Conflicts In A River | Wildlife Documentary
Үй жануарлары мен аңдар
At the foot of Uganda's roaring Murchison falls live two eternal enemies : the monitor and the Nile crocodile. Despite the crocodile's reign of terror within the river, the stealthy monitor is master of the banks where it steals and devours their vulnerable eggs. The first days of the young Nile crocodile are a series of nightmares : if it survives the monitor's attacks, it must avoid the swooping attacks of perch and eagles. Once adult, it becomes the undisputed master of the river and seeks to devour its erstwhile enemies one by one.
episode of Conflicts of Nature
Producers : Saint Thomas Productions
Author : Bertrand Loyer
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Пікірлер: 1 000
This is how nature documentaries should be. No music, no sound effects, good narrator, and good camera work. I really enjoyed this.
@yourtimetraveleralara
Жыл бұрын
Yeah me too
@avya6915
Жыл бұрын
ຝຝຝຝຝຝຝຝຝຝດິຕ ຈຈ
@richardtutor8331
Жыл бұрын
Yes, that is the way it should be.
@dnjj1845
7 ай бұрын
There was music
The narrator's voice makes the documentary even more interesting, relaxing and chilled,, epic💞
@robertoandrew9360
2 жыл бұрын
I dont mean to be off topic but does someone know a trick to log back into an Instagram account? I was dumb forgot my account password. I would love any help you can offer me.
@kingeli8839
2 жыл бұрын
@Roberto Andrew Instablaster =)
@marcelpop5840
Жыл бұрын
Yes
@senarsungaiaceh5568
10 ай бұрын
Yes
I loved it, this very informative documentary... Good job
Natural scenery.... Like to see that amazing video❤❤❤
Mirar y aprender mas sobre la vida de los animales sin duda es lo mejor, buen video!
Who else here wishes that the monitor lizard would’ve got eaten by mama crocodile?
@mordechaihaokip5434
2 ай бұрын
Not me 😅
200mln years of hunting instinct and evolution. This is the real king of any wildlife.
@girawarbaghelgirawar4361
4 жыл бұрын
मढतरय क्षडज्ञ
Muchos datos interesantes...para aprender sobre la vida de los animales..👍
My love for Nat Geo is on another level,, the commentary is 🔥🔥
@andrewquigley8938
Жыл бұрын
this isn't nat geo
@Champeh254
Жыл бұрын
@@andrewquigley8938 noted, thanks for the correction
Thank you for a wonderfel documentary. Most inteeresting and beautifully produced and narrated. June, 2023.
100 year old croc still rocking it for her age. They are the ultimate predators.
@fatimamounir7999
4 жыл бұрын
poking htgb
@1972dsrai
4 жыл бұрын
Fatima Mounir htgb?
@camwrhodes
3 жыл бұрын
Bullshit. They don't screw with hippos and elephants. The saltwater crocodile, Grizzlies, kodiaks, Siberian and Bengal tigers, honey badgers, wolverines, the orca..... Those are the super apex predators. They will prey on anything, or at least fight anything.
@kugaththeplaguefather6332
Жыл бұрын
@@camwrhodes I don't think you realize what Apex means.
@kugaththeplaguefather6332
Жыл бұрын
@@camwrhodes plus it's not just about some fucking braveness. it's also the fact that practically the outside physical form of crocodiles haven't changed. They mess with Elephants baby elephants that is same with baby hippos. Crocs are predators lone wolfs while Elephants and Hippos are social animals they will help those in need especially their own kind. PLUS most of the time hippos and elephants don't separate from the group. It's not all about braveness and toughness my man. a croc that ate a whole antelope literally doesn't need to feed for another 1 year, the crocodile is literally one of the closest things to a perfect predator. Amazing digestive, respiratory, cardiovascular system. They have the bite force that literally only existed in the dinosaur times, they have been known to OBSERVE prey despite being reptiles (reptiles are often dumbasses.) They haven't changed for hundreds of millions of years.
Nile lizards keep a check on population on Nile Crocs...... Nature always finds it balance.....
Cool show it's very relaxing
Thanks for the very impressive and heartfelt documentary very informative.
Allahu ekber Allah en büyüktür
Thank you😍😍😍🇮🇷درود به کانال خوب شما👏👏👏
Beautiful Uganda 🇺🇬
Something about Croc and Lion vids I'm addicted too! Something about their lazy power that puts me at ease!
@user-og5om3rh1o
3 жыл бұрын
Àà
@limpopostudios6788
3 жыл бұрын
Lol where are you from?
