Should have thrown the little monkey off the bridge. Somersaulting Hitting Breams on the way down and hit Solid Concrete. Survive but Serious Head Injury and no good so mom Abandons it. Wouldn't that be Cool. Left alone and Scared as F--K 😆 😆 😆 😂 😂 LMAO 😂
There is no brain "power" to speak of, as the arboreal rodent is incapable of cognition. That is to say, the rat-sow did not "invent" a plan by analyzing the scenario and the parties involved, considering various methods for achieving the desired outcome and judging the merit of each upon the respective estimated probabilities of success vs. failure, potential consequences associated with each hypothetical course of action factoring in heavily....It is one-hundred percent certain that no single step of the above-mentioned process transpired, as a tree goblin does not possess the requisite neural hardware to realize any sort of critical thinking. The fully-developed goblin brain is 1.5% the size of the fully developed human brain. It is, in part, the tiny brain of the tree-dwelling varmint that precludes any process of reasoning. Exacerbating it's virtually brain-dead status, however, is the fact that the micro-mind the goblin does have at it's disposal is profoundly primitive in both structure and physiology. Thus, the human brain (which is what you conflated with the pitiful central nervous system of the tree-rat when you exclaimed, "The power of a mother's mind!") is not merely exponentially larger, but also has evolved certain apparatuses that make cognition possible. In any case, without the ability to think critically, the goblin-heifer, like the vast majority of mammals, relies instead upon instincts. That is what her brain is good for, containing the programming that provides her with specialized urges and reactions, activated by various stimuli. These instincts are powerful and useful, obviously, as both the individual, and its specie, exist. Nonetheless, she did not require any mental power to call upon this instinctive behavior, this is innate. She does not know why she does what she does, she simply does it. The rats whose instincts are helpful in the various situations they encounter during a lifetime survive as a result, and are able to pass on their genetics. Those whose instincts are poor likely do not survive to pass on their genetics. After a certain amount of time has passed, almost all of the population possesses virtually the same, effective mental programming. Hope you learned something :D
@@ГалинаАмеличева-ф9иTrue, they don't have that much cognitive ability to premedite a complex plan to lure a kidnapper....She followed the higher ranking female like normal. If she tried violence, she would have got her ass beat. She simply started grooming the other monkey while waiting for the other higher ranking 🙊 to get done playing with her baby. The grooming happened to attract the kidnapper.
People who cite animals as being kinder or “purer” than humans should remember that animals, especially other primates, can indeed be cruel to each other.
It's important to remember that while animals, including other primates, can display acts of kindness and compassion, they are not inherently "kinder" or "purer" than humans. Just like humans, animals have the capacity for both good and bad behavior, including acts of cruelty towards one another.
To say the least! However, can you imagine what our non- human primate cousins (as an example), think of us?! 😮💨 I picture perhaps Libby saying to Luna (primates), "what in the world is that camera guy doing here at all times of the day and night? " 😁
It is indeed amazing to witness the challenges that even macaques face in the wild, and the kidnapping of an infant can be a heart-wrenching event. However, it is heartening to know that in some cases, there can be a happy ending, such as the safe return of the baby to its mother. These moments remind us of the resilience and adaptability of animals, and the power of maternal instincts to protect and care for their young.
@@wanimalusyes thankfully this ended well. Usually the babies fall from super heights and smack the ground face first, killing them. Often a slow agonizing death, depending how high.
A parent's worst nightmare to have a child kidnapped and to feel helpless ... and then, rather than violence, the mother recruits another macaque in a gesture of peace and social-binding, and the kidnapper can't resist exchanging the child for group grooming. So much to learn from this example!
Indeed, the kidnapping of a child is every parent's worst nightmare, regardless of whether it happens in the animal kingdom or among humans. However, the actions of the mother macaque in recruiting another member of the group to help retrieve the baby is a powerful demonstration of the importance of social bonds and peaceful conflict resolution. This example highlights how animals, like humans, can use social bonding and cooperation to overcome difficult situations, and how we can learn valuable lessons from observing their behavior.
It was the best option. Doesn't mean that if you get your own child kidnapped, you shouldn't resort to violence. If I had a child and someone kidnapped it, I wouldn't hesitate one second to resort to violent means if it was necessary.
Mama estaba utilizando lo que en humanos es equivalente a la Diplomacia , para evitar males mayores , muy lista y astuta esta mama lo utilizo todo para que su bebe no resultase dañado o muerto , muy bien por esta mama .
All the crap the VOs shoot and lie about has made us very cynical. I don't know who put this on here, but this was actually part of a video made by real cinematographers for a nature special, not for a channel on u -tube.
