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Twitter: / stephaniesamma
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Credits:
Narrator/Writer: Stephanie Sammann
Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.net/dylanhennessy1)
Illustrator/Animator: Kirtan Patel (kpatart.com/illustrations)
Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraphics.com/)
Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net)
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster ( / forgottentowel )
Producer: Brian McManus ( / realengineering )
Imagery courtesy of Getty Images
Additional Footage
Mulligans Flat Woodland Sanctuary
Queensland State Archives
Dmitry Konovalov
Music:
The Ghost by Martin Puehringer
Monster from the Deep by Young Rich Pixies
Organism by Roie Shpigler
Agitated Swords by Marco Martini
John James by Steve Poloni
Heart by Roman P
In Orbit by Ian Post
Chaplin--scene-2 by Maya Belsitzman, Matan Ephrat
Secret Pathways by Ardie Son
Wandering Caterpillar--scene-1 by Maya Belsitzman, Matan Ephrat
Warts 'n All (The Cane Toad) by Don Spencer
Climbing by Nbdy Nprtnt
References:
[1] www.nma.gov.au/defining-momen...
[2]
[3] www.sciencedirect.com/topics/...
[4] www.newscientist.com/article/...
[5]sci-hub.se/www.scienc...
[6] royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
[7] www.publish.csiro.au/AM/AM19016
[8] www.nature.com/articles/439803a
[9] www.nature.com/news/2006/0602....
[10] www.nature.com/articles/d4158...
[11] www.pnas.org/content/118/35/e...
[12] royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
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Hey @Real Science, I think you have mistakenly used toad photo as a thumbnail. I know you know it is human.
FIRST KILL THAT PEOPLE WHO GAVE THIS FOOLISH ADVICE TO AUTHORTIES THAT TO KILL WORM BRING FROG
It was unreasonable. Known as crime. Get therapy considering..
Lemme git mah shtick.
As someone studying biology I absoloutely adore canetoads you're doing a really excellent job at explaining all these lovely creatures.
Wait, so you're telling me.....they are literally turning the fricking frogs gay?
like that other invasive species taking over all of the earth...what were they called again?
@@nameless1016 hmmmm it’s on the tip of my tongue 🤔
Lol
precisely Brian
That was a real problem related to chemical dumping. Alex Jones just made it look crazy.
"All of this because of this stupid, ugly toad" i laughed way more than i should have
Yeah a low blow 😭
I heard that tooo
Yeah, should have said the stupid asshole humans who introduced it. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and i'm sure the female toads find the males very attractive.
i feel the intensity and anger hahaj
I laughed at it too
You know the toad disaster is bad where the DEATH ADDER is going endanger.
fun fact: Recent observations found bin chickens (ibises) using a method of wash, rinse, repeat (and then swallow whole) in order to eat the cane toads safely. Cane toads may be dangerous but Australia's wildlife always find a way to be more.
I watched this documentary too back in high-school. I still distinctly remember the popping sounds the cane toads made when run over. I'm surprised that it's such an iconic part of science education even outside of Australia.
Pop!
yuck
It's an important example of what nations SHOULD NEVER do, that it is included in almost every curricula.
Yeah it sounded the same as a kid jumping on his juicebox (popper) during recess.
We kill them with golf clubs on Queensland. They definitely pop from a good strike
Okay, Australia isn't allowed to have any more new animals. It's obvious everything just gets faster and deadlier there.
As an Australian, I agree. No more underland beasts aloud.
Agreed. Especially cheetahs. They're already fast and deadly enough.
@@gebali I don't see the Cheetah evolving to become more dangerous in Australia. I think they would fair better in Australia as they are now instead of Africa. No need for more bulk. No lions or hyenas or any land predator that can oppose them. Their speed is enough as it is. they hunt things that are faster and more agile than kangaroos (not red kangaroo) and emus (my guess on what their largest sized preys will be) and they won't have to defend it from lions and hyenas.
When humans are sheeple to a feral animal (horses at Kosciusko for example) they hate everyone who is humane because starving=humane when it's cruel. We have a neighbour starting a breeding program, they get fed.
Australia is freaking brilliant with ecological shenanigans. The emu war, Macquarie Island, cane toads... I think living in a land where everything is out to kill them, makes them crave biological chaos.
As someone studying biology I absoloutely adore canetoads you're doing a really excellent job at explaining all these lovely creatures.
