This video effectively highlights the vulture's indispensable role in public health, proving that ecological stability is a prerequisite for human survival. It is a sobering reminder that the most overlooked species are often the ones keeping our global infrastructure from collapsing.
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"Why We Owe a Vulture on Steroids an Apology" | Kip Reacts to Casual GeographicAdded:
Why we all vulture on steroids and apology by Casual Geographic. I I love this. I love I love big birds.
So cool.
>> [laughter] >> Wonderful. Don't be scared. He's just a baby.
He will get bigger. I'm pretty sure isn't that isn't that down? I'm trying to remember cuz like baby penguins have that too. The the fuzz the floof whatever it is. Yeah, isn't that like Yeah, that's like juvenile feathers, right?
>> Close your eyes and visualize the most disrespected animal on Earth. Now open them and apologize for not thinking of the living laundry lint. You don't respect this dinosaur nearly enough.
Many people have never seen this flying fossil or they have and never wish to ever again. The world would be a legitimate horror movie without them.
Yet this vulture and his kind are still very much relied by humanity. Well, you'll see why. The first two videos pretty much sums up our relationship with them, especially when you let it play all the way. I told you just a baby. That is a baby Andean condor and condors are Jurassic vultures on steroids. There's the Andean and the California condor and both are built like a prehistoric paralysis demon.
They're the closest relative of Argentavis and I live a life of decency and virtue cuz otherwise I know I'd see this homicidal death pigeon in hell.
Argentavis flexed a wingspan of up to 23 ft, weighed as much as an adult man, and would have been about the size of a Cessna 152. And on the ground, they would have looked that same grown man in the eye. The condors of today are slightly smaller with Andeans having a wingspan of nearly 11 ft, which is how the bird can stay in the air for hours without flapping their wings once. I feel like that would have to cuz like I don't know. I'm on the other end of things where like I like hearing about deep sea gigantism and reasons to it, you know, because of it, metabolism, pressure, conservation of energy, all that fun stuff, right? So I wonder if it's like habitat change, climate change, as well as like How would I word that? Availability / scarcity of food over the course of however many thousands of years to uh to get you know get get smaller bird. I'm assuming that's how that works. In fact, by using thermal drafts, one condor managed to soar for 5 hours and cover 100 miles. All that and no flap. The feather relic is also one of the longest-living birds with some surviving up to 70 trips around the sun. Fair. Not only does puberty turn an avian dust bunny into skeksis from Dark Crystal, they end up becoming the biggest birds of prey on Earth. You can't imagine waking up to a dragon and dragon outside your window. And that's because you're not from Chile. Not only is it the national bird of Chile, shout out to Chile, they even have a Chilean comic based on them called Condorito. Luckily for Chileans, this dog and my mental health, condors are absolutely harmless.
I love Spanish. It's like how uh you know Buddha? Buddha? Donkey?
Wouldn't burrito technically be like tiny donkey, baby donkey?
By technicality.
>> [laughter] >> Unless you watch Total Drama, cuz that might have been the first time Alejandro got his rocked. Oh, so good.
>> But yeah, it's a good thing that a bird that could pass for a man in a suit is a scavenger.
To be fair, that is a man in a suit, but it's for a good reason. Dude, I was kidding about the cheeses. Time really hasn't been kind to the condor. It might actually be the dinosaur left behind.
Way, way back in the day, California condors made a meal out of megafauna like mammoths, bison, and giant ground sloths after they passed tense. It's believed that it was a presence of plus-sized prey in the Pleistocene that allowed condors to get so big. The problem is mammoths and giant sloths got discontinued a while ago, meaning a literal big bird got left holding the bag. It's a biological anachronism. The Condorito was built for a time that is long gone. And when many of the megafauna disappeared, the condor flirted with the oblivion, too. Somehow they survived, but that would not be the closest condors would come to extinction. The sick joke is DDT was really good at merking insects, BUT EVEN OH, BOY. YEAH. OH.
>> [laughter] >> YEAH. We don't that chemical anymore or at least we're not supposed to.
Yeah.
>> [laughter] >> It's like we we also don't use chlorofluorocarbons anymore, CFCs, or lead. Yeah.
