Don't forget the giant tortoises which are still around today They're pretty much the largest non-mammal native herbivores on their respective island ecosystems
It's amazing how many times dinosaurs evolved into quadrupeds from bipedal ancestors. Sauropods, ceratopsians, ornithopods, thyreophorans all started out being bipedal.
I notice quite a few humans going this round too.........granted the quads they are on are mobility scooters. Well actually I'm the only 45 year old I know that doesn't own a car, never had a drivers license and walks everywhere...............hell I'm the only adult I know that does this without a court order.
@@valivali8104Im not sure that is entirely true. Some research has suggested that Megatherium may have been bipedal. And many Ornithopods seem to have used four legs when feeding but probably still ran on two! The more likely case is that if you are large and your food is on the ground, having a lower body plan makes it easier to reach your food.
One thing that always amused me of late ceratopsids is how they repeatedly filled in the same niche of modern bovids. Large, stocky horned grass browsers living in herds? Definitely another case of convergent evolution.
I studied Zoology at uni, years ago, and I've always been interested in absolutely every facet of natural history and life on earth. Your videos are outstanding! They're so well done, so interesting and enjoyable. Great work!
Triceratops is probably my second favorite dinosaur. They just look so majestic, and powerful, like a tank on legs. It is interesting to learn that their family was also so successful, and comparing them as herbivores to others goes to show that there are lots of ways to get the job done.
Beak combined with ever growing teeth. A parrot combined with a rat.......but the rodent ability was in the molars........I hate that I will never know how these animals actually were.
I recently saw a video on Clint's Reptiles where he asked viewers what their favourite dinosaur was. Being obsessed with the creatures when I was younger, I thought the question would be easy, but the more I thought about it, the more I realized I didn't have a proper answer. The best I could to was to say that my favourite ceratopsian dinosaur is Styracosaurus. I'm always happy when the make even the briefest of appearances in video like these.
I just wanted to correct you about that bit you said at 2:12 about all dinosaurs evolving from a therapod dinosaur in the Triassic period- I'm sure you probably meant therapod-like dinosaur but I thought I should clear that up for anyone confused in the comments
First Anaceratops, then Monoceratops, then Diceratops, and then comes Triceratops. Then comes Tetraceratops, Pentaceratops, Hexaceratops and Heptaceratops. Then Octaceratops and Nonaceratops, and finally Styracosaurus. UPDATE: Oh, I forgot Leptoceratops, then Baryceratops, then Microceratops and Macroceratops!
"Ornithischians the group that contains all herbivorous Dinosaurs that weren't Sauropods..." Therizinosaurs & Ornithomimosaurs: "Are we a joke to you..."
It was very likely mostly herbivorous. Though they were likely able to eat animals too and did it occasionally. Still herbivorous enough to count as a herbivorous dinosaur as far as herbivorous niches are concerned.@@isaacbruner65
I’d love to see a video on the Evolution of Cycads. It would be interesting to see topics of genuses like Ctenis, Antarcticycas and Dioonopsis just to name a few.
I found this so fascinating. I've seen so much coverage in Paleontology media of creatures that are already famous, but not as much about how they evolved. I learned so much watching this video. Thank you!
We can't assume a singular function for structures such as horns. Modern-day horned animals often use horns both for defense and male-male contests. An animal will use whatever weapons it has as need presents.
So many things we don't know..........and as yet the sexual dimorphism of ceratopsians doesn't seem so extreme.......which leads to so many more questions about them.
well why do you think they developed those "weapons" in the first place? You are correct, most likely for a variety of uses, however the horns came from a need for them, not the other way around.
@@piggymag1c that’s an outdated view on evolution having an endpoint. Horns evolved gradually by selecting for individuals with bigger horns. The reason the ones with smaller horns not surviving or at least not reproducing isn’t really known.
