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10 Animals That Came Back From Extinction

Mar 10, 2024
like and subscribe and you will be very lucky for the rest of the week in today's video we will see 10

animals

that returned from

extinction

against all odds number 10 the takahi of the south island the takahi of the south island is a large species and beautiful flightless bird found in New Zealand around 1841. It was the largest living member of the Rail family and all we knew about this bird was only four individuals, but after the last encounter in 1898, the birds were not found nowhere, so experts considered them extinct. and there is a brief explanation that the first official encounter of a South Island takahi occurred in 1849.
10 animals that came back from extinction
Back then, a group of dark sealers tracked the path of what appeared to be a large, beautiful but mysterious bird, eventually finding it. They killed him, roasted him and ate him. the bird which they declared delicious that is why the takahis be

came

an attraction for hunting until the last bird was captured for its meat in 1898 and thus the era of the takahis ended or so it was believed 50 years later a small group of takahis were miraculously rediscovered near lake tianao, according to the researchers who discovered them, the birds were desperately clinging to life, but since the takahis are under very close surveillance number nine, the platypus frog, platypus frogs, also known as gastric broody frogs They were once found in Queensland, Australia.
10 animals that came back from extinction

More Interesting Facts About,

10 animals that came back from extinction...

They were first discovered in 1972, but no one considered them special until a group of researchers discovered something unique about the way they reproduce. Unlike most frogs, the platypus mother frog lays her eggs and then swallows them into her stomach, which normally acts as a uterus. It contains dilute hydrochloric acid which can damage the eggs, but as soon as she swallows them, the mother frog stops producing stomach acid and thus can grow about 25 tadpoles inside her, after a while she vomits them out because of this unique baby. causing scientists to seek to study these

animals

further, but the frogs be

came

a difficult find, in fact, the last specimen seen was in 1971, so everyone believed that they no longer existed until 2013.
10 animals that came back from extinction
That year, Mike Archer and Their team of

extinction

experts use a process. called somatic cell nuclear transplantation to bring frogs

back

to life today a good number of platypus frogs now roam the earth number eight the clarion night snake as the name the clarion night snake is an 18 inch snake that works best of night has a characteristic color that makes most species beautiful, but since its discovery in 1938 these characteristics constitute everything we know about the snake, this is because the only preserved specimen of the nocturnal bugle snake dates from 1936 Since then no one has seen another alive. specimen Although different experts launched some expeditions to locate the snake in 1938, a group of experts hoping to find the snake tried an alternative approach, according to them, the bugle snake is an elusive species that lives on one of the islands remotest places in Mexico.
10 animals that came back from extinction
Even accessing that island would require a military escort, so the team simulated the exact conditions of the previous successful find. To do this, they need to get the right time and season right in order to increase their chances of finding the Clarion night snake after a long time. In the search, the team identified 11 snakes that resembled the bugle snake, but to confirm their suspicions they performed a series of DNA tattoos and in the end it was confirmed that the night bugle snake now walks among us number seven, the pygmy tarcier, is found with the pygmy tarcier currently known as The smallest pieces of primates in Indonesia and with just one look at the creature we don't understand why this should surprise you, but until now the wildlife preservation community assumed that the pygmy tarcier was extinct because no one had even seen its shadow for a long time.
At the time, all that was known about the creature was literature that described the fossil or preserved specimen according to the books. Pygmy tarsiers often weigh 2 ounces, are 75 percent smaller than other tarsiers, and often have slender and long appendages—in fact, they can even turn their heads like an owl for 80 years. that Grisky Doyen, a researcher at the University of Texas, rediscovered them in 2008. According to him, he intended to confirm whether pygmy tartians were unequivocally extinct, but to everyone's surprise, he became the first. man in almost 80 years to see a live pygmy tarcian, many others came before him but failed, although even until now we still don't know how many tarsiers there are out there number six, the caledonian krusty, the crested geckos or the geckos of eyelashes were once found in the southern province of New Caledonia, New Zealand and Australia, but in the late 19th century conservation experts declared them extinct because so much expense arose to find them.
Unfortunately, none of them managed to find a single Caledonian crested gecko. However, in 1994 and about 200 years ago. Later, a betting team stumbled upon a group of small lizard-like animals near Caledonia. Additionally, the creatures have two long rows of spines running from head to tail. All of these descriptions match those of Caledonia Crestes after extensive laboratory work realized that experts The accident led to the rediscovery of crested geckos as a first step towards conservation. Scientists exported hundreds of geckos for study. In an examination, scientists discovered that crested geckos have no eyelids instead of long tongues and use them for cleaning. their rubble eyes and this made them even more popular, so many long to have them as pets, however, the government banned all exports in the trade of the number five crested geckos, the Chacoan peccary, in addition to the name chico and peccary These animals are also known as taguas and are only one of three species of peccaries found in the Americas, unlike the other two, experts reported that the chaco and peccaries are found only in the gran chaco, a small dense forest in argentina, according to dan brooks, a conservationist who studied peccaries for about 30 years the gran chaco may be beautiful, but it is a thorny, dry and inhospitable forest, very hot, so the boy and pegaris lived in conditions hard and this made life difficult, but the locals hunted the peccary and the peccary so much that the only known specimen came from a fossil from 1970.
In the early 2000s they disappeared from intensive hunting and no one saw them from then until 2014 , when Dan Brooks and his team rediscovered them, although, according to some experts, locals knew all along that some chicago and peccaries still live deep in the shaco. region but even after the rediscovery the chico and the peccary still face great danger from climate change and habitat destruction today we still have around three thousand chico and peccaries left tomorrow we may not have any number four gilbert's potoroo at first At first glance you might think that the podu route is no different from any common rat in its size and some of its external features are to blame for this, however, there are only 100 Gilbert's potoroos on the planet, so it is most likely that you haven't even seen one in real life, in fact, the last one.
The only time anyone saw one before 1994 was in 1869. Back then, John Gilbert and a group of other zoologists reported the existence of these creatures somewhere between Albany and the pollen upstream, so the which is why they are called Gilbert Potoroos, however, the locals considered podurous to be a dangerous pest that often destroyed their crops, poisoning and killing any podu they encountered. Before long the potaroos disappeared from books and scientists and locals They thought that Gilbert Protoroos are no longer with us, but somehow an isolated group of Poderoos was rediscovered in 1994 after a group of scientists noticed a podu trapped in a fox trap, however, Gilbert's Potoroos are still alive.
Considered the rarest marsupials on the planet, at the top of the list today we have an animal that is literally a reincarnation of the ice age, but can it be true? discover number three the smilodon the smilodon or the saber-toothed cat, as many people call it, was one of the largest predators that ever existed, it roamed and ate on earth 60 million years after the dinosaurs became extinct and He lived until about 10,000 years ago, when The Last One disappeared, so the scientific community declared them extinct. However, on September 12, 2012, a video about a random couple walking their large pet down the street in Los Angeles broke the Internet.
According to the story, the cat was huge and had long teeth that reminded everyone. the saber-toothed cat aka smilodon, at first we thought the video was fake, but interestingly, the video was not fake and all the other news that came with the

