the fear in other animals.
Leopard: “This guy knows my every move. A worthy opponent.” “Oh sh*t elephants. I’ll come back for this lil multiverse motherf*cka later.”
Haha! It is always so crazy every time we see big big African cat be scared of anything - it’s easy to forget that they can still get f’d up by certain animals too.
"My god. His stance is perfect. There are no openings, just layers of feints upon feints. This guy is dangerous."
*starts kissing his own reflection*
The big cat looks like it's only a few steps from acquiring self-recognition.
*In animals as in humans, self recognition in a mirror is not innate. It is the result of the more comfortable training in the mirror at home among young humans in the company of their parents who have done this training and who have the words to explain to their young child the properties of the mirror. Among primates, éléphants and felids, in the insecurity of the jungle learning with his parents who have not done this and who do not speak, this is much more difficult even for intelligent individuals.* *To date: only Humans, Orangutans, Chimpanzees, Bonobos, Gorillas (blackback), Rhesus Macaques, Bottlenose Dolphins, Asian Elephants, Orcas, Grey parrots (African/Gabon grey Parrots) and Magpies have shown the ability to recognize their own reflections after an even long training in the mirror for some ones.* Three asian elephants in captivity at the Bronx Zoo in New York were standing in front of an huge mirror with each one two crosses just been drawn on their forehead. A white cross and a colorless cross. A only one named Happy, has touched with her trunk repeatedly the painted white cross but ignored the other colorless painted cross. The test failed with the other two. *No African elephant has so far passed the self recognition test in a mirror. No cat as leopard, tiger or homecat, no dog passed this test.* Please read the description attached to each of my 160 videos published on my KZhead channel you will know very interesting informations about animals reactions front of my mirrors in the jungle kzhead.infovideos
i think the leopard was lonely and finally saw one of his kind or atleast thought it was a different leopard and try to play. I only say this because leopards are endangered and rarely in big packs.
@@lowkeytrippy1833 *Leopards are genetically programmed to live alone. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend. These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them this male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 160 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
@@TheVesylum *To date: only Humans, Orangutans, Chimpanzees, Bonobos, Gorillas (blackback), Rhesus Macaques, Bottlenose Dolphins, Asian Elephants, Orcas, Grey parrots (African/Gabon grey Parrots) and Magpies have shown the ability to recognize their own reflections after an even long training in the mirror for some ones.* *No African elephant has so far passed the self recognition test in a mirror. No cat as leopard, tiger or homecat, no dog passed this test.* Please read the description attached to each of my 160 videos published on my KZhead channel you will know very interesting informations about animals reactions front of my mirrors in the jungle kzhead.infovideos
@@XHB06400CANNES My blue neck-ringed parrot recognizes himself in the mirror.
He must be so embarrassed knowing this video leaked on youtube 🤣
Lol
*g r o w l*
He will be like- ye mera mirror hai aur ye mai hoon aur yaha meri " pawri" horahi hai
First he needs 10 years of studying to understand out what KZhead is
@@theonlybigsmoke he is just kidding... chill big smoke
everyone in the comments complaining about the mirror stressing out the animals and being cruel is overreacting these animals arent stupid, after 30 minutes of posturing and slapping the mirror they will realize its no threat and go about their day like any other new, strange thing. ( ex: trash or pollution, which is a much more pressing matter than mirrors in the forest they are not confined to the 10ft shot of the camera nor are the animals forced to walk infront of this mirror. There are many other videos of animals peacefully admiring themselves in the mirror in their free time too.
I’m a huge animal lover and you are completely right this is a choice for them to explore the mirror think outside the box for a lil bit then there all on there way unharmed and happy to be free
I totally understand that leopard. What could be more beautiful than me.
Leopard be like: this guy have skills
GREETINGS FROM RUSSIA
"Damn, whos that stud looking at me in the mirror?"