You know what? You know, let's scratch that. Let's bring back the leaded gasoline. I'm sure that'll fix a lot of problems.
Even better at outracing everything else, and condors [music] caught the biggest stray since the same pesticides would weaken eggshells and cause them to break. Right. Condors only have one egg every two years, and the lint chicken that comes out can take up to eight to mature. And this painfully slow reproductive rate only made the effects of DDT hit harder.
Baby birds look so strange to me. Like they always look so alien.
But wait, there's more. As an aerial coffin, many condors die from lead poisoning caused by the bullets hunters leave in the dead. Ben Balak was a condor raised in the Los Angeles Zoo who was released to help contribute to the population. He never would as he would die 3 months later with an air gun pellet in his gizzard and another statistic for lead poisoning. And a >> [sighs] >> That's unfortunately something you'll never fix though.
Because anything that would fix that would inherently be shot down, pun intended, in the US. Because that like cuz what helps fix that? You can only use firearms in certain areas, which I mean, I think most people, yeah, we go like, yeah, go to a ranger or whatever.
But it is also part of living in the US that, you know, especially in Idaho, yeah, people just go out to like wherever.
I've seen signs in Idaho like, you know, like no fishing signs or like signs that are like, you know, like boat ramp signs, just full of bullet holes. That's just Idaho.
People shoot signs.
Um that's one of those that I don't think you actually ever fix.
Because any sort of regulation that would limit where people can fire firearms is going to be shot down.
That being said, in addition to this, it would also get shot down because people are just going to do it anyways.
Hey, you know you can't shoot that out here.
Okay.
But meanwhile, 2 hours later, someone goes shooting out there. Right?
Something something something. You punish the people actually following the rules rather than punishing people who just don't care. Right? It's It's a big societal problem. That's That's That's Yeah, it's unfortunate. That wasn't bad enough. Johnny Cash nearly soloed the entire species. Johnny Cash is known for many songs that I cannot name, but I do know him as the guy that got high, started a fire to stay warm, and caused a forest fire that not only burned 500 acres of a national forest, it cooked 49 of the condors living there.
I've never heard of this. Was he ever charged?
This is pretty bad. When asked, "Did you start the fire?" Cash said, "No, my truck did and it's dead so you can't question it." Okay, Cash. When asked if he felt bad, Johnny said, "Well, I feel pretty good right now." Evidently, the forest wasn't the only thing that got blazed. And when Honestly, I've heard his music, but if this is him as a person, what an awful person. The judge reminding him of his hate crime towards condors, Cash asked, "Why should he care?" After the federal government took 125,000 worth of care out of his account, he got his answer. Also, I lied. I can name one song, "Ring of Fire." No currency could bring the condors back, though. And years of getting jumped by DDT, lead poisonings, and human hubris had the California condor population down all the way to 27 left in the world by 1987. The bird from a land before time was about to flatline. That is until folks finally decided to step up. For all the damage done to the condor, humanity came in clutch for the cause. They went all out.
First by capturing all the wild condors left, and when they were done, every condor alive was in captivity. Then they really put in work. Condor eggs have a longer release time than a Spider-Verse movie, but a bio hack is that condors will often lay a second, even third egg if the first one is removed.
>> [laughter] >> Bro, bro, you're gaslighting the bird.
Like >> [laughter] >> bird lays egg, people take egg, bird, bro, my egg was just here. Fine, I guess I'll lay another egg. Human proceeds to take egg.
Bird, extremely confused, also very upset. Fine, I guess I'll lay a third egg.
>> [laughter] >> Bro, you're just GASLIGHTING THE BIRD.
>> [laughter] >> UH, I LOVE SCIENCE. SO, THE strat was to collect condor eggs for caretakers to raise themselves, basically doubling the output. This would save the condor population at the last absolute second as condors would begin to be airdropped back into the wild in the '90s. And today, there's over 500 California condors both in captivity and seasoned across the Southwest. There is one problem with raising condors, and it's that the condors can become attached to humans. And like we always say on this channel, the worst thing a wild animal can do is lose its fear of people.
>> Yeah. The condor compromise was raising these floof nuggets with hand puppets in their parents' likeness. This allowed keepers to teach baby condors how to condor while also retaining their natural fear of humans. Imagine going on a date with someone and they have to explain that they use like hand puppets to uh to to raise animals.