This is the best segue into a sponsor I have ever seen. Not forced at all. Actually amusing making me want to do what she says to do. I'm a severe cynic so that is extremely rare. Kudos!
I agree! That was amongst the most awesome of transitions into an advertisement I have ever seen or heard.
Cane toads and the gene shredder program remind me of the krogan from the Mass Effect video game series. A very aggressive and fast reproducing species was uplifted to fight a galactic invasion, and after they won the war they started reproducing out of control. Eventually the other species deployed a sterility plague which meant the majority of females are infertile, keeping their reproductive rate more in line with the other species.
Hahaha, what a comparison! I always found the krogan too talkative and easy-going, giving their history, plus their aspect.
At least the Krogans got results. In this case, the Cane toad didnt even do what the Australians wanted them to do....reduce the cane beetle population. They got transported here for nothing lol.
Genophage
@@BattleToads1990 why r u going against ur same species,Mr.toad?
That was the first thing that came to my mind too
By 2050, Australia will either be toad-free or overrun by genetically engineered truck-sized mega toads. Either I'm excited to see it.
Not a good news for people with Ranidaphobia
its fine. there will be new adventure hunting tourism then
“Mad Max… Beyond Thundercroak!”
I grew up in far north Queensland as a boy, the LZ of the cane Toad... this is an informative video, but I can add a little more information. There is a little monitor lizard that has reached the endangered list because it sees the toad as a frog that is a normal part of its diet, also this little monitor is the ONLY animal to predate on the largest and most aggressive of the crocodiles, the "Saltwater crocodile" this little monitor will sneak into a crocs nest and steal eggs when the parent is off feeding... So now without a reduction in the crocs clutch, all the babies are hatching, this has in turn caused a boost in croc numbers...
This is one of the most interesting nature videos I've ever watched about predatory animals. I've never even heard of the Cane Toad or most of the predators mentioned. This video was so fascinating, that I subscribed to this channel, something I hardly ever do. But one thing I have noticed about living organisms on this planet, nature generally finds a way to restore equilibrium, it may take decades, but it happens. BTW-thanks for putting the advertisement at the end of the video.
Cane toads aren't so bad really. Native fauna does suffer short term but it rebounds fast. On the other hand, our so-called "growth" and development leaves no survivors aside from humans and domestic pets.
i remember every summer growing up in queensland my family would have to cull the toads. they hunt at night so we would use lamps to attract moths which in turn attracted an army of toads emrerging from their burrows. culling is such a strange feeling. you are taking a life to save many other lives but its not their fault they are good at surviving.
Your taking many lives to save more lives
If anything it's the humans fault for placing them where they didn't belong
Sounds like a perfect target practice for a. 22 long rifle.
Nope, it's not a moral issue
Disgusting
Bees have caused problems in some regions. For example, in Mexico it has led to the decline of endemic bees, who don’t have stings (they actually look like oversized flies) and thus have a hard time competing against their overseas cousins
Wow, that's interesting. Australia has many native bee species includind a small stingless species. But the stingless species are doing fine because they polinate different kinds of flowers. Smaller flowers.
Yeah, and humans have f@cked up pretty everywhere they went.
good job, nice sounds, scenerio and editing^^
Thank you for the recent info? on these monsters. I live in Florida and they are hated here by many! Please can you do a video of how to rid them of your yard? They are so hard to kill.
Water pistol full of Dettol or an air rifle!
As someone studying biology I absoloutely adore this channel, you're doing a really excellent job at explaining all these interesting concepts.
There is now a genetic technology that is being used on invasive fish species in the USA. Essentially they genetically engineer males in the invasive species that have two Y chromosomes. This means when they mate they produce all male offspring including 50% YY males. Eventually the number of females in the population fall to such low levels that the invasive species dies out. This might be adapted to get rid of other invasive species, including Cane Toads in Australia.
Their impact on humans: trophic cascade. They have removed other predators and thus the number of granivores birds have multiplied in Australia. Granivores birds eat grains. So very bad for crop production in Australia.
Except for the whole toad "venom" thing. Does no one else cringe everytime she says toad venom?
Why would you 😂when she talks bad about the toad when it’s who’s fault ? The Australian governments .
Isn't her voice just adorable lol young, yet knowledgeable. I love it. Keeps me interested.
As a kid, Detol in a water-gun did the trick of killing a toad, the smell the next day was horrendous clearing the yard of dead toads. Toads will actively avoid car tires at the last second, they've become masters of avoiding cars on the road now.