El documental es interesante e educativo nos da información de los animales que no conocemos, gracias por la informacion y muy bueno el documental
@esperanzaortizranero3949
9 ай бұрын
Yo e estado en unnos safari en kenia ytanzania y e visto toda clase de animales y es dicno de ver ay se ve toda clase de animales😅😅😅
Hermosa nuestra naturaleza 🏞️
Oh I love the narrator. Some old school feel to it
@HuyenNguyen-bn7gg
3 жыл бұрын
Olioiei9r9rorooro33i3irk3k3iei3orri8d98RIRIR9323T344943a4
God bless this narrator. His voice is so calming
@benjaminhaase7223
4 жыл бұрын
It ain't no David Attenborough, but I could sit through it.
interesting information, it will always be nice to know more about animals
@cornell833
10 ай бұрын
True animals was born before humans
Thank you for a wonderful documentary.i like it.this is very informative.
Has anyone else hear that fly buzzing in your ears enough I would never allow them to survive because they are beyond a torment
Excelente documental, muestra datos interesantes y el contexto de la realidad de la vida salvaje, la imponencia y belleza de los animales.
Técnicamente es una muy buena forma de apreciar y aprender sobre la naturaleza muy buen documental😁
power of hippo swim and relaxing with croc !! :P
amazing creatures...
Jesus loves you so much! Get Back to Him While There's Time Prfvr
Wow..its a good natural scenery
Animal immune and digestive systems are amazing. Eating a dead raw fish, no problem. Eating a developing egg, no problem. Drinking water which many other animals live and poop in, no problem. Simple incredible
@tman9619
4 жыл бұрын
It depends on the animal when it comes to eating decaying food and humans immune systems were also that impressive during the Neolithic era
@user-du3sn5te3i
4 жыл бұрын
ไแไ,ภขช
@PinvinoPiggg
3 жыл бұрын
@Mike Watson hahaha. As a Filipino I love balot but I had an allergic reaction to it when I was a kid and nearly died, at least it felt so. 41º fever and my skin turned red and I was so warm that I started to peel the outer layer of skin. Maybe it was a "bad" balut. But yeah there are some strange foods out there.
@PinvinoPiggg
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks friend😉.yup it ws a horrible experience and I don't think I'd be eating that again. I will stick to boiled eggs.
@envyallison926
2 жыл бұрын
Funny you said thus comment because I was saying to myself how others animals drink and live in nasty water. Like hippos. There constantly spreading poop around where they live 🤮
I love the narrator
Excelente documental, nos ayuda a entender más sobre lo difícil que puede llegar a ser la vida animal.
Exelente video me gustó mucho. Muy informativo
I like this commentator. My unbiased opinion: he is very good. Great documentary
Those are cool birds and everything
Excelente documental
He's not gonna be messing with these again
So interesting video! Thank you very much to the voice-over.
@longvo9872
4 жыл бұрын
Ouo
Crocodiles are the last surviving dinosaurs, they wouldn't look out of place in the dinosaur era either
@splash5150izy
5 жыл бұрын
^^^No They Wouldn't Look Out Of Place in The Dinosaur Era Timmy O'toole, But They Would Certainly Be A Mere Snack For the Much Larger Voracious Predator's Ha!!! .. .
@hdssx3kc7
5 жыл бұрын
Mabye today's size but other scientific proof shows they were much larger
@charonstyxferryman
5 жыл бұрын
quote : Mabye today's size but other scientific proof shows they were much larger Yep, 12 meters, or 3x longer than today's crocodiles
@hauntedhatatefumo8699
5 жыл бұрын
Birds.
@Raison_d-etre
5 жыл бұрын
Wrong. Crocodilians are not dinosaurs. They're only distant cousins. Birds are avian dinosaurs.
Terrific, fantastic 👏🏼 👍🏾 😀
Dammmm AK 🔥🔥🔥🔥😂😂😂😂😂
Good documentary: Great narrator.
Hell yeah murchison is really beautiful! Been there so many times I can’t count but it never gets old.
@hoopsbasketball7560
4 жыл бұрын
0
These documentary is very informative for mee🙋
Narration, par excellence.