@susanwakley Why don't you pay attention to the channel before putting a silly comment? It's BBC Earth (with 12.2 million subscribers) and David Attenborough is the narrator. It's the BBC's own documentary.
The Barbary Macaque (Macaca sylvanus) is a species of macaque native only to Northern Africa, it is the only living non-human primate species found in the Atlas Mountains and is the only extant species of the genus Macaca and the tribe Macacini, it is also the only of the twenty-five extant macaque species not found in Asia.
Thank you. The entire reason that I started reading these comments was to find out what kind of macaques these are. The only other monkeys that I know of that are essentially tailless are the Black Macaques. I didn't know until just now that there was another.
@@keiththompson-mg4yt : There are currently 21 species of macaques and many subspecies. The ones you see most often on youtube are from Asia such as: rhesus macaques - long-tailed macaques - pigtail macaques - crab-eating macaques - Toque macaques - Japanese macaques - Taiwanese macaques.
@Sandy Trani, actually, there are twenty-five extant macaque species: the Barbary Macaque (Macaca sylvanus), the Lion-Tailed Macaque (Pithecoleo silenus), the Arunachal Macaque (Oreopithecus munzalus), the White-Cheeked Macaque (Oreopithecus leucogenys), the Assam Macaque (Oreopithecus assamensis), the Tibetan Macaque (Oreopithecus thibetanus), the Rhesus Macaque (Calidopithecus mulattus), the Japanese Macaque (Calidopithecus fuscatus), the Formosan Macaque (Calidopithecus cyclopis), the Hainan Macaque (Calidopithecus brevicaudus), the Crab-Eating Macaque (Cynomolgus fascicularis), the Stump-Tailed Macaque (Cynomolgus arctoides), the Bonnet Macaque (Indocebus radiatus), the Toque Macaque (Indocebus sinicus), the Northern Pig-Tailed Macaque (Hyocaudus leoninus), the Southern Pig-Tailed Macaque (Hyocaudus nemestrinus), the Pagai Island Macaque (Leucocebus pagensis), the Siberut Macaque (Leucocebus siberu), the Moor Macaque (Melanocebus maurus), the Booted Macaque (Melanocebus ochreatus), the Muna-Buton Macaque (Melanocebus brunnescens), the Tonkean Macaque (Melanocebus tonkeanus), the Heck's Macaque (Melanocebus hecki), the Gorontalo Macaque (Melanocebus nigrescens), and the Celebes Crested Macaque (Melanocebus niger).
@@indyreno2933 : I haven't listed them all There are many more you forgot to add The Magot (Innuus ecaudatus) which still lives in the wild on the Rock of Gibraltar. And then we must also take into consideration the subspecies which are the cercopithecines (Cercopithecinae) which form a subfamily of Old World monkeys.
@Sandy Trani, actually, old world monkeys are a superfamily (Cercopithecoidea) with four extant families: Colobidae (Colobuses), Presbytidae (Langurs), Cercopithecidae (Guenons, Talapoins, Green Monkey, Malbrouck, Tantalus Monkey, Grivet, Patas Monkeys, Vervets, and Inoko), and Papionidae (Baboons, Mangabeys, and Macaques), they are officially divided into two clades, the leaf-eating group, which contains the colobuses (family Colobidae) and langurs (family Presbytidae) and the cheek-pouched group, which contains the families Cercopithecidae and Papionidae, in fact, there are officially twenty-one extant families of primates: Lorisidae (Lorises and Pottos), Galagidae (Galagos), Phaneridae (Fork-Crowned Lemurs), Lepilemuridae (Sportive Lemurs), Cheirogaleidae (Dwarf Lemurs and Mouse Lemurs), Daubentoniidae (Owl Lemurs), Indriidae (Mountain Lemurs), Lemuridae (Common Lemurs), Tarsiidae (Tarsiers), Aotidae (Owl Monkeys), Callithrichidae (Marmosets and Tamarins), Saimiriidae (Squirrel Monkeys), Cebidae (Capuchins), Atelidae (Prehensile-Tailed Monkeys), Pitheciidae (Sakis, Uakaris, and Titis), Colobidae (Colobuses), Presbytidae (Langurs), Cercopithecidae (Guenons, Talapoins, Green Monkey, Malbrouck, Tantalus Monkey, Grivet, Patas Monkeys, Vervets, and Inoko), Papionidae (Baboons, Mangabeys, and Macaques), Hylobatidae (Lesser Apes), and Hominidae (Great Apes).
So much to learn from animals and nature. The problem nowadays seems to be we humans look mainly to the Internet not to overall life experiences. Humans the top of the animal kingdom? I fear not.