Nah bro more like: "finally a worthy opponent our battle will LEGENDARY
@@production9574 ikjjennwxdasjjjsjgrrdhjeedp
Lamo 🤣
Leopard finally found somebody who understands him
.
.
.
.
Pretty sad honestly🤣
RIP headphone users when Elephants appear
*The first line of my attached description to this video:* 𝐑.𝐈.𝐏. 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐩𝐡𝐨𝐧𝐞 𝐔𝐬𝐞𝐫𝐬 Description English/French: The warning 𝐑.𝐈.𝐏. 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐩𝐡𝐨𝐧𝐞 𝐔𝐬𝐞𝐫𝐬 is well mentioned under its thumbnail image but unfortunately it is not possible to increase the size of the font. Keep watching my videos (180 pieces) that I put online on my channel and read the description attached to each one of them. You will know very interesting explanations about animals reactions front of my mirrors in the jungle : kzhead.infovideos
I love how the leopard ends up rubbing its face on the end of the mirror as if to say: “wow! I love me! I really love me!”
that leopard in the beginning was like, how this dude know all my moves?
😃😂😂😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
That's exactly what I said when I saw this lmao
The Elephants are bullies. My man is just checking himself out.
Elephant sounds like karens when they scream
Leopard: good they left, now back to more important things, like myself
The elephants came in like a swat team
How cute were the two little ones with their ears up? 😆
In his defense, he is quite a beautiful leopard.
For leopard fanatics, I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html Also a second short version taken by another trap camera of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, have already been published on my channel, kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 130 videos shot by our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection
1:54 "It won't fight me, maybe it'll make out with me?!"
This is like the Albert Einstein of jungle cats trying to figure out how this works and you call him a narcissist. You're the one that put the mirror there.
You must be fun to hang out with
This ain't that deep bruv 💀💀
@@han_xiao4280 can't it be both? It's funny that the big jungle ultra killer cat does funny things with the mirror. It's also pretty interesting that the elephants didn't seem to care at all, when they're touted as having great memories, sense of space, and emotional connections to other animals. Do they just not care as they recognize it as probably useless? Do they understand it's a reflection like water? Then this cat is just completely enthralled, probably because it isn't as smart as the elephants. Does it stress it thinking there's a competitor? Does it understand that it's a reflection eventually? It's fascinating on a deeper level. Things can be silly and interesting. You should never hate on curiosity, or miss a chance to chuckle.
Leopard be like: *....so u wanna fight??.. aight BE PREPARE- oH swHit!! Wait a minute...* *you handsome who are u;)*
Jeonmafuyu_ Alien LOL
I like how at first they're ready to fight their reflection and by the end they're basically making out.
Imagine how much simpler life would be if we could asexually procreate.
This is the prime form of entertainment for me as it seems i fell in a huge rabbit hole of animals looking at their reflections ngl
Same atm
"I love my self" -Leopard
Look likes he fell in love with... himself)
In felines, lions are genetically programmed to live in a pride while *_leopards males as females are genetically programmed to live alone._* Lone lions are males who have been driven from the pride. These mirrors break a certain sameness in life in the rain forest. Front of them this male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival. To mate he must call female in heat living in or around his domain. Watch that call: "sawing call", a guttural sound to invite females in heat and warn rival males to keep out: kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html Please do not forget to read the description attached to each of our 160 videos published on our channel kzhead.infovideos
the leopard: "Mirror mirror on the ground, am I the most fearsome beast all around?" :)
The elephant: no I'm the most handsome beast around
I just love the idea of animals being so confused how their enemy in the mirror is prediction and countering every single move they make.
The leopard was looking at the mirror like “I feel like this guy gets me.”