What if we make tires smell like cane toads?
What if we make tires bigger?
That is the exact opposite of kangaroos and other macropods that will stay at the side of the road and at the last second jump in front of the car
@@HesderOleh that happened to me in a 110km zone. Dented my bonnet so badly, I couldn't open it. And the roo survived.
@@deathbycheese850 I wondered how we haven't influenced roo evolution so that they stop jumping in front of cars, but I guess if they survive and reproduce after getting hit it won't change the phenotype frequency
I think it's fascinating to see such a fast evolutionary competition
I would love to hear you talk about the reindeer and mice/rats of South Georgia. That's an amazing success story!
Fun fact: Some dogs get a high from licking Cane Toads. It's hella bad for them but some of them can't stop. My mate has a dog that's legit addicted to chewing and licking the toads
Considering Australian declared war on Emus, I'm not surprised the next step would be bringing in a non-native, invasive species to the country. Great job, Aussies.
We have a sick humour down under that's for sure
yknow that all the emu war actually was, was using the army to cull an overgrown population, which just turned out to be way too cost ineffective? thats all it is.
Australians just can't win on animals lol
i came over just to figure out exact details of the toad's appearance for my school project... i did not expect all the other necessary information to be here too. thank you so much!
Wow 😳 THAT'S crazy 😮.... Great video, very informative 👍😁
The same thing happened in Missouri with the Asian carp. It was introduced in the 70's to battle a moderate algae problem. There are now a trillion spread out over several states in one of the largest freshwater lake and river systems in the US. It's been described as putting out a campfire by blowing the hoover dam.
Happened in Manitoba too. Introduced carp, then when government learned they made a mistake, then they tried to convince us we wanted to eat them. NOT.
Hah good analogy
@@seahorse2 😂
Hopefully they don't evolve like the cane toads and start turning into Gyarados
They should be fished for commercially for pet food. I'd imagine that would help a lot
“We, as a species, already are playing God, whether we like it or not. So we might as well get good at it.” Absolutely brilliant 😂
I think she really hates the toads.
This is like the clench line mid way through an action movie
by 'playing god', i presume you mean 'be non existent'. yup, 8 billion planet eating chimps are definitely working on that one. the more there are, the fewer there will suddenly be
We are not playing God. We were given lordship over animals (Genesis). The issue is when we apply Science to our own reproduction.
@@leapdrive no, the issue [soon to be resolved by the 4 horsemen] is that the humans have not applied science to human reproduction. the sensible thing when theres an 8 billion strong plague of insane predatory chimps running amock is universal mandatory sterilization
I learned so much interesting things this morning my eyes were just wide watching this it was funny and serious and just different emotions
Really appreciate your informative videos. I've learned so much by following Real Science 🙏🏻
I live in Florida and I had two of these jerks living in my yard - my baby koi kept disappearing. I accidentally stepped on one of the toads one night and I swear he just shoved my foot off it’s back and waddled off. Thankfully, my husband was able to catch them and my koi pond is starting to recover.
That is frustrating
Their impact on humans: trophic cascade. They have removed other predators and thus the number of granivores birds have multiplied in Australia. Granivores birds eat grains. So very bad for crop production in Australia.
Bruh I don't dare to touch them
@@amit4Bihar Clearly you guys should just release a ton of cats to sort out the bird problem. /s
@@briangan3133I don’t touch anything in my backyard. Stingers, Salties, Taipans. Everything in Australia wants you dead!
There's also a follow up documentary called Cane Toads: The Conquest. It features some of the same people from the first one from the 90's!
I grew up in Townsville in the 90s and can attest to the sheer numbers being talked about here. Our local government used to offer bounties for toads.. it wasnt alot per toad, but it did encourage the young people in our town to earn some pocket money, and we did haha. When it actually did rain.. which was fairly irregular their populations would absolutely explode and we would do exactly what was told here.. get our dads golf clubs and a large bin of any description and cull as many as possible. While in retrospect it was pretty inhumane, it was much more important to save our native species.. and filling our wallets with enough candy money for weeks!
Why wouldn’t the PowerPuff Girls stop the Cane Toads then? ;)
12:25 the legend. I love him serving trying to get em all
I love your channel, while being able to communicate amazing and fun information you also act like a person by reminiscing about things you've learned as an individual and it's cool to be able to relate to that
These videos are so excellent - informative, clear, engaging. I often pause to read, consider or look up stuff. Great learning material!