From the Gibraltar group I assume? Been there couple of times and they're very clever...but also kind. A younger member (we had brought carrots, banana, nuts etc. But NO produced food) after a snack took to my eldest daughter and hopped up on her (sitting quietly) and started grooming her long thick hair....like a thanks? Then one large male came to check...my daughter just sat still...the younger member left, he pulled at her clothes to check for more food...then left. It was getting dark so we left too. Sadly too many visitors bring bags of crisps or foil wrapped food like sandwiches so it's becoming dirty up there 💔😭 please don't bring anything like that or even a bag (unless you lock it in a vehicle before going out, and do not plan to sit up there eating your lunch...it won't be yours long and the rubbish will be left) sunglasses and phones too are easy pickings. If you want to give something...bring fresh veg/fruit and no containers (just pick out a handful or 1 carrot 1 banana, leave container inside, bags, phones etc too) give the food that won't leave rubbish behind and enjoy.
Какая красивая обезьяна, какие выразительные глаза, они необыкновенно умные, а эмоции нне менее сильные чем у людей, в поступках они часто превосходят людей.
To show they can, letting that mom know who I'd higher up..Like a thing to maybe remind her where mom belongs..Terrible the others would have attacked the monkey in the wrong though, if mom had tried to get infant back.
I became a full-time TH-camr , just to record and showcase the unseen, the unexplored and the unshared and since then my channel has been doing so good. BBC earth motivated me through their epic nature videos.
The kidnapping of an infant macaque is a tragic event that highlights the dangers that many animals face in the wild. Primates, in particular, are often targeted by poachers and hunters, leaving their young vulnerable and without protection. The loss of a young macaque not only affects the immediate family but can also have significant impacts on the broader social network of the species. It's important to remember that every animal, no matter how big or small, plays a crucial role in the delicate balance of the ecosystem.
(cont) one to where she could groom it in front of the kidnapper. Eventually the kidnapper came to them to be groomed and released the baby. The mother had such wisdom and patience to stay close by, but not agitated the kidnapper.
The narrator said the mother and baby were outcasts and the only comfort they receive is from each other. She wasn't an outcast when she called in another Macaque. lol
If mom even goes near that baby they will hurt her badly. Most kidnappings end with out the baby hurt. The mom just patiently waits for the kidnapper to let the baby go or the baby gets away. Nothing dramatic.
Ahhh. What a way to start April Fool's Day 2023... the one-and-only voice of our beloved Sir David Attenborough calmly narrating a Macaque kidnapping. Much love and prayers to you and yours, everyone, from your eternal sister in Christ somewhere near Seattle. ⚘ 🙏❤🙏 ⚘
Please make a documentary about the Macaques at the Angkor Wat temple. The world need to know how abused and maniplulated they are by the ruthless VO’s. It’s been going on for years and just getting worse. The little babies suffer the most.
I don’t think anybody really cares 😂 that’s never going to change. And if you think that’s bad, good thing you haven’t seen the dark dark videos 👀 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 🙊
Wow you clearly haven’t seen how bad it actually can be, with the babies accidentally falling from super high trees and dying slow painful deaths. This was a happy ending. Grow a pair
Maybe so but this is handed down through the ages. Cruelty to their babies is terrible but what drives them to it? Even our dogs, if there is something wrong with one of the puppies, the mother segregates the ill puppy and leaves it to die. What compare can you make between an animal an
Not sure that's high ranking kidneper. High ranking monkeys not need to run so far away. Lower ranking don't look into eyes like this monkey did. And macaques never try to immediately snatch back baby to avoid injury, they always chaising kidneper and sitting beside
The mother shows the kidnapper compassion between two macaques, and that offers the kidnapper a mirror to see herself as also capable of receiving and giving compassion. I think the mother guessed from the beginning the kidnapper meant the youngster no harm, and that guess turned out to be right. I'm fascinated though at what force drove that third macaque to join, perhaps they and the mother have built up a lot of trust over time.
Dude this is NOT about compassion, compassion has absolutely no role in this scenario at ALL. You are in Lala-Land right now assuming the mother was guessing that the kidnapper wouldn't hurt the baby, bc oh yes they would have, plenty of similar situations have resulted in dead baby monkeys. These are animals, not humans. The mother offered the kidnapper a grooming to distract her so that her child could sneak back to her arms while she was close enough to do the grooming. It was an equivalent exchange, not a googoo-good feelings moment.
@@dondada6602 I didn't say that and it's demonstratably untrue. The mother at least has compassion for her own baby to try and save it. I'm just saying that I highly doubt the mother was showing the kidnapper said compassion, in that case I think the monkey was using logic to get what she wanted, that is her baby back.