I swear we all got this in our recommended like 30 minutes ago
Did you like my 4-year-old video recommended by KZhead? If so, on my side, I recommend that you watch our channel kzhead.infovideos (38 million views, 53,000 subscribers) with more than 120 videos (including 24 videos with more than 100,000 views each and one video with more than 12.9 million views), videos made and edited by me. With my wife and a friend Michel, we installed six large mirrors in a remote area of the Gabonese forest. In this uncontrolled and natural environment, multiple cameras were placed in front of each mirror to be able to film the animals' reactions to their reflection from different angles and at different distances. After each viewing, don't forget to click on the "show more" option, I attach a description to each of our videos to learn more about how animals react to their own reflection in mirrors placed in their jungle. I would like to point out that these wild animals, in complete freedom (neither in a zoo nor in an animal reserve), can go to these mirrors, as they see fit and stay in front, as long as they wish.
Elephants: we have a army Leopard: i have a mirror
The leopard is justified to admire his impressive image!
That initial shriek of the elephant is straight out of a horror movie. It scared me a lot.
Multiplied by the fact that the constant menacing low growl of the cat builds up enough tension beforehand!
He’s learned one of the most important lessons in life. Love yourself
Wow that's so cool! I didn't know there were naturally occurring mirrors like that in the jungle
On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 100 videos shot by our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them shows encounters of wild animals with one of our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection
Xavier HUBERT-BRIERRE woosh
Hilarious
That feeling when you're minding your own business, squaring off with your reflection, and 4 elephants run up on you.
1:48 omg such a handsome guy!
Or beautiful girl
This leopard reminds me of people at my local gym. They spend more time looking at their reflection than doing bloody exercise.
ROFLMAO
Leopard never knew he was so gorgeous
Maybe looking for a mate
"Narcissistic leopard" 😂😂😂
I like how the elephants kick the leopard off of the mirror, only so they can run around + scream at it.
He is probably *trying to understand how it works.* Human children do that, when they see the mirror for the first time.
..hh
Hhhhhhhh
dolphins know right away
8
لافا
Who’s in bed browsing KZhead
Tethius it’s literally 1:00 am for me. Tf am I doing with my life?
Jayy Boone same man same
Ya mee
Lmao 😂✋🏻
🇫🇷
This has to be the most fascinating and intriguing wildlife footage I've ever seen ! I could watch the leopards reactions all day 😍
*This will be the most fascinating and intriguing wildlife footage you have ever seen* ! I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html Or a second short version shooted with an other trap cameras of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, has been already been published kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html And a video front of a different mirror kzhead.info/sun/gch9YdOma3pvpqs/bejne.html In felines, lions are genetically programmed to live in a pride while leopards are genetically programmed to live alone. Lone lions are males who have been driven from the pride. Leopard is lone animal. So this male leopard doesn't feel alone. He only wants to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell! He dont search an odourless mate because to invite the females in heat, he just has to make a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain: kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html Don't forget to read the description attached to each of our 180 videos published on our channel : kzhead.infovideos
Watched this at work w my ear buds in… that first elephant scream almost blew my eardrums out
same 💀
this Leopard sounds like he is powered by V12 engine
His fur don't look like a jaguar ones but his sound is similar to the exhaust from a V12 engine. Listen to another leopard sound similar to the exhaust from a KTM bike that having trouble starting: a guttural sound (produced at the back of the throat) to invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars called "sawing", because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw : kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 160 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
I live in the southern United States we have a 36000 acre bird sanctuary near our home I was walking on one of the trails when I heard someone weed eating with a gas trimmer. I thought who is weed eating so far out here. Then I saw her a mother linx with about 4 young. I swear she sounded like a gas weedeater when she growled needless to say I backed out of there keeping an eye on Mom. Biggest cat I ever seen
V4, V6, V8, and v12's can all sound like that!!
It sounds like the crackle of a V12 engine in a Ferarri 812.
He's like "I wanna beat him, but his moves are just too good...."
Lol 😂
Leopard sounds like a nice V-8 with headers and a flow master!