True....., I think this sounds like my favorite George Carlin skit on natural disasters (or nature getting back at mankind) that just keep getting worse and worse and worse lol!
14:18 "We as a species already are playing god, whether we like it or not. So we might as well get good at it." Why is this such a raw line oh my gosh... XD
I'm not too surprised to hear that these Toads are evolving faster than scientists ever thought possible for Toads, Australia seems to be an evolutionary crucible like no other.
12:04 That sounds like Charlie work
I'd love to see a video about how wax worms (or was it silk worms) have evolved to eat plastic and if we are doing anything to help that process in a fight against plastic pollution.
Mealworms! They can eat and digest polystyrene foam and produce organic, non toxic waste as an output. I breed them as feeders for a lot of my pets and it's bizarre to be able to watch them just munching away on foam.
We also have bacteria that evolved to digest plastic, they're breeding them so they can adapt to different plastic. We would be extremely lucky to find plankton that do the same with microplastic, right now they eat it but don't digest it.
Will they eat plastics my car? ( second order thinking)
@Jesus Gonzalez bro stop going on every comment and posting that stupid shit everyone knows cats are very destructive over there too. I've seen documentaries where they literally go around town sniping stray cats
Be careful what you wish for
I remember reading (long ago now) that a caffeine solution would kill frogs by basically hyping their heartbeat up until they drop dead. Because they breathe through and absorb moisture through their skin. I am curious (if anyone reading this knows) as to why Australia has not attempted this method of eradication too?
1. The cane toad's expression says, "I fully intend to cause trouble-lots and lots of trouble. Just for fun." 2. The cane toad is almost as big as my cat. That is disconcerting. 3. Australian government: "I've made a HUGE mistake."
Fascinating as always. I hope the other gen editing program which is on mosquitoes succeed.
Why are they called cane toads? I didn't see a single toad using a cane in this video.
Their native habitat is in Florida, primarily in and around sugar canes.
They have been selectively bred over the years to eliminate the nasty species wide limp. Humans are amazing
@@RealEngineering and that’s all that really matters
@@RealEngineering not really, they're the same toads that are indigenous to Florida, it's just that Australia is a completely different ecosystem, the other species there haven't developed an immunity to their toxin, so they have no real predators other than humans, so they can breed and breed and breed and eat everything in their path. Nothing genetically special about them other than being a particularly large species of toad.
Ba-Dum-Tss 🥁
as problematic as the kudzu plant is, it's all so beautiful looking 4:18
Very well explained !
I actually caught my pet cane toad in the yard of my summer home in Florida. As devastating as they are, I freaking love Patty and can’t wait for her to grow dinner plate sized
Try having 30 of em in your yard at once mate and yard is small and it never ends
Interesting that it wasn’t mentioned that corvids and some other birds have started eating the toads too
Gene therapy was our diversion tactic. The secret weapon were the corvids but you had to ruin it, toad lover. Now they know...
The old bin chickens flip them and wash them
@@paulholmes1181 Are you talking about the French?
@@not.harshit hahahaha 😆
yep, they will pick them apart and leave just the poison glands
When i was in Canberra, i once jumped out of shock and went looking for my relative who was in the house when i came across a Possum that was jumping from out of no way onto the fence right in front of me behind my cousin's house. At that time i didn't know and wasn't sure about the behavior of that fiercely cute looking creature. That four-legged animal is like an alien to me and does not exist in my country.
Great post my friend. I appreciate any awareness being brought to light concerning invasive species.
Water pistol full of Dettol, or my favourite method - the nine iron. Fun fact - there's cane toads in Perth, I had one in my yard when I lived over there about 15 years ago. It got the 9 iron treatment
Great article!
First the Emu wars, now the TOADWARS
This whole rapid evolution side of things is fascinating. I wonder how all of this will play out. Nature will eventually find a balance, but I wonder how.
When humans finish this epoch, kill ourselves off as a species and give the planet a few hundred years.
@@ryancoleman8482 Humans are part of nature, we just happen to be able to influence much more than any other species, for both better and worse.
@@willwin4744 we are able to influence much more than any other species? Based on what? Ofcourse, based on what humans can percieve. Isn't that biased? I mean, if any species were to be asked what species is influencing the most, based on what they have seen, they would all believe is their own. Actually the species that influences the most is green bacteria, since they are the ones who have caused the greatest extintions by pourong tons of oxigen into the atmosphere. They influence the environment even more that we do, since they produce about 100 times more oxigen that what we produce in carbon dioxide.