Lo que sufre una VERDADERA MADRE nadie más lo soportara😍💗!! Que inteligente es esta mama👌🤗😍pobrecita!! Que vida tan complicada y difícil tiene que ser muchos animales.. y 99%de los casos por nuestra culpa HUMANA😭
This time things had a happy ending. Some times it can go horribly wrong, specially for the baby. Some infants could get hurt or killed. I had read various articles about this behavior and nobody seem to understand why monkeys do this. The narrator is correct about one thing. If the mother tries to get her baby back, she could get attach by the troop or the kidnapper. Being a low ranking female she need to be smart if she wants her baby to survive
Nobody seems to understand this? Not according to everything I've ever read. They do it for two reasons: one, to establish/reinforce the dominance relationship; two, if it's a female, and especially a juvenile female, she may simply really want a baby of her own, and there's nothing stopping her from just taking one, so long as it belongs to a lower-ranking mother.
@@keiththompson-mg4yt : It is also one of the reasons why young dominant females kidnap babies. Their social status allows them all the rights and they use and abuse the permissiveness of other females at the bottom of the group's ladder to attack babies. If a reconciliation is not found quickly, the baby's life is potentially in danger.
Actually, this wasn't a set up. It was on a BBC special. A low ranking female had this baby. Another monkey who didn't have a baby stole it. The baby tried to get away, but couldn't. The mother followed the kidnapper up to this high place. It looked like she was afraid if she tried for it, it might get dropped. She maneuvered the other
Mom: "GUUURL, we gon do our hair right now!"
This is the best comment here😂
Poor mom. She’s worried sick. And baby knows what’s happening .. so smart!!!
It’s the camera work wow. They even the sounds these guys make.
Cool to see how easily they can climb those metal structures.
Such a smart mommy. She handled it perfectly❤
You know they deliberately edit these videos to make drama and make their lives look more complicated.
Should have thrown the little monkey off the bridge. Somersaulting Hitting Breams on the way down and hit Solid Concrete. Survive but Serious Head Injury and no good so mom Abandons it. Wouldn't that be Cool. Left alone and Scared as F--K 😆 😆 😆 😂 😂 LMAO 😂
@@bottlethrower1544 This does really happen in Macaque society they have a strict hierarchy
Didnt look that deep to me probly just babys cousin just messing wit baby. Mom wasnt worried least bit it seamed 😕
indeed She couldve went the violent route but that wouldve endangered her kid. Such a smart play by the mom
The power of a mother's mind! Heart strings pulled just cinematic!
There is no brain "power" to speak of, as the arboreal rodent is incapable of cognition. That is to say, the rat-sow did not "invent" a plan by analyzing the scenario and the parties involved, considering various methods for achieving the desired outcome and judging the merit of each upon the respective estimated probabilities of success vs. failure, potential consequences associated with each hypothetical course of action factoring in heavily....It is one-hundred percent certain that no single step of the above-mentioned process transpired, as a tree goblin does not possess the requisite neural hardware to realize any sort of critical thinking. The fully-developed goblin brain is 1.5% the size of the fully developed human brain. It is, in part, the tiny brain of the tree-dwelling varmint that precludes any process of reasoning. Exacerbating it's virtually brain-dead status, however, is the fact that the micro-mind the goblin does have at it's disposal is profoundly primitive in both structure and physiology. Thus, the human brain (which is what you conflated with the pitiful central nervous system of the tree-rat when you exclaimed, "The power of a mother's mind!") is not merely exponentially larger, but also has evolved certain apparatuses that make cognition possible. In any case, without the ability to think critically, the goblin-heifer, like the vast majority of mammals, relies instead upon instincts. That is what her brain is good for, containing the programming that provides her with specialized urges and reactions, activated by various stimuli. These instincts are powerful and useful, obviously, as both the individual, and its specie, exist. Nonetheless, she did not require any mental power to call upon this instinctive behavior, this is innate. She does not know why she does what she does, she simply does it. The rats whose instincts are helpful in the various situations they encounter during a lifetime survive as a result, and are able to pass on their genetics. Those whose instincts are poor likely do not survive to pass on their genetics. After a certain amount of time has passed, almost all of the population possesses virtually the same, effective mental programming. Hope you learned something :D
Нет у них, разума!!!! Есть только инстинкт!!!!!
@@ГалинаАмеличева-ф9иTrue, they don't have that much cognitive ability to premedite a complex plan to lure a kidnapper....She followed the higher ranking female like normal. If she tried violence, she would have got her ass beat. She simply started grooming the other monkey while waiting for the other higher ranking 🙊 to get done playing with her baby. The grooming happened to attract the kidnapper.
Drama among macaques. 😢😮
This involves hierarchy as well. The abductor is higher ranking in the troop.
People who cite animals as being kinder or “purer” than humans should remember that animals, especially other primates, can indeed be cruel to each other.