*Right! Leopard sounds, some are similar to the exhaust from a Jag V8, others similar to the exhaust from a KTM bike that having trouble starting and a guttural sound (produced at the back of the throat) to invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars called "sawing", because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
What a mean elephant. That narcissist Leopard just enjoy himself in the mirror and do no harm 😑
*In felines, while lions are programmed to live in large family groups (pride), male leopards are genetically programmed to live alone, to live without any female (except during mating periods) and without their own offspring and therefore to be single throughout his life. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He occupies a territory that overlaps a few smaller female territories. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend, any lifepartner. **_"This male leopard is not in love with his own image reflected in a mirror in the jungle as Narcissus, an impossibly handsome figure from Greek mythology, fell in love with his own image reflected in a pool of water."_** These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them This male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. Or maybe this male rubs himself on the mirror because a female leopard in estrus did it earlier leaving her scent? He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description in english attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
Elephants came in yellin "Gang Gang muffucka"
Who knew elephants screeched like they're using a xboxlive microphone
"He is reading every moves of mine. Finally a worth opponent"
Always carry a large mirror in the jungle for your personal safety
The leopard making out with himself was the funniest thing I've ever seen today Lmao
Más que gracioso es triste...
cats are always the most curious
For leopard fanatics, I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html Also a second short version taken by another trap camera of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, have already been published on my channel, kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html Listen to another leopard sound similar to that of a KTM bike that having trouble starting: a guttural sound (produced at the back of the throat) to invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars called "sawing", because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw : kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 150 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
The leopard was enjoying the mirror I think, he was definitely fascinated by it 😂🐆😂 The poor elephants 🐘🐘🐘🐘🐘 were afraid of their own reflection, I love how they let known their arrival 🎺 what magnificent animals 💙🖤💙🖤💙
Leopard: who is this beautifull guy? Well, ofc its me
Most here are not interpreting this correctly. Cats cannot identify themselves in a mirror. This Leopard thought it was another cat, then realized it wasn't offensive (with a touch of confusion I would imagine) and then looked for affection from the mirror image. Elephants in fact CAN identify themselves in a mirror. Not many animals outside of humans can do this.
1:56 kids practicing their first kiss be like
Ахах я понял о чем ты
😄
😅
He couldn’t see himself at that timestamp🤦🏼
@Fahmi ridho ur lying i think
"My compliments to you other leopard sir. You are my equal in most every maneuver. Most impressive"!
“So Handsome ,So Fierce , Who Left You Out Here All By Yourself” -Leopard
He has never seen such a formidable opponent
Leopard just looks like he's lonely and wants a mate. 😔
In felids, lions are genetically programmed to live in large family groups (prides), while leopards are genetically programmed to live alone. So this male leopard doesn't feel alone. He doesn't need any companions. He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he makes a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain: kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 160 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
Homie fell in love with himself
When the elephants came in with that noise my blood ran cold! 😳
Why the heck is KZhead suddenly recommending this 5 year-old video to everyone around the globe?
Because theres millions of videos uploaded on here and they dont know every single video out there immediately?
Man, elephants are scary...
yes....😵
0:31 sounds like my mother n law
LMAOOO
What do you do when she invades your house??
@@tigeruealexander5097 hope the fridge has enough food to keep her occupied
@@graygunter698: LOL🤣
leopard is like the people who save themselves as a wallpaper in the phone
The leopard is falling in love with himself
In felines, lions are genetically programmed to live in a pride while leopards are genetically programmed to live alone. Lone lions are males who have been driven from the pride. Leopard is lone animal. So this male leopard doesn't feel alone. He only wants to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell! He dont search an odourless mate because to invite the females in heat, he just has to make a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain: kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html He can even spend the night in front of a mirror by checking from time to time for the presence of his reflection in the mirror. At that time this leopard is still in love with himself: watch this video kzhead.info/sun/Y96PetCdqomNkqs/bejne.html on which the time stamp mentions the recent date of 04/17/2019 (In the Gabon jungle, a leopard in love with his reflection stays stuck to the mirror for 3 full days). For leopard fanatics, I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html Also a second short version taken by another trap camera of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, have already been published kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html Don't forget to read the description attached to each of our 160 videos published on our channel : kzhead.infovideos
@@XHB06400CANNES doesn't get the joke
Imagine sleeping alone in the jungle at night and hearing all those sounds around you in utter darkness.... That was the life of our ancestors
Bryson Contreras yes. terrifying existence amongst all of those wild mirrors
The leopard can't decide whether it should fight the reflection or make love to it!!