They're defense was to run away. They're battles for mates were locking horns. I think its safe to compare them to modern ungulates (deer, bovids, antelope). Horns also serve as radiators for cooling
When I was a kid I drew Tyrannosaurus jousting with Triceratops and my triceratops was walking on its hind legs. My teacher told me ceratopsians would have never walked on theirhind legs. I can just picture her now if I told her about this video, smugly telling me that hind leg ceratopsians wouldn't be dueling Tyrannosaurus anyway because the era was wrong. Oh well. She's dead now so that kinda sucks. 🤷
Dude, your content is awesome! I always, always love your videos! Question: at 2:30 mark...Ankylosaurs were actually that big? Edmontosaurus is the second largest hadrosaurid known to date, right? I thought Ankylosaurus was a bit shorter, or is that Edmontosaurus is shorter than i thought?
I think you mean the vast majority of (very) large herbivorous dinosaurs evolved back into being quadrupedal. The smaller ones often stayed bipedal, especially among therapod species who were mostly herbivorous. Even some of the big herbivorous dinosaurs like hadrosaurs were facultative bipeds. Also, smaller animals tend to have more species and fossilise worse, so I would imagine taking all herbivorous non-avian dinosaurs into account would have them being mostly bipdeal, or at least it being close to 50/50. But the large herbivorous non-avian dinosaurs were likely mostly quadrupedal. Obviously even more bipedal herbivorous dinosaurs would be counted if you include the birds of the Mesozoic.
I've wondered if any creatures of this family ever filled the niche of a beaver. Big head, powerful bite, stomach of steel. Possible paddle tail derived from elongated feather/scales upon the sides ofthe tail.
Check out "Walking With Dinosaurs Remake || Third Chapter : Clash Of Dynasties", it's independent documentary about parallel evolution of Ceratopsians and Tyrannosaurids.
One of the illustrations of the triceratops had flowering plants included at 56 second of the video; I do not believe that there were flowering plants at the time of the triceratops; please confirm Moth Light Media.
Flowering plants, angiosperms, evolved in the early Cretaceous, and became steadily more common through the period. By the late Cretaceous, they were quite diverse and common, comprising about half of all plant species (it would be after the extinction that they would absolutely dominate in diversity though).
First of all, that isn't a Triceratops, its a Styracosaurus. Secondly, flowering plants evolved early on in the Cretaceous and became very widespread moving on (this is what Moth Light Media said in the video as well). Both Triceratops and Styracosaurus evolved during the Cretaceous, making them co-exist with flowering plants.
I am fascinated by the early north American primate's that died out, they've been finding fossils like crazy and now they're just getting to know them crazy.
Please upload more videos more frequently when you can ! Love the content and I’m fascinated so much by prehistoric life be it dinosaur, reptile or mamal 🙌🏾
Cheese toastie meat ranking: 1. Roast beef -flavour doesn’t overpower the cheese -heats nicely as cheese melts -breaks apart with each bite so you don’t have to separate/rip with fingers 2. Turkey breast -slightly bland flavour -thicker satisfying chewing experience -best protein per gram 3. Sliced ham -most flavourful (outflavours the cheese) -Doesn’t break as you bite; meat is pulled from toastie unless you pinch bread together -Slightly too cold when bread and cheese are done
Does anyone know where can i contact this guy? I have a question for him about his video on the large flightless birds. If anyone else is an expert on the subject, please let me know
What is clade of animals with most it's species alive today that would be comparable in species size (estimated) to the Dinosauria clade during the lade Cretaceous?
There was a theory at one time that the frill functioned as an anchor for massive jaw muscles so the animals could eat woody vegetation. The frill would have been mostly internal, encased in skin and muscle. What's the current status of this idea?
I just wrote an elaborate response to this that somehow got eaten by the algorithm before I was able to hit post. Basically, I agree. And I compared it to our own hyoid bone.
@@valivali8104 I don't know. Perhaps by relaxing the jaw muscles? A dinosaur jaw is organised differently than a mammalian jaw. At any rate, I'm curious about the current status of the theory.
I think saying 'putting them all in the same group is misleading' is a tremendous understatement. It is fine to some degree, but grouping this cat sized bipeds with elephant sized quadrupeds would be like grouping humans with squirrels. Even if we are closer related to rodents than we are to cats or whales. Maybe as a clade, or something between the class mammalia and the order primate/rodent, but anything beyond that is such a stretch.
The Evolution of Grass would be interesting.