Except humans are way more cruel to each other....
It's important to remember that while animals, including other primates, can display acts of kindness and compassion, they are not inherently "kinder" or "purer" than humans. Just like humans, animals have the capacity for both good and bad behavior, including acts of cruelty towards one another.
@@NathanBee3 No, we're actually not.
@@NathanBee3 and more cruel to animals, as sad as that is to say 😢
@@osimeon00 come out from under the rock, you will find, that yes, we are
The camera work is out of this world.
Im so impressed! What a smart mother omg! She loves her baby!😊❤
Dang, this is like watching parkour. I expect the camera to pan over and Daniel Craig fighting someone.
The life within these small groups of animals is incredible and so crazy.
To say the least! However, can you imagine what our non- human primate cousins (as an example), think of us?! 😮💨 I picture perhaps Libby saying to Luna (primates), "what in the world is that camera guy doing here at all times of the day and night? " 😁
@@Lotta-Democracy👍😂
Amazing that this happens also with the
Macaques, but it had a happy ending the
baby was returned to its mother.
It is indeed amazing to witness the challenges that even macaques face in the wild, and the kidnapping of an infant can be a heart-wrenching event. However, it is heartening to know that in some cases, there can be a happy ending, such as the safe return of the baby to its mother. These moments remind us of the resilience and adaptability of animals, and the power of maternal instincts to protect and care for their young.
@@wanimalusyes thankfully this ended well. Usually the babies fall from super heights and smack the ground face first, killing them. Often a slow agonizing death, depending how high.
Macaques steal other goblin’s milk leeches all the time.
The photography is absolutely stunning. I am enthralled. Well done!
Clever primates. So much more diplomatic than the human species.
A parent's worst nightmare to have a child kidnapped and to feel helpless ... and then, rather than violence, the mother recruits another macaque in a gesture of peace and social-binding, and the kidnapper can't resist exchanging the child for group grooming. So much to learn from this example!
This is what human civilization looks like too. In Australia blk beta mums had their babies stolen and put into homes with alpha yt mums 🙄
Indeed, the kidnapping of a child is every parent's worst nightmare, regardless of whether it happens in the animal kingdom or among humans. However, the actions of the mother macaque in recruiting another member of the group to help retrieve the baby is a powerful demonstration of the importance of social bonds and peaceful conflict resolution. This example highlights how animals, like humans, can use social bonding and cooperation to overcome difficult situations, and how we can learn valuable lessons from observing their behavior.
It was the best option. Doesn't mean that if you get your own child kidnapped, you shouldn't resort to violence.
If I had a child and someone kidnapped it, I wouldn't hesitate one second to resort to violent means if it was necessary.
Name one way that a human mother could employ the same tactic to get back her child.
Yeah because life is that easy. Grow up.
Bravo 👏👏 aux cameraman Super
Merci 👏👍pour cette vidéo grandiose
Mama estaba utilizando lo que en humanos es equivalente a la Diplomacia , para evitar males mayores , muy lista y astuta esta mama lo utilizo todo para que su bebe no resultase dañado o muerto , muy bien por esta mama .
That was intense!
That was so well put together, very entertaining and fun to watch! Thank you!
like the Channel hired the macaque actors to do a scene for your entertainment? 😁
All the crap the VOs shoot and lie about has made us very cynical. I don't know who put this on here, but this was actually part of a video made by real cinematographers for a nature special, not for a channel on u -tube.
Vermin cinema at its best. Nothing like some good vermatic film.
@susanwakley Why don't you pay attention to the channel before putting a silly comment? It's BBC Earth (with 12.2 million subscribers) and David Attenborough is the narrator. It's the BBC's own documentary.
She went and got her baby WoW well done ✅
Ok girl you done enough babysitting, let's do your hair instead 😂❤
“We can learn so much from animals” ….
Just fascinating. Ruthless word. With a video more exciting and dramatic than any action movie.
Как здорово снято!!! Прям детектива!!! Сердцебиение участилось!!! 😊
this simulation is simply amazing
??
The Barbary Macaque (Macaca sylvanus) is a species of macaque native only to Northern Africa, it is the only living non-human primate species found in the Atlas Mountains and is the only extant species of the genus Macaca and the tribe Macacini, it is also the only of the twenty-five extant macaque species not found in Asia.
Thank you. The entire reason that I started reading these comments was to find out what kind of macaques these are. The only other monkeys that I know of that are essentially tailless are the Black Macaques. I didn't know until just now that there was another.
@@keiththompson-mg4yt : There are currently 21 species of macaques and many subspecies. The ones you see most often on youtube are from Asia such as: rhesus macaques - long-tailed macaques - pigtail macaques - crab-eating macaques - Toque macaques - Japanese macaques - Taiwanese macaques.