*To invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars, guttural sounds (produced at the back of the throat) called "sawing" because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
@@XHB06400CANNES we're not asking but thanks
@@balajiedlyngdoh8366 *_A comment like yours is a great moral booster after reading comments calling for the dismantling of these cruel mirrors!_* *Your feedback on my videos encourages us to pursue our overwhelming and somewhat dangerous passion. It is a great reward for my wife Anne-Marie, my friend Michel and me. As you may have noticed we are not comfortably sitting in our armchairs, to publish without any description, pieces of videos copied from the Internet and put end to end. But we maintain our mirrors and numerous cameras traps, to change the SD, batteries, to clean the objectives, to remove the fallen branches in their field of vision, to go up on foot the bed of the marigots to find zones of crossing of animals to install new traps there etc... Drenched by tornadoes, the body covered with insect bites of all kinds (horseflies, gorilla flies, tsetse, black ants, magnan ants etc.) and unfortunately the number of cameras refusing to work increases because of the humidity rate of 95%. Then we do the editing of the videos and write a long description in English which is not our native language (french) and then put them online to show the beauty of Gabonese fauna, talk about poachers, show how elephants who have managed to get away from a wire snare trap, treat the deep cut made by this trap, show how elephants pick mangos, self recognition in mirrors that is not innate both among humans than among primates and other mammals and so on... and answer to numerous comments posted on my channel* It's a choice.. Watch more of my 180 videos published on my channel kzhead.infovideos and read the description attached to each of them. You will find very interesting information about the reactions of the animals in front of my mirrors in the gabonese jungle: Good vision!
Leopard goes from growl to purr to growl when looking at itself. Same leopard. Same.
*Leopards produce a number of vocalizations, including growls, snarls, meows and purrs. To invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars, guttural sounds (produced at the back of the throat) called "sawing" because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
That leopard instantly falls in love with himself. 🤩
In felines, lions are genetically programmed to live in a pride while leopards are genetically programmed to live alone. Lone lions are males who have been driven from the group. Leopard is lone animal. His behaviour changes from one minute to the next, from contemplation of his reflection, from a desire for company to a desire to fight with a rival and then to a desire to mate. He can even spend the night in front of a mirror by checking from time to time for the presence of his reflection in the mirror. At that time this leopard is still in love with himself: watch this video kzhead.info/sun/Y96PetCdqomNkqs/bejne.html on which the time stamp mentions the recent date of 04/17/2019 (In the Gabon jungle, a leopard in love with his reflection stays stuck to the mirror for 3 full days). For leopard fanatics, I publish a 19-minutes long video containing all the leopard's trap camera shots (assembled end to end) in front of this mirror from 13 PM before his meeting with elephants, during the face to face and after until he left the mirror at 23PM kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html Also a second short version taken by another trap camera of a different brands and under slightly different angle of view, have already been published kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html Don't forget to read the description attached to each of our 150 videos published on our channel : kzhead.infovideos
Plot twist: Mirrors are considered as drugs in the forest laws and the Elephants are Cops
You gotta give the leopard credit. It was curious about this strange other cat and wanted answers. Lol. You could almost see him trying to work it out.
This is amazing! that beautiful Leopard loves his reflection haha and those elephants ... wow just so amazing to see, thank you.
Uploaded: 3 years ago Comments: 10 minutes ago
Still
this KZhead algorithm i tell ya...