Y u wanna watch grass grow?
It would be. It's actually pretty amazing just how recently a lot of our modern plants evolved.
Yeah boy there is so little paleobotany content out there!
Probably from sedges
@@cameronhill688beat me to it
"The largest herbivores in the ecosystem would never be dinosaurs again."
New Zealand: And I took that personally.
I was thinking of the moa, too, and also the elephant birds of Madagascar 😅
Don't forget the giant tortoises which are still around today
They're pretty much the largest non-mammal native herbivores on their respective island ecosystems
@@ekosubandie2094tbf they also arent Dinosaurs
non avian dinosaurs
It's amazing how many times dinosaurs evolved into quadrupeds from bipedal ancestors. Sauropods, ceratopsians, ornithopods, thyreophorans all started out being bipedal.
Well, if animal is big and heavy, which big herbivores have to be thanks to bigger and more complex digestive track, they have to be quadrupeds.
and morons of the 22nd century still just call them reptiles even when they MUST know better
I notice quite a few humans going this round too.........granted the quads they are on are mobility scooters. Well actually I'm the only 45 year old I know that doesn't own a car, never had a drivers license and walks everywhere...............hell I'm the only adult I know that does this without a court order.
@@Thulgorewe are becoming a rare breed 😁
@@valivali8104Im not sure that is entirely true. Some research has suggested that Megatherium may have been bipedal. And many Ornithopods seem to have used four legs when feeding but probably still ran on two! The more likely case is that if you are large and your food is on the ground, having a lower body plan makes it easier to reach your food.
One thing that always amused me of late ceratopsids is how they repeatedly filled in the same niche of modern bovids. Large, stocky horned grass browsers living in herds? Definitely another case of convergent evolution.
Herds? Correct me if i'm wrong, but ceratopsids were solitary
@@MarcoAntonio-hw7si I don't think I've ever seen convincing evidence they didn't live in herds or at least small groups.
@@MarcoAntonio-hw7sievidence of a Paticular species living in Groups is hard to come by
It's really shocking when you see how big a Triceratops skull could get in context.
I studied Zoology at uni, years ago, and I've always been interested in absolutely every facet of natural history and life on earth. Your videos are outstanding! They're so well done, so interesting and enjoyable. Great work!
Triceratops is probably my second favorite dinosaur. They just look so majestic, and powerful, like a tank on legs. It is interesting to learn that their family was also so successful, and comparing them as herbivores to others goes to show that there are lots of ways to get the job done.
Beak combined with ever growing teeth. A parrot combined with a rat.......but the rodent ability was in the molars........I hate that I will never know how these animals actually were.
That tank also have ball joint in their neck. They can rotate their full-of-weapons head to extremely wide range.
Plus big spiky horns.
Pachyrhinosaurus is my favorite, I like the thought of a ramming ceratopsian.
I recently saw a video on Clint's Reptiles where he asked viewers what their favourite dinosaur was. Being obsessed with the creatures when I was younger, I thought the question would be easy, but the more I thought about it, the more I realized I didn't have a proper answer. The best I could to was to say that my favourite ceratopsian dinosaur is Styracosaurus. I'm always happy when the make even the briefest of appearances in video like these.
Knew about them from Dino riders. Them and deinonycus were me favourites as a kid. Still today
I just wanted to correct you about that bit you said at 2:12 about all dinosaurs evolving from a therapod dinosaur in the Triassic period- I'm sure you probably meant therapod-like dinosaur but I thought I should clear that up for anyone confused in the comments
Also *theropod
First Anaceratops, then Monoceratops, then Diceratops, and then comes Triceratops. Then comes Tetraceratops, Pentaceratops, Hexaceratops and Heptaceratops. Then Octaceratops and Nonaceratops, and finally Styracosaurus. UPDATE: Oh, I forgot Leptoceratops, then Baryceratops, then Microceratops and Macroceratops!
Onerioceratops when
Very enjoyable and informative video.
Fun fact: Chasmosaur is so named because its skull has two huge "chasms" i.e. holes in the frill.
These evolution videos are always so fascinating.