@Sandy Trani, actually, there are twenty-five extant macaque species: the Barbary Macaque (Macaca sylvanus), the Lion-Tailed Macaque (Pithecoleo silenus), the Arunachal Macaque (Oreopithecus munzalus), the White-Cheeked Macaque (Oreopithecus leucogenys), the Assam Macaque (Oreopithecus assamensis), the Tibetan Macaque (Oreopithecus thibetanus), the Rhesus Macaque (Calidopithecus mulattus), the Japanese Macaque (Calidopithecus fuscatus), the Formosan Macaque (Calidopithecus cyclopis), the Hainan Macaque (Calidopithecus brevicaudus), the Crab-Eating Macaque (Cynomolgus fascicularis), the Stump-Tailed Macaque (Cynomolgus arctoides), the Bonnet Macaque (Indocebus radiatus), the Toque Macaque (Indocebus sinicus), the Northern Pig-Tailed Macaque (Hyocaudus leoninus), the Southern Pig-Tailed Macaque (Hyocaudus nemestrinus), the Pagai Island Macaque (Leucocebus pagensis), the Siberut Macaque (Leucocebus siberu), the Moor Macaque (Melanocebus maurus), the Booted Macaque (Melanocebus ochreatus), the Muna-Buton Macaque (Melanocebus brunnescens), the Tonkean Macaque (Melanocebus tonkeanus), the Heck's Macaque (Melanocebus hecki), the Gorontalo Macaque (Melanocebus nigrescens), and the Celebes Crested Macaque (Melanocebus niger).
@@indyreno2933 : I haven't listed them all There are many more you forgot to add The Magot (Innuus ecaudatus) which still lives in the wild on the Rock of Gibraltar. And then we must also take into consideration the subspecies which are the cercopithecines (Cercopithecinae) which form a subfamily of Old World monkeys.
@Sandy Trani, actually, old world monkeys are a superfamily (Cercopithecoidea) with four extant families: Colobidae (Colobuses), Presbytidae (Langurs), Cercopithecidae (Guenons, Talapoins, Green Monkey, Malbrouck, Tantalus Monkey, Grivet, Patas Monkeys, Vervets, and Inoko), and Papionidae (Baboons, Mangabeys, and Macaques), they are officially divided into two clades, the leaf-eating group, which contains the colobuses (family Colobidae) and langurs (family Presbytidae) and the cheek-pouched group, which contains the families Cercopithecidae and Papionidae, in fact, there are officially twenty-one extant families of primates: Lorisidae (Lorises and Pottos), Galagidae (Galagos), Phaneridae (Fork-Crowned Lemurs), Lepilemuridae (Sportive Lemurs), Cheirogaleidae (Dwarf Lemurs and Mouse Lemurs), Daubentoniidae (Owl Lemurs), Indriidae (Mountain Lemurs), Lemuridae (Common Lemurs), Tarsiidae (Tarsiers), Aotidae (Owl Monkeys), Callithrichidae (Marmosets and Tamarins), Saimiriidae (Squirrel Monkeys), Cebidae (Capuchins), Atelidae (Prehensile-Tailed Monkeys), Pitheciidae (Sakis, Uakaris, and Titis), Colobidae (Colobuses), Presbytidae (Langurs), Cercopithecidae (Guenons, Talapoins, Green Monkey, Malbrouck, Tantalus Monkey, Grivet, Patas Monkeys, Vervets, and Inoko), Papionidae (Baboons, Mangabeys, and Macaques), Hylobatidae (Lesser Apes), and Hominidae (Great Apes).
Wow, I was scared there for a minute!
So much to learn from animals and nature. The problem nowadays seems to be we humans look mainly to the Internet not to overall life experiences. Humans the top of the animal kingdom? I fear not.
Remarkable photography. Drones? CGI? Act of God??
Aside, the mother's angst, the climbing agility is incerdible!
It’s like she said I know you want a baby but this one is mine you’ll get one and you can play with my baby.😂
What a scary thing to happen for a small baby
Naaah they go through much worse when humans kidnap them and make torture videos for money.
Yes. Did you notice the way the baby looked back and screamed for his mother after the kidnapping? Utterly heart-wrenching.