That would be so cool.
Like I'm like let's be real. What exactly are someone like like like me? What are my prospects? Oh, I'm a funny man on the internet. [laughter] I do marketing and talk about random things. It's not like I have the most STUNNING RESUME.
>> [laughter] >> BRO, YOU HELP WITH conservation efforts by using hand puppets of animals. Bro, that's actually so cool though, like actually.
>> Which I thought was what was happening here, but I looked into it and this has nothing to do with conservation. This is just love of the game. Must be mutual because if you look closer, that's also a condor in a man suit.
Convincing, right? But raising condors is more than just throwing meat at a pan-handling puffball. There's a method.
In the late '80s and early '90s, folks started raising kid condors in this like daycare system, but with no older birds.
But because they had no older birds to use as role models, when the condors were released, they basically acted like teenagers with their parents gone for the weekend. They do things like approach people, invade campsites, and even enter buildings. Things you don't want an endangered species doing. So, we had to adjust. Instead, folks shifted tactics based on how wild condors come up and would have a baby sitting by itself most of the time, only occasionally being visited by an adult, aka a puppet. Later on, they'd be assigned an older mentor condor to show them the ropes. And in the final step, both would be moved to a flight pen for the fledgling to learn how to fly. And caretakers would teach stranger danger by using the business end of a water gun on any condor that got too friendly with humans to keep them I'm sorry. People PTSD.
I mean, nature is weird. Like, so I was thinking about this. I was watching some BBC clips of penguins earlier. Penguins are weird birds.
Uh one, people say they have no natural predators and that's why they go up to people. But then I'm like, okay, but what about leopard seals? Something something penguin goes out, they have to go swimming for food to bring back to the colony.
Like leopard seals would be a natural predator, would they not? So, I think there's a little more nuance to that statement than is initially like portrayed. Second, there are so many fail points along the way, right?
Something something something uh I think it's What is it? I think it's the mother, right? The mother stays in the egg, father has to go out, find fish. Leopard seal ganks father, cool.
Guess Guess that Guess that chick just doesn't live.
Um if the uh chick between the transfers on the ice for too long, chick just freezes. That's a uh that's a failure point.
Uh like there's so many failure points.
And I was like, you know, it must be really depressing to be an animal like documentary filmer. Because like, you know, we get to see the whole like oh, this penguin fell through the ice and luckily it got away from the leopard seal at the last moment and I'm like, but how much B-roll exists of like penguin falling through ice and just getting mauled by a leopard seal?
Like >> [laughter] >> it's really messed up when you actually think about it. Like it's got to be really depressing just to watch birds get mauled all day for like a documentary and then have to like paint it as some like I mean it it is a miracle of nature but but not in the way that it's presented, right? Like the failure rate is a lot higher than is portrayed. Like obviously it sets up you know, stakes and stuff like that but you're not necessarily watching a uh I'm watching a game-ending film where just leopard seals club penguins left and right, right? I don't know. It was just interesting to think about. So I mean this does minimize a lot of things but it really makes you like think about how fragile nature is.
It makes you really think about it, right? And how you know, people talk about natural selection. Meanwhile, these are the same people who are either blissfully unaware or maybe they like the content a little too much where you'll have videos on YouTube where a bird just kicks a chick out of the nest. Why does it do it? Because it can't it can only feed like two of them and that one is it deems that that child does not survive. We as humans reasonably do not do that. At least we're not supposed to.
also use like shock therapy to teach condors to avoid frying themselves on power lines. But the job's not finished once you have condors in the wild. I won't call them the pandas of birds cuz well one pandas don't deserve that self plug but two condors have an even harder time making more of themselves. 25% of California condor eggs are infertile duds that have to be replaced before the couple gives up. That's wild. That is I mean also as well human human thing actually is really there's a lot of issues in that as well.
Trying to have a kid is apparently like that is that is riddled with failure points as well. Like the body has a lot of built-in like redundancies and stuff.
So, it can be genuinely hard to have a kid.