@KZhead Algorithm you unpredictable bastard
2:00 fell in love with itself
*In felines, while lions are programmed to live in large family groups (pride), male leopards are genetically programmed to live alone, to live without any female (except during mating periods) and without their own offspring and therefore to be single throughout his life. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He occupies a territory that overlaps a few smaller female territories. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend, any lifepartner. **_"This male leopard is not in love with his own image reflected in a mirror in the jungle as Narcissus, an impossibly handsome figure from Greek mythology, fell in love with his own image reflected in a pool of water."_** These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them This male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. Or maybe this male rubs himself on the mirror because a female leopard in estrus did it earlier leaving her scent? He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description in english attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
I remember being a toddler and getting scared of a full body mirror I actually thought it was another toddler looking back at me and I remember it taking time touching and trying to grab and having my every move copied before I realized it was me. I can relate to the jaguar. Just imagine if a fully grown adult human never saw their reflection I'm thinking it would be just as funny to see
*I saw a scene where white explorers meeting a Papuan tribe shot a polaroid photo of a man and a woman side by side: Both of them recognized the other and didn't want to admit to being the second person in the photo because each didn't know what he looked like, having never seen himself!* *In the following video **kzhead.info/sun/lqtxZ6yZoIFvjKs/bejne.html** , an excerpt from the report of the French director Jean-Pierre Dutilleux on a first contact with the Toulambis tribe in Papua New Guinea shows adult dads who were afraid to see themselves in a mirror, but who after a few minutes understood the reflective properties of this object. Compared to the silverback gorilla alone facing his reflection in a very large mirror, avoiding direct eye contact with it, or with a chimpanzee group all together front of a mirror, it was easier for these Papuans, endowed with speech, standing in the middle of their quiet tribe, in front of a very small mirror with a white one that shows its reflective property, to understand, their reflection through the comments of other tribe members.* Check out more of my 180 homemade videos from my channel and don't forget to read the description attached to each of them, you will find very interesting information. kzhead.infovideos Good vision!
Got the leopard questioning it’s own existence 😂
This...is exactly what youtube was created to provide. Who would have thought putting a mirror and camera in the wilds and just watching animals react would be so damn interesting? Who would have thought it would instantly create such chaos?
Mr Hold Button I am watching this on godtube.
Leo looks and sounds stunning
*Leopards produce a number of vocalizations, including growls, snarls, meows and purrs. To invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars, guttural sounds (produced at the back of the throat) called "sawing" because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
1:42 Leopard: “I’m too sexy for my paws, too sexy for my print, too sexy babaaay…”
Did this just pop into everyone’s recommended at the same time?
you uncultured swine yep
2:00 Definition of *Loving yourself*
The leopard sure is a gorgeous creature. Slow-witted but gorgeous.
*For leopard fanatics, I publish many videos of these felines:* kzhead.info/sun/lL2kdpxsZJOagqc/bejne.html a 19 minutes video containing all the shots (assembled end to end) in front of this feline's mirror from 1:00 pm, time of his arrival before his encounter with the elephants, during the face to face and afterwards, until his departure from the mirror at 11:00 kzhead.info/sun/iL56f8Nobnmahqs/bejne.html and kzhead.info/sun/p8WoeqiQkYOuaKs/bejne.html two short versions taken by camera traps of a different brand and from a slightly different angle of view. kzhead.info/sun/gch9YdOma3pvpqs/bejne.html a night face to face leopard/elephants kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html a video showing how, this solitary feline calls the oestrus females of his domain when he wants to copulate and kzhead.info/sun/fbWNaNODqJSEdX0/bejne.html a video of one of his matings. kzhead.info/sun/dLKBXZSceIGVnq8/bejne.html A young leopard plays with its mirror reflection under the control of its mother in the jungle. kzhead.info/sun/d5F6kdZxiWeglZE/bejne.html Leopards VS mirror - 3 years later the same mother with her new cub (identification demonstrated in clip) kzhead.info/sun/lsNuYJuIZHabnJ8/bejne.html leopard: mirror learning does not progress kzhead.info/sun/palpgbaeaaKgpJ8/bejne.html What a great seducer! and so on. Please read the description attached to each of my videos published on my KZhead channel you will know very interesting informations about animals reactions front of my mirrors in the jungle kzhead.infovideos
Elephants really walk around like with no fucks given
The leopard sounds like a V10 engine or maybe a Mustang 🙂
His fur don't look like a jaguar ones but his sound is similar to the exhaust from a Jag V8. Listen to another leopard sound similar to the exhaust from a KTM bike that having trouble starting: a guttural sound (produced at the back of the throat) to invite females in heat for mating and to warn rival males to keep out, male leopards emit a repeated sequence of roars called "sawing", because it sounds like a wood plank being cut with a saw : kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 160 videos capture with our trap cameras in the jungle in Gabon. A majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After each watching do not forget to read the description attached to each one to learn more about the behaviour of animals in front of their reflection.