Nature can be brutal 😮
From the Gibraltar group I assume? Been there couple of times and they're very clever...but also kind. A younger member (we had brought carrots, banana, nuts etc. But NO produced food) after a snack took to my eldest daughter and hopped up on her (sitting quietly) and started grooming her long thick hair....like a thanks? Then one large male came to check...my daughter just sat still...the younger member left, he pulled at her clothes to check for more food...then left. It was getting dark so we left too. Sadly too many visitors bring bags of crisps or foil wrapped food like sandwiches so it's becoming dirty up there 💔😭 please don't bring anything like that or even a bag (unless you lock it in a vehicle before going out, and do not plan to sit up there eating your lunch...it won't be yours long and the rubbish will be left) sunglasses and phones too are easy pickings. If you want to give something...bring fresh veg/fruit and no containers (just pick out a handful or 1 carrot 1 banana, leave container inside, bags, phones etc too) give the food that won't leave rubbish behind and enjoy.
That was a good video
Какая красивая обезьяна, какие выразительные глаза, они необыкновенно умные, а эмоции нне менее сильные чем у людей, в поступках они часто превосходят людей.
It is insane how much they kidnap each others babies.
To show they can, letting that mom know who I'd higher up..Like a thing to maybe remind her where mom belongs..Terrible the others would have attacked the monkey in the wrong though, if mom had tried to get infant back.
It's all about alliances and allegiances. Not morals, or ethics. Just like some of the great apes of the genus homo
I became a full-time TH-camr , just to record and showcase the unseen, the unexplored and the unshared and since then my channel has been doing so good. BBC earth motivated me through their epic nature videos.
There should be more videos like this or better or funny .i like how you talk and tell the story .this was very interesting thank you!😊❤
Clever momma.
Their dexterity and clombing ability is crazy
The kidnapping of an infant macaque is a tragic event that highlights the dangers that many animals face in the wild. Primates, in particular, are often targeted by poachers and hunters, leaving their young vulnerable and without protection. The loss of a young macaque not only affects the immediate family but can also have significant impacts on the broader social network of the species. It's important to remember that every animal, no matter how big or small, plays a crucial role in the delicate balance of the ecosystem.
This is the perfect ending we all want to see in a movie.😄
This was quite harrowing to watch the first thing on a Saturday morning! 🫣
Kudos to the clever mama.
Yeah and i had a very sad dream about monkeys
@@Pingu-mc1vo 😰
(cont) one to where she could groom it in front of the kidnapper. Eventually the kidnapper came to them to be groomed and released the baby. The mother had such wisdom and patience to stay close by, but not agitated the kidnapper.
Why was this so intense...
Quality Video
Wow is like a movie
Their natural way of life.
Leave them to their world, rules and way of life.
Super mommy 🎀🦋🐾🙏😊
The narrator said the mother and baby were outcasts and the only comfort they receive is from each other. She wasn't an outcast when she called in another Macaque. lol
Outcast as in lower ranking of the heirarchy in monkey troops.
Thank you mommy
Hair party, ladies!
If mom even goes near that baby they will hurt her badly. Most kidnappings end with out the baby hurt. The mom just patiently waits for the kidnapper to let the baby go or the baby gets away. Nothing dramatic.
Ahhh.
What a way to start April Fool's Day 2023... the one-and-only voice of our beloved Sir David Attenborough calmly narrating a Macaque kidnapping.
Much love and prayers to you and yours, everyone, from your eternal sister in Christ somewhere near Seattle.
⚘ 🙏❤🙏 ⚘
She looks like the hunchback of Notre Dame trying to carry it around. 😂
Please make a documentary about the Macaques at the Angkor Wat temple. The world need to know how abused and maniplulated they are by the ruthless VO’s. It’s been going on for years and just getting worse. The little babies suffer the most.
I don’t think anybody really cares 😂 that’s never going to change. And if you think that’s bad, good thing you haven’t seen the dark dark videos 👀 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 🙊
Kiddnappers are Moms best friend
OMG. This is so sad and brutal to watch. 😢
It was a problem resolved.... In the end it seems as if they were set up to share the kid.
@@urrywest such a beautiful moment man...😢
@@KingNez89 Yea it worked out...
Wow you clearly haven’t seen how bad it actually can be, with the babies accidentally falling from super high trees and dying slow painful deaths. This was a happy ending. Grow a pair
what incredible visuals ❤
Maybe so but this is handed down through the ages. Cruelty to their babies is terrible but what drives them to it? Even our dogs, if there is something wrong with one of the puppies, the mother segregates the ill puppy and leaves it to die. What compare can you make between an animal an
So excellent 👍
Spain or Morocco?
Spain
None of them. We are in Gibraltar
@@gregoriospotti3222 spain i says
this is yo mama house ask yo mama
So cute baby monkey 😍
Was ist an diesem haesslichen Scheusal cute? Die Kreaturen sind genau so "cute", wie Krokodile, Schlangen und Haie!
Not sure that's high ranking kidneper. High ranking monkeys not need to run so far away. Lower ranking don't look into eyes like this monkey did.