@@NormanMent You are right, they have done more, I still would say humans are up there
Small evolutionary processes happen in a few generations. Large evolutionary processes are yet to be observed even in laboratory conditions.
That “King Brown Snake” was a Brazilian rainbow boa. Otherwise great episode as always! 😄
Your mom's a Brazilian rainbow boa
@@jakes.house. what's yours j?
How can you tell?
@@missng9392 I had a Brazilian Rainbow Boa as a pet a few years back
It's the Australian cousin the munted rainbow boa
Wait, you mean to tell me this toad not only survived Australia's hellish plants and animals but is actually *conquering* the place? What a badass.
I'm a zoology major and your videos are absolutely amazing.... However I noticed that the cane toad was referred to as "stupid and ugly"... Although I agree they're not good looking, the idea of calling them stupid is unfair... Because humans are the ones at mistake here to have not done a proper environmental assessment before introducing a new species. Otherwise good job! I love the content... Keep it coming!! Thank you.
They're stupid. Cry about it.
You should take a class on humor while you're there.
there's loads of toads in Bermuda and almost all of them are deformed and at last check no one could figure out why. i kicked one once by accident, coming round from the laundry back to the front of my house, i was barefoot too, also there is a tree in bermuda that's native to Australia and although it been growing in Bermuda happily for a few hundred years it still follows the Australian seasons, so it'll bloom in a Bermudian winter even though its a summer bloomer. its proper weird
Let us always remember though, that humans are the OG invasive species.
Invasive species are ones that are brought somewhere either on purpose or accidentally. Humans were not brought to new places, we went on our own accord which is the natural spreading of the species.
@@jasondashney yeah we are invasive, who knows how beautiful earth would still be now if we humans dont have intellegence
@@martinketchum if humans doesnt had ´´inteligence´´ you would never learn what is and what is not ´´beautiful´´ to begin with.
Tell that to Gusti Allah swt who made the mankind at very first place
Cane toads actually eat insects so much which is why in hindsight it is useful in for the environment particularly for the rice farmers.
I've seen Owls swoop down, flip a toad on its back to avoid the poison glands and peck out its organs they're learning and adapting.
I think the reason people are worried about weaponizing genetic technology, has more to do with what will happen when we turn around and start using them on each other as opposed to using them against toads.
The mechanism described in the video would never work on humans, and even if it did you would have to do a whole host of other awful things not related to gene science to get any person to accept the modification. Like, if a leader starts rounding people up for nonconsensual gene therapy you've got much bigger problems on your hands than the therapy tech itself.
@@rbesfe a bit like what Hitler was trying to do.
Probably no need. Lots of developed countries already have plummeting birthrates.
Thank you for bringing up cats as invasive species. Many people don't like to hear it or are unaware of the problems cats cause when let outside without being watched.
They're cute though.
Mine kills any rat, insects that comes onto my property so I see no problem.
@@royaldecreeforthechurchofm8409 Well...for rats is is not a big deal but some birds (and other animals) are decreasing or completely gone in some areas because of cats. And that is the problem.
We want cats
@@ANNEKE1999 my cat is scared of birds so I see no problem
Yep, that cane toad doco is an Australian classic. I watched it at high school in 1991.
What a video! Excellent.
What amaze me the most is the fast pace of the animal's adaptability to poison. I always imagined that it had a much slower pace
It's a protein production gene splicing, in order to counter the poison, nature has it's tricks up it's long sleeve.
What?
@@clarenceadams2143 what do you not understand
Can you guys do "The insane biology of primates" video please. I've always been fascinated by their biology and their adaptations i love your videos
sorry to nitpick but *our* biology…we are primates too
Honey bees are invasive, for example in the US where they have crowded and killed off native pollinators and caused declines in some native plant species. They also actively compete with the native bee species and are causing some to go extinct.
Fantastic video !
These kind of insane invasive species that we did to our selves.. freak me out so much, and think about how much it has changed a amazing ecosystem. Like Australia's ecosystem that before was so unique and different than anywhere on the planet. Before this plague of toads.
And plague of super spiky cacti
Rats invaded Australia aswell
@@royaldecreeforthechurchofm8409 Japan invaded Australia too.