Lol🤣🤣
@@XHB06400CANNES dude you wrote 10marks worth of essay can i use it in my exam, hope teacher will not give me a copyright
Mustangs are trash
@@recipoldinasty if you can't buy one lol
0:49 TRUMPET GANG BIAAAATTTCCHHH!!!!!!!!
Leopard seems to like the mirror. He found his friend inside the mirror.
*In felines, while lions are programmed to live in large family groups (pride), male leopards are genetically programmed to live alone, to live without any female (except during mating periods) and without their own offspring and therefore to be single throughout his life. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He occupies a territory that overlaps a few smaller female territories. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend, any lifepartner. These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them This male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. Or maybe this male rubs himself on the mirror because a female leopard in estrus did it earlier leaving her scent? He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description in english attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
Leopard behaves in exactly the same way to a mirror as my cat does ,just too funny to see a big cat doing the exact same set of moves .😂😂
Leopard “I don’t like that guy BUT damn is he handsome “
That leopard sounds like an idling V8 with a straight pipe
TJ And that other leopard sound is ????? "sawing call", a guttural sound to invite females in heat and warn rival males to keep out: kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html Please do not forget to read the description attached to each of our 100 videos published on our channel kzhead.infovideos
He seems to have fallen in love with his own reflection. Apparently has not read the Ancient Greek tale of narcissus.
What is the story of Narcissus? A young man of Greek mythology, gifted with great beauty. Driven by thirst, Narcissus caught his reflection in the water of a spring and fell in love with it; he let himself die of languor; the flower that grew on the spot where he died bears his name. *In felines, while lions are programmed to live in large family groups (pride), male leopards are genetically programmed to live alone, to live without any female (except during mating periods) and without their own offspring and therefore to be single throughout his life. So this male leopard is a solitary and territorial animal. He occupies a territory that overlaps a few smaller female territories. He doesn't feel alone and dont search an odourless mate. He doesn't need any friend, any lifepartner. These mirrors break a certain sameness in his life in the rain forest. Front of them This male leopard behaviour changes from one minute to the next, of desire for company, of desire to fight with a rival, an intruder in his territory who strangely has no smell and is mute. Or maybe this male rubs himself on the mirror because a female leopard in estrus did it earlier leaving her scent? He only meets females during the mating season. To invite the females in heat, he emits a guttural sound called " sawing call ". This call also warns rival males not to enter his domain:* kzhead.info/sun/hbCuo5iai4mwmYU/bejne.html On our KZhead channel kzhead.infovideos are published more than 180 videos captured by our trap cameras fixed in the Gabon jungle. The majority of them show encounters of wild animals with our 6 large mirrors. After watching each of our videos, don't forget to read the description in english attached to learn more about the behaviour of the animals in front of their reflection.
@@XHB06400CANNES 👍🏻