I like this guys username “Best Documentary” Sounds like something Borat would say
I’m surprised the professional KZread zoologists didn’t recognize the fact that he said, “the largest of it’s species”-when it’s actually the saltwater crocodiles
@josephBo
2 жыл бұрын
Today, you are the professional youtube zoologist
@easportsaxb8057
2 жыл бұрын
@Josh well the often stated saying that they 'changed little over millions of years of evolution' is kinda true and not true, but what little truth it holds is an often misunderstood concept. Yes. there was a huge variety of crurotarsans, the broad and ancient group of archosaurs who's only living representatives are the few crocodilians today, that roamed the earth in many different continents just before and during the Mesozoic, from the huge predatory rauisuchid Postosuchus, to the strange herbivorous aetosaurs like Desmatosuchus. While in the same broad group of archosaurs as crocodylians the relation was still very distant and were very distinct in ecology as much as in morphology, with similarities probably only being diagnostic anatomical features such as orientation of hip joints and stuff like that. Many of the early large, predatory pseudosuchians such as the aforementioned Postosuchus superficially resembled dinosaurs quite a bit more than modern crocodiles, even their skeletons. But interestingly, there was a lineage of early Mesozoic crocodyliformes that began the characteristic of the later crocodylians, and those were the Neosuchians. Many of these started to have semi-aquatic niches, and they diversified rapidly. This is where we get some of the famous giant Late Cretaceous crocodile-like Neosuchians; namely Sarcosuchus. Although bearing strong resemblance to modern crocodiles both in appearance and probably in ecology, Sarcosuchus and relatives like Dryosaurs (which persisted until the early Cenozoic) were still pretty distantly related to crocodiles. Surprisingly, many phylogenetic studies recover Pholidosauridae (the family Sarcosuchus was in) as actually being more closely related to another famous group of Neosuchians; the marine Thalattosuchians, which were first coastal animals that probably laid eggs on land, but later on gave rise to fully marine animals such as Metriorhynchus. Also, as you probably know but that I'd still like to emphasize is that all of these groups are subsets of broader group, which have no living descendants. These specific groups didn't evolve into the 'newer' ones. Finally Neosuchians gave rise to more crocodile-like animals, the Eusuchians. Some strange and lesser known crocodyliformes such as Stomatosuchus formed basal groups, but later on Eusuchians finally gave rise to Crocodylia. This group split into 3 main groups, all of which are still extant today; first the Alligatoroids and later the Gavialoids and the Crocodyloids. Ancient Alligatoroids are also some of the best known prehistoric crocodyloformes; namely Deinosuchus and Purussaurus. Alligatoroids began roughly 85-80 million years ago well into the Late Cretaceous, while other 2 seem to have begun later on just after the KTP extinction. Sorry for the huge message, so if it was TLTR, I'll summarize: it really depends on what you define the definite lineage of crocodylians, as there were so many groups of crurotarsans throughout their history, and the majority of them were dead-ends that have no living relatives, and only a relatively small and not very diverse group remains today. But similar basal groups that were part of their broader group that would lead on to modern crocodiles appeared by the Early Jurassic, while the more specific groups (like Crocodylia) only began somewhat recently in the Late Cretaceous.
@easportsaxb8057
2 жыл бұрын
@Josh oh thank you very much for the compliments. I am also learning and paleontology is a big interest of mine. Of course I might get a few things wrong as I'm no paleontologist, but I do like to share the knowledge I learnt with others. Crocodilians and archosaurs in general are definitely a very interesting group of animals and I encourage anyone to research them. And I totally agree especially with your last sentiment that it is important that we properly refer to the specific clades to refer to any animal's phylogeny. I think we get the same problems of crocodiles as with Taturas, sharks or coelacanth. Coelacanth especially is one commonly referred to as a living fossil because of its ancient lineage. People keep saying that "coelacanths were thought extinct, but were rediscovered off the coast of South Africa". This often makes it sound like we found the same exact species unchanged for millions of years, when in fact not only the modern coelacanths (genus Latimeria) are different species of genus, but completely different family, coelacanths being an entire order. Many genera went extinct, but Latimeria evolved very recently.
@rochellephillips2180
2 жыл бұрын
@@easportsaxb8057 WOW!!!😲
@Rookiez87x
Жыл бұрын
@@easportsaxb8057 ok
I like the sound of the narrator's voice.😊
@user-mf7ze3wv6q
2 ай бұрын
And the fly keeps buzzing nearby😂😂😂
Este documental nos permite ver la verdadera naturaleza. Excelente
It is amazing look these beautifull birds help protect the crocodile eggs.
@splash5150izy
5 жыл бұрын
Yup it's Called a Contract With a Powerful Killer Ha!!! .. .
@gheebleasdale4550
5 жыл бұрын
Their eggs been stolen too by those monitor lizzzies. In revenge they collaborate with the crocs.
@alexanderjordan6601
4 жыл бұрын
I think it's more hate for the nile monitor than protection of crox eggs. The nile monitor is a threat to the bird eggs as well
@sokdavet8975
4 жыл бұрын
Rambut Lebat
@walkerfamily5582
4 жыл бұрын
My enemy enemies are my friends
Love crocs and gators 🐊 fascinating how they’ve managed all these years. What if the water freezes what do they do?