And macaques never try to immediately snatch back baby to avoid injury, they always chaising kidneper and sitting beside
Had to skip to the end of this one to see the outcome before I decided to watch the rest 😰
The mother shows the kidnapper compassion between two macaques, and that offers the kidnapper a mirror to see herself as also capable of receiving and giving compassion. I think the mother guessed from the beginning the kidnapper meant the youngster no harm, and that guess turned out to be right. I'm fascinated though at what force drove that third macaque to join, perhaps they and the mother have built up a lot of trust over time.
Dude this is NOT about compassion, compassion has absolutely no role in this scenario at ALL. You are in Lala-Land right now assuming the mother was guessing that the kidnapper wouldn't hurt the baby, bc oh yes they would have, plenty of similar situations have resulted in dead baby monkeys. These are animals, not humans. The mother offered the kidnapper a grooming to distract her so that her child could sneak back to her arms while she was close enough to do the grooming. It was an equivalent exchange, not a googoo-good feelings moment.
@@kymo6343Exactly. These tree rats have no compassion
@@dondada6602 I didn't say that and it's demonstratably untrue. The mother at least has compassion for her own baby to try and save it. I'm just saying that I highly doubt the mother was showing the kidnapper said compassion, in that case I think the monkey was using logic to get what she wanted, that is her baby back.
Глаза зверя
4:21
What an adventurous, wonderful love story. ❤
‼YEAH MOMMY ‼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
The walking baby snatcher sure looks creepy
Какие то все страшные вот никакой симпатии тошнотики
And they lived happily forever 😊
No.
No a week later the baby macaque fell from a tree hitting the ground face first. It never moved again after that.
@@dondada6602 😲
What an amazing video
Poor mother. She can do nothing.
색다르고 재미있다 신선하네 새끼낳고 젖먹는거만보다가 구독😂😂
I was totally expecting someone to fall down.
GLAD SHE GOT HIM BACK X
As a Mid/Top/jngl player i enjoy every play
thank you for showing a glimpse of our rock ❤🇬🇮 love from Gibraltar
BBC Earth is Good Chanal
Good climbers
When u a kidnapper but still gotta go to the salon
how many likes for the kidnapper holding the baby and jumping over the real mom, landing on one arm? 🙈
They are astonishingly agile!
Glad the baby was reunited with the Mom.
What a real mom do for their child.
Heartwarming vermin cinema at its finest,, a real tear jerker 😢😭😭
Good sharing
murga ki tang tu yahan video dekh raha hai ghar ka kam kon kerega tinday ju shakal wala
Omg 😳 Started off horrible. Ended happy. 😊
She wasn't worried. She knew aunty just wanted to babysit for a while.
She was worried. That's why she followed them closely.
Name Of The Chapter? Could Not Find It? Plz Help?
Beautiful rejoin her baby back to his or her mother. Wow!
Good
kidnapper very aware she did wrong, or she would not have ran.
What an strategy!!!
Mother love😍
Mother instinct
Die Natur kann ggrausam sein!
Very clever Mother! I am so happy the baby Macaque was able to get back to Mom.
This is like the beginning of Casino Royale.
Lo que sufre una VERDADERA MADRE nadie más lo soportara😍💗!! Que inteligente es esta mama👌🤗😍pobrecita!! Que vida tan complicada y difícil tiene que ser muchos animales.. y 99%de los casos por nuestra culpa HUMANA😭
Exactly! So true. 😢🙏🌍❤
This time things had a happy ending. Some times it can go horribly wrong, specially for the baby. Some infants could get hurt or killed. I had read various articles about this behavior and nobody seem to understand why monkeys do this. The narrator is correct about one thing. If the mother tries to get her baby back, she could get attach by the troop or the kidnapper. Being a low ranking female she need to be smart if she wants her baby to survive
Nobody seems to understand this? Not according to everything I've ever read. They do it for two reasons: one, to establish/reinforce the dominance relationship; two, if it's a female, and especially a juvenile female, she may simply really want a baby of her own, and there's nothing stopping her from just taking one, so long as it belongs to a lower-ranking mother.
@@keiththompson-mg4yt : It is also one of the reasons why young dominant females kidnap babies. Their social status allows them all the rights and they use and abuse the permissiveness of other females at the bottom of the group's ladder to attack babies. If a reconciliation is not found quickly, the baby's life is potentially in danger.
Actually, this wasn't a set up. It was on a BBC special. A low ranking female had this baby. Another monkey who didn't have a baby stole it. The baby tried to get away, but couldn't. The mother followed the kidnapper up to this high place. It looked like she was afraid if she tried for it, it might get dropped. She maneuvered the other
Я очень внимательно смотрела, но женщину не заметила, что вы имели ввиду? где там женщина, что она там делает???????