>> Side note, I I just remembered condors can pull a Virgin Mary where a female can lay and hatch a fully functional egg with zero male involvement like maternal menaces. That's parthenogenesis and [music] I feel like having that move in your bag and almost never using it even with your population halfway past tense.
Like like I get that it's mostly our fault, but like help us help you anyway.
There's no guarantee once the egg hatches anyway cuz many chicks get accidentally poisoned by micro trash which clogs their system and starves [music] them to death. So, researchers got to constantly sift through the nest for micro trash and any chick suspected to be contaminated is kidnapped and medevac'd [music] for surgery which also means someone has to camp by the nest for 24 hours and keep the parents from coming home to an empty one and abandoning it. Gatekeeping a dragon from its child for a day sounds more like a Mr. Beast challenge than a way to spend your zoology degree. If a Please.
Please, let's not get Mr. Beast like animal challenges, please.
Just like Hi, everybody. Here we are today and we're trying to We're trying to I don't even want to go this route. This is getting really dark. Let's let's not.
I have an endangered species of bird here today and we're going to try to see how we can save them and not have not have them sit on power lines and GET FRIED.
>> [laughter] >> WHAT?
IF THIS CONDOR can avoid lead poisoning, pollution, and getting deep fried on power lines, [music] it'll roam the skies for decades and hopefully make many more condors along the way. And if they're lucky, they'll have the same partner by their side the whole time.
Condors do not get enough credit for how loyal they are. The symbol of unity can have a 5% divorce rate and a penguin can propose with his best pebble and still get cheated on. But for the most part, a condor will see another condor and just spend the next 40 years making it work unless death really does them part. But condors aren't just loyal to their mate.
Believe it or not, an overgrown struggle vulture has a social structure on par with chimpanzees and wolves. Condors have a social hierarchy where every bird knows its rank, especially at the dinner table where elders dominate, which is why those raised without other condors end up with avian Alzheimer's, as in they forget their place. But it's not just a hierarchy. Condors will have a friend group that they'll hang with, and if you're around long enough, you'll see them preening, play fighting, and even chasing each other. They'll even look after other injured condors and share food with those that can't do so for themselves. What kind of bird of prey you know that's moving like that? The social butterfly nature is why we had to put on the hand puppets in the first place. When I said condors can get attached to humans, we're talking about a commitment lasting years.
>> [music] >> Eduardo is an Argentinian cattle farmer who found an injured condor on his property and helped bring the bird back to health. Now, every once in a while, the condor visits the man that saved him as a thank you and even tries to preen him. But to me, the wildest part is the condor didn't imprint on Ed because it eventually went back into the wild instead of following him around. So, this venti vulture is actively going out of its way to see him. Who'd expect that kind of emotional depth from a cloud casket?
Well, anyone who's worked with them, cuz they'll tell you that vultures are sky puppies with personalities that'll even have favorite keepers that they'll run to when excited. They're also curious and will play with anything from actual toys to the socks and shoelaces of their preferred human. Many keepers swear by vultures being the most fun bird to train because their curiosity and attachment makes them act like precocious children always looking for their parents' approval. They're even on the short list of animals smart enough to use tools, with Egyptian vultures using rocks to crack open ostrich eggs.
You wouldn't expect that from a career scavenger and death merchant. Vultures have been Bro, these birds are literally more intelligent than people I meet like just going out, like to the grocery store.
Like that's wild.
>> [laughter] >> I love how intelligent birds are.
Like you don't think much about it, right? But like yeah, have you considered throw rocket thing? Oh yeah, like it's it's that basic cause and effect. It's so good.
>> underrated. And fun fact, there's old world [music] and new world vultures, and they're not related. Vultures are essential workers. They're just so important that nature went ahead and made them twice. But, this is not a vulture glaze video. So, before we talk about the good Huh. Huh. Wait a minute.
Rev, is that Is that the Reevy bar?
>> [laughter] >> Is Is that the Reevy bar a capybara YouTuber?
>> [laughter] >> Capybaras are strange to me, dude. I don't understand it.