back

story was mostly correct, so, Was it a reincarnation of the smilodon? Well, no. the big cat you see here is actually animatronic in this video of the couple the smilodon was on its way to the briatar pitts museum where it became a star attraction in a program dedicated to ice age number two the giant lizard of la gomera the lake Mara lizards are a species of giant lizards native to the Canary Islands 23 years ago the scientific community declared them extinct because the only known specimens of the lizard were fossils of fossils experts knew that lizards can reach up to 1.9 meters and they had very long lines of that size, there is no way that someone could go unnoticed, but in the span of 23 years no one saw a single one, however, in July 1999 a group of experts from the University of Laguna responded to a distress call from the locals.
According to locals, there was a large species of lizards in Lakomara scattered all over the place. Upon reaching there, the lizards turned out to be the elusive giant lizards. In the event that they called the lizard Lakomera, interestingly, the experts also realized that the lizards were the same. Pioneering inhabitants of the island today, conservationists now have around 400 individuals bred in captivity and are looking to introduce some into the wild before moving on. I have a little challenge for you that will take you five seconds to complete, so here's the deal. just leave a like on this video, hit the subscribe button and hit the notification bell and you will get 25 years of amazing luck.
Try it, it really works. The number one can of cola on today's list. The cola can is the oldest animal whose history exists. Danes 65 million years ago, in the 19th century, everyone believed that this creature had long disappeared; In fact, the scientific community at the time only knew of its existence through tassel records that are millions of years old; They believed that there was no way such an animal could remain alive. today, but one fateful day in 1938 proved them wrong. On that day, December 23, 1938, a local fishing boat captain named Hendrick Goosen caught a very strange fish in the Shalomno River.
Out of curiosity, he called Marjory Courtney Vladimir, a self-taught naturalist at a museum in the South African city of East London, however, she could not identify the fish at first glance using her textbooks and journals, so she kept it and He then called experts who then confirmed that the fish was actually the tail, it cannot be a creature that scientists thought went extinct with the dinosaurs the animals survived in the depths of South African waters anyway the rediscovered colicanth was named of latimeria in honor of the woman who preserved the specimen for science with everything said and done see you next time

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