@@Opanker_ only papa new Guinea not Australia
@@royaldecreeforthechurchofm8409 They did invade it, it just wasn't succesful.
"We are already playing God so we might as well get good at it " is the most Heavy Metal Sci-fi quote I've ever heard
I consider you to be one of the best science communication channels on KZhead of all time period your dedication to your craft is inspiring and greatly appreciated. Please never stop making amazing content
I can't even be mad at the toads; this is just another classic human blunder.
You make amazing videos. This videos contains a lot of knowledge. Expecting more videos from you😍
I was aware of the toad invasion from some years already... But totally didn't know about the whole evolution of the native animals as well as the toads themselves. Nature's fast...
The Pet Shop Boys "Go West" would make the perfect theme song for the cane toad.
"All because of this stupid, ugly toad"... That seemed personal... 😂
This game of Frogger has turned rather intense...
😆
Haven’t Honey bees been linked to the endangerment of native bee species?
Yeah, they have; they compete with and introduce disease to native bee populations.
Yeah this video is so retarded, honey bees in north america have wrecked havoc on the ecosystem, but people won't call it invasive because of $$$. Same can be said about crops/livestock, monocultures of potatoes for example have certainly destroyed many ecosystems, but humans only care about our own interest, the term invasive means nothing, humans are after all the most invasive organism of all.
yes, the ´´killer bees´´ are a breed of western and east african honey bees that exists because back on the end of the 50s i guess they introduced east african honey bees to brazil to increase honey production but some of these bees escaped from the kind of quarantine they where and started to spread and reproduce, creating that new variation that is much more defensive and aggro responsive than other kind of honey bees
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:03 🦗 Australian sugar cane crops were attacked by cane beetle grubs, leading to a misguided attempt to control them by introducing cane toads from Hawaii. 00:33 🐸 The introduction of cane toads to control cane beetles in Australia turned into a massive ecological disaster, with toad populations exploding and causing harm to native species. 01:28 🐸 Cane toads have become invasive in Australia, growing large, poisonous, and consuming various prey items but failing to control the cane beetle population. 02:25 🌿 Invasive species harm native ecosystems by outcompeting or preying on native species, and the cane toad's toxic nature makes it particularly destructive. 04:17 🌍 Introduced invasive species disrupt ecosystems where native species haven't evolved defenses against them, leading to negative impacts on native plants and animals. 05:12 ☠️ Cane toads' extreme toxicity and the lack of natural predators in Australia result in native species suffering massive declines and extinctions. 07:33 🥚 Cane toads lay vast numbers of poisonous eggs, and their tadpoles are also toxic, posing threats to predators that try to eat them. 08:56 🐸 Cane toads have evolved to spread faster and are rapidly moving across Australia, potentially due to the longer legs of the toads on the leading edge of the invasion. 10:20 🌱 The invasive cane toads are driving rapid adaptation in native predators, including cannibalistic behaviors and developing tolerance to the toxin. 11:44 ⚙️ Various attempts to control cane toad populations involve culling, trapping, and genetic modification methods to reduce their reproductive success. 14:31 📽️ The cane toad issue inspired humorous documentaries, serving as a reminder of the challenges posed by invasive species and the need for intervention. 16:22 📺 CuriosityStream and Nebula offer educational content and documentaries, supporting creators and providing access to informative material. 17:14 🌍 Signing up for the CuriosityStream and Nebula bundle supports educational creators and provides access to exclusive documentaries and original content. Made with HARPA AI
I've heard that frogs are dying in a kind of pandemic the world over, could the cane toad be seen as a positive exception to this being a hope for frog survival in some kind of way?
Can you talk about the beaver in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina?
I do not know about this beaver 🦫
Not to be nitpicky but they carry poison, not venom. Used to eat something = Venom || Persuade something to not eat you = poison
Venom doesn't have to be used to try to eat something. Bees are venomous but are herbivores. Venom is toxins delivered via piercing.
@@GloriousSimplicity is that really the definition?
@@AliHSyed Yes, you if you Google the definition of venom, the key word in the definition is injection.
even then it could be arbitrary as like a cobra a snake that is evolved to defend it self against bipodal hominins. It has no need for any other animal it naturally encounters to be able to spit venom up to 2 meters in the air (about the height of the eyes of a standing adult human). at that moment there venom against humans is more used as a defence not because it wants to eat us but to want us to not eat/kill them. It's also most likely the reason they developed there ''wings'' so we as humans can see them even better so we know we can and they know we will they to avoid them.