>> important that nature went ahead and made them twice. But, this is not a vulture glaze video. [music] So, before we talk about the good, we got to speedrun the side you probably already know. Everything I've said about vultures is still true. But, it's also true that they have the nastiest diet of any animal. They'll eat the foulest, most putrid piece of meat like a kid eats candy. And having a weak beak and feet means they'll break into a body from the worst half, which is why vultures are bald. No point in having feathers when you're going to be neck-deep in a dead buffalo. Being bald also helps with temperature. So does another thing they do. Vultures practice urohydrosis, where they'll leak liquid nasty all over their legs to cool off like sweat. So, if you see a vulture with ashy feet, now you know. Also, some vultures will weaponize their diet, as turkey vultures will projectile vomit sewer-smelling foulness I can't even imagine.
Maybe I just don't want to. Especially if they spray you in the eyes. And if it hits feathers, the acid nerfs the ability to fly. That's not the most offensive thing vultures do. Contrary to popular belief, black vultures will camp out and flock around sheep giving birth and immediately swarm the newborn, gouging the eyes out and eating the blind lamb alive.
Bro, you can't spawn ca- I mean, we talked about this in his butterfly video, right?
Butterflies are horrifying. The fact that you can have the metamorphosis process and a female butterfly literally is still in the chrysalis and tries to get mated with is just so It's fubar on so many levels.
Like it is so messed up that that exists in nature.
>> [laughter] >> But like then it's I don't know. I'm not going to defend it because there's no defending it, especially for humans, right? There's no defending that. It is very much a opportunistic nature thing and it's just like oh, that's awful to think about. Oh, butterflies are strange, dude. I don't like them.
Moths, moths are cool. I like moths.
Butterflies are uh That's not even mentioning what vultures do to the economy. You do know vulture vomit and dookie juice can cause power outages when they pile up on [music] transmission towers. And that vulture curiosity can send your car insurance into the stratosphere as necro tweeties are liable to scratch paint, rip rubber seals and wipers off cars and even tear the vital seat covers from boats and tractors. That's not as bad as the possibility of them contaminating water sources with their acidic feces when the coliform bacteria from it invades water towers or reservoirs. Not to mention being the highest flying bird can backfire when they join the mile high club after getting rear-ended by a plane engine. Which makes vultures, in terms of damage, one of the costliest animals in America, estimated to cause about 3 million and 1.2 million dollars in damages to military and civil aircrafts respectively. When you add the dent they leave in infrastructure and livestock, vultures are capable of burning a multi-million dollar hole in the economy. But the real damage is to the economy of your social life. Let a guest see, smell or otherwise perceive the committee of vultures on your property and that might just be the last time they ever come over.
See, you say that. But that's a selling point today, right? Can you imagine you you go over to somebody's house, right?
I their friend, significant other, whatever, right? Like, what is that? Oh, it's a bunch of condors. Bro, that's so cool.
>> [laughter] >> I feel like to a lot of people it's actually a selling point.
>> people would probably forgive all of that if they weren't so ugly. So it's not hard to see how people see a vulture and see nothing but a nuisance. Well, vultures have no business being as OP as they are. Many animals have powerful digestive juices to eat carcasses, but no animal can match a Hades chickens internal fortitude. Vulture stomach acid has a pH lower than one, MEANING THEY CAN DESTROY WOW. TOXINS LIKE ANTHRAX and cholera that would one shot almost anything else. Botulism is considered the most potent natural substance on Earth as the toxins produced by bacteria attacks the body's nerves causing muscle paralysis, difficulty breathing, and even death. Let alone the fact some people pay to put that in their face.
The vultures nervous system is resistant to that same bacteria and can also tank the same bacteria that can cause tetanus and gangrene with zero effects. Not to mention when they're knee deep in death and decay, leaking liquid on their legs not only cools them, it acts as an antiseptic that kills bacteria on contact. Vultures are what that 0.1% of germs are afraid of and pathogens like tuberculosis, salmonella, leprosy, and even rabies meet their end in a vulture's gizzard. Oh my god.
That bird just ate that entire femur.
I'm assuming that's a femur.
That that bird Huh.
Uh Kind of lost for words.