@achrafr5852
2 жыл бұрын
In North Carolina gators poke their noses through ice to survive freezing temperatures
@tisbutascratch7168
2 жыл бұрын
Their hearbeat slows to about 1bpm and they go into hibernation.
@metalmamasue3680
Жыл бұрын
Generally speaking, gators and crocs live in warmer areas closer to the tropics where the water doesn't commonly freeze. But reptiles in general can and do brumate which is their version of hibernating. It's not true hibernation because they will come out on warm days no matter what time of year to take advantage of the opportunity to warm up in the sun. I definitely have a reptile dysfunction 😃 and have kept many species of reptiles. Currently I only have 2 snakes 🐍🐍because of limited space.
Belleza, fuerza, intensidad, grandeza, tranquilidad, el Nilo, y su hábitat en su recorrido que sorprende con ejemplos de supervivencia y evolución animal, que equilibra, preserva, la naturaleza y el ecosistema.
سبحان الله ربي الخالق العظيم لااله الاالله وحده لاشريك له
The fly is driving me insane.
Top From Indonesia
@shabansoudan8568
3 жыл бұрын
انت جميله
Nice! 👍👍
Good documentary
I've been to the falls. very close to my relatives village. very beautiful
Imagine the amount of crocs if it wasn’t for the Nile monitor. God bless them lol
@benthekeeshond545
5 жыл бұрын
Adam, If they are overpopulated, people can harvest them. They make good handbags.
@ihanakaunotar2741
4 жыл бұрын
Ben TheKeeshond thats soma useless shit. Human skin is better.
@tedious7207
4 жыл бұрын
@@ihanakaunotar2741 human skin is better makes the finest leather
@alanpeterson6224
4 жыл бұрын
@@tedious7207 Only the high class Crocs carry those purses.
@tedious7207
4 жыл бұрын
@@alanpeterson6224 yes those vril
No loud background music Nice
Nice work
Dangerous piece of beach right there
Mergulhador: Eu vi um crocodilo de tamanho muito bom, mas não sei onde está também Mergulhador: Vamos mergulhar e ver o que acontece
Who would downvote this?
Great clip!
It is a wonderful place where bords and others animales live. The water and the végétation remmember me my village during the wet season
Wonderful Voice
@manuelakani6763
3 жыл бұрын
🎼
@juliocortezguayao8302
3 жыл бұрын
@@manuelakani6763 ooóóoóooooooo
Excelente documental, el contexto de la realidad de la vida salvaje, la imponencia y belleza de los animales.
Great show!!
The croc that yawned @3:44 was a beauty.💚
@billasingh8360
3 жыл бұрын
K3d
Man's vocab and adjectives are AMAZEBALLS
ក្រពើពិតជាធំហើយសាហាវខ្លាំងណាស់
good for relaxing, peace :)
I like that there is no annoying music. Thank you. I think in a nature docu should be nature sound
Damn that fly
Wow amazing good job
Muy buen el vídeo 👍 me encanta
Woooooooow!
for God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son that whosoever shall believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3:16 God
Excelente documental!
Muy interesante 👌👌👌👌 y muy buenas las imágenes y limdos los paisajes
The voice is killin me im juss trynna enjoy this vid and i got winston churchill wisperin in my ear
@siyanxumalo4230
4 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@nazzirsegda575
4 жыл бұрын
@@siyanxumalo4230 ca.mments
Нужно всю нашу власть связать и сбросить в реку на корм крокодилам.
So fascinating
Keep it up good
so good narration
Excelente documental ❤❤❤
Does birds are amazing! Sad end for the croc mom!!! 😭
@user-bc5vq3hr6f
4 жыл бұрын
Elias Shadow
Those fish are huge
Thanks
This is such a Beautiful Country nice Animals Great info , the Persons who make this Video did a Great Job 👍
At 15:45 the fish had already been gutted so was obviously placed there by the film crew to get the shot... I don't miss a trick..
@user-pm4zg2mw5b
Жыл бұрын
Yup
Dang fly sounds gave me the creeps.
@rikkijohnston2432
4 жыл бұрын
I thought the same loud as a FEMINEST😈
@alkalinejames346
4 жыл бұрын
Bjf
@GatorMike79
3 жыл бұрын
Damn Yuppies!
@jtrobins1
2 жыл бұрын
me too
Wow I like it
Wow, it's so interesting
Nile Monitors are not sly, highly evolved predators capable of thriving in challenging conditions with remarkable senses.
@rhealrock4655
3 жыл бұрын
Happy Mother's day to you
What was the point of those birds? The crocodiles were in no hurry to return to shore.
Buen video