Like every other snob, that became a pet peeve of mine about five minutes after I first learned the distinction.
Okay... _Who the freak_ thought it was a good idea to bring POISONOUS toads in to save their crops??? Like _bruh..._ I could understand non-toxic toads, but seriously!? Poisonous ones?
😂😂😂😂😂😂I WAS told , this specie was introduced here in the Philippines to control poisonous snakes.
If I remember correctly, I think scientists were doing something similar with mosquitoes in either Hong Kong or Singapore, I don't remember. But they were trying to breed mosquitoes that only lay male mosquitoes and releasing them annually or smth
5:00 "Venom secreting poison glands" I feel like something is not right, the poison glands secrete venom ? So the toad has to bite to inject it ? Or venom gland that secrete poison ? Then why would the venom glands be on it's back and not somewhere more convenient for injection ?
They're just improperly using the terms interchangeably. Unfortunate.
"Chemicals in the water are turning frogs gay"
Blast! Tricked me with the sneaky ad at the end.
This kinda reminds me of The Simpsons when they introduced the lizards and then they send in Chinese needle snakes to eat them, followed by snake-eating gorillas, which will "simply freeze to death" when wintertime rolls around.
This channel is so underrated OMG
what, underrated at 750K subscribers? they definitely deserve more reach, but they are definitely not underrated
@@ayush.kumar.13907 A High subscriber count doesnt mean a fairly rated channel Judging by the editing and the quality of this video and any other video they posted they definitely deserves more than a guy playing minecraft A documentary like this shouldnt only get a couple thousan or a million views it deserves much more
@@ayush.kumar.13907 so You're saying that this video that got only 6.1k views in an hour isn't underrates?
Licking cane toads is something people sometimes do in northern Australia. It's extremely dangerous because it's impossible to know what dosage you will receive. It takes only a small amount to give you life long brain damage.
Is it possible to make passive traps for these frogs? Like for mices, big bucket where mices can go in but can't get out.
Okay great video, however u might want to know that the cane toad produces poison not actually venom. You would have to actually orally taste the toads liquid white substance in order for you to feel the effects. Hence venom and poison are two very different things.
The documentary is called "Cane Toads: An Unnatural History" and I highly recommend it. My favorite part is a scientist holding a struggling cane toad and imitating its mating call completely deadpan.
And how did the toad respond???
@@apolloandwarrior_3229 It's been a while, but I think it just kept kicking its feet and trying to get away. It wasn't a very good imitation, I guess, lol.
These bloody things are everywhere. They're in the lift, in the lorry, in the bond wizard, and all over the malonga gilderchuck.
In Thailand, we would deep fried that beetle’s lava, spray Maggie sauce & white pepper and enjoy this delicious snack.
Imagine being a cane toad, listening to humans, who've impacted the environment so extensively, now showing up to backhand any other species that try to do it 😂😂 i'd be salty
Humans are poisonous
Exactly, the human species needs to be eradicated and preferably in a way that involves intense pain and suffering.
@@oliverplougmand2275 I hope you'll volunteer first.
@@oliverplougmand2275 Why are you still breathing?
This made me laugh.
"All because of this stupid, ugly toad." Correction. This innocent, amazing toad, brought somewhere they didn't belong by stupid, ugly humans.
I had the same reaction lol
It's still an ugly, horrible toad
Typical western commentators they all put the blame on something or someone else.
Amen.
Actually, they're quite horrible. They pretty much hump anything that moves. Seen em humping half a squashed toad plenty of times. Seen them swim into fish ponds and release their poison, then hump the fish as they jump out the water. They basically wait til they're halfway down a dogs throat before releasing their poison. They're nasty, horrible, ugly things. Source: I'm Australian. There are other animals who deserve your sympathy here, certainly not these ones.
Seems like this is one of many “oops” stories from Australia.
4:06 IDKY but "murders anything they can get their paws on." sounded cute. Maybe because it was with the photos of one of my favourite animals 🤔 🤷♀️ But cats are definitely apex predators, those cute, fluffy, majestic, predatious, blodd-thirsty little beasts! 😅😅 Seriously though, their murder toe beans are no joke!
I just wanted to say that you are a point of light in the midst of the insanity that spreads on youtube today, bringing science, linking sources and really caring about the topic, as a Brazilian I really appreciate this, given the situation in Brazil regarding popular hatred science and data.