>> [laughter] >> Which is a big deal because if you watched this video, another plug, but you know rabies is the disease that scares me the most. Yeah. The idea of a disease re-wiring your brain chemistry for the worst while also making you afraid of water, something that is non-negotiable if you want to live, haunts me. Rabies buries an estimated 70,000 people a year and with the most common cause of cases being dog bites, it's most destructive in areas with a large stray population like India. But there's two things India did that gave rabies the green light. First was them criminalizing euthanizing stray dogs, but the main reason was a complete accident. Diclofenac was a drug used as a painkiller and anti-inflammatory for cattle, but that same drug also caused fatal kidney failure in the vultures that ate them. This did an absolute number on the vulture population with many species cut down by 99%. Not only was it one of the fastest collapses of a bird species, the consequences of the sudden disappearance of nature's cleanup [music] crew was predictable as Weird.
It's almost like you you mess with part of the food chain or part of the uh the the the the network of interactions and suddenly you have more issues. It's almost like nature evolved a specific way on purpose. Like and that's the thing is like that's an idealistic way of looking at it. Like obviously we as humans do exist, right? Like you're not necessarily especially if you live in a hot area going to cover your car with a tarp every single time you go out to avoid vultures, right? Like to avoid vultures like stepping on your car, right? Like it's a weird one because on one hand yes, there's the idealistic view, but on the other hand there's a like realistic view of like are people going to necessarily change them doing something even if it's beneficial especially for a bird that they think looks ugly.
It's very superficial, but it's unfortunately reality.
>> The number of rabies cases skyrocketed.
And you remember what I said about vultures in the economy? Well, the free fall of the vulture population likely led to the deaths of half a million people and an economic loss of 70 million Ooh, that's a comma. 70 billion dollars.
>> Oh. from 2000 to 2005. But don't think it's just India that benefited from a scavenger stimulus package. Anthrax outbreaks are a semi-common occurrence in places like Kruger National Park in South Africa and Virunga National Park in the Congo. Especially in places where you can have pool parties that contain more hippo than pool and these outbreaks can kill up to 100 hippos at a time. Not only that, but these outbreaks can reach humans as in 2011 over 500 cases of anthrax poisonings in humans were reported after 80-something hippos died of the same. Now imagine the carnage if you didn't have bald-headed equalizers clearing the disease for the free. Like I said, there's a reason nature thought vultures were so nice they made them twice. Vultures also contribute to society in less dramatic ways. [music] As in the 1930s, the Union Oil Company of Texas started putting mercaptan in natural gas, and with turkey vultures [music] often gathering around the smell, they'd use the birds as markers to locate gas leaks. Vultures also act as an alarm bell for illegal poaching activity, as them circling over an area is like a Batman signal to park rangers.
Unfortunately, that has also made them a target for poachers, who purposely try to poison them. Evidently, the only toxin vultures have no answer for is humanity. Like I said, you do not respect vultures nearly enough, and I take back what I said about them being ugly. The Griffon vulture mogs any eagle you can think of. The Bearded vulture is like a Pokémon fire type come to life.
The King vulture is just an ethereal specimen of a bird. That is, if you can ignore the testicle situation.
>> [laughter] >> I love it. It's so cool. And oh, my sweet baby boy, if there are no condors alive, just know that I have died. And that's going to do it for this video.
Make sure you drink water, hug your mother, put some respect on the vultures game. Shout out to this comment for making me make this video. Acknowledge your father, and I'mma see y'all in the next one.
What a good video.
I loved it. I hadn't really considered the condor until this point. So, it was really cool to uh kind of go through and hear the history.
Uh yeah, Johnny Cash seems like an absolute piece of work. I'm perfectly fine never hearing Ring of Fire again.
Perfectly fine with that. What a piece of work.
>> [laughter] >> What a cool bird. Uh and you know what uh you know what else is cool? Casual Geographic. As always, links are in the description down below for your convenience. I absolutely recommend that you go ahead and check out the channel, uh as well as this original video. I know that YouTube's algorithm has been a little wonky recently. So, I was just wanting to make sure that uh we support creators who are honestly super cool.
Um I love it. I love animals. I love science. I don't get to engage with that enough. So, I actually really like that these uh I actually really like that these uh are very big conversation pieces um and reactions. And just honestly, I love that he's still doing videos. It's so cool to see him still doing stuff. But, thank you for watching. Really do appreciate it. I had a good one, and hopefully you did as well. And I will see you all in the next one.
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