Finally one step closer to finding out how they tasted like
"Ornithischians the group that contains all herbivorous Dinosaurs that weren't Sauropods..."
Therizinosaurs & Ornithomimosaurs: "Are we a joke to you..."
I thought Ornithomimus was an omnivore
@@isaacbruner65 Perhaps, in the same way a modern ostrich or emu is omnivorous. But none of that egg eating nonsense...
It was very likely mostly herbivorous. Though they were likely able to eat animals too and did it occasionally.
Still herbivorous enough to count as a herbivorous dinosaur as far as herbivorous niches are concerned.@@isaacbruner65
Finally, an episode about triceratops! I've been waiting for this one for ages, thank you so much Mothlightmedia!
I’d love to see a video on the Evolution of Cycads. It would be interesting to see topics of genuses like Ctenis, Antarcticycas and Dioonopsis just to name a few.
Babe wake up new moth light media video is up
Oh boy I've been waiting for this one, never clicked so fast
I found this so fascinating. I've seen so much coverage in Paleontology media of creatures that are already famous, but not as much about how they evolved. I learned so much watching this video. Thank you!
Your video is the best thing to happen on my Black Friday.
We can't assume a singular function for structures such as horns. Modern-day horned animals often use horns both for defense and male-male contests. An animal will use whatever weapons it has as need presents.
So many things we don't know..........and as yet the sexual dimorphism of ceratopsians doesn't seem so extreme.......which leads to so many more questions about them.
well why do you think they developed those "weapons" in the first place? You are correct, most likely for a variety of uses, however the horns came from a need for them, not the other way around.
@@piggymag1c that’s an outdated view on evolution having an endpoint. Horns evolved gradually by selecting for individuals with bigger horns. The reason the ones with smaller horns not surviving or at least not reproducing isn’t really known.
They're defense was to run away. They're battles for mates were locking horns. I think its safe to compare them to modern ungulates (deer, bovids, antelope). Horns also serve as radiators for cooling
@@vinny184 i agree evolution never stops and did not say otherwise. and surely bigger is not always better
lots of small early ceratopsians, that looked nothing like later giants with horns and frills, I never heard of until now!
He is back!
Another great video. I can’t believe you give us this kind of relaxing education for free!
The triceratops had a ball and socket joint in its neck!
fantastic video. Ceratopsians are awesome.
Ceratopsians are some of the coolest dinosaurs! Somehow, I had never heard of the tiny bipedal ones, though!
I really like your Videos, your voice fits perfectly. Its calming and informatif.
Would love to see more about the evolution of dinosaurs!!!
Your videos are the last truly entertaining relaxing dinosaur content
these videos are so good and always make me sad that we evolved so late and missed out on seeing so many incredible creatures
Not really though. We have some of the most amazing creatures ever today. We're just normalized to them, just as we would be to the dinos
I love your work! Keep it up. Is there any source to those paleomaps you use?
this video needs more love, great content as always
When I was a kid I drew Tyrannosaurus jousting with Triceratops and my triceratops was walking on its hind legs. My teacher told me ceratopsians would have never walked on theirhind legs. I can just picture her now if I told her about this video, smugly telling me that hind leg ceratopsians wouldn't be dueling Tyrannosaurus anyway because the era was wrong. Oh well. She's dead now so that kinda sucks. 🤷
Moth Light Media out with more W content.
Hi from Brazil
Good thing that you pointed out that late ceratopsians did not have quills or feathers, only the ancestors did
In 2019 I made a TH-cam account to thank you for your videos.
Ceratopsids are one of my favourite dinosaur groups, alongside Ankylosaurians and Stegosaurians
Oh wow, I'm early for once. I never thought about dinosaur evolution beyond birds before so this will be a fascinating watch 👀
Thanks very much for doing this video. It means a lot to me personally because my great grandmother was a triceratops.
damn, i feel an urge to make a joke about Yinshort, the smaller cousin of Yinlong
Finally Dinosaurs are back 😊💕
Hey 👋
Can you do a video on Birds and Reptiles that lived in Cenozoic Era
This is fascinating. Great channel. Thanks so much.
Dude, your content is awesome! I always, always love your videos!
Question: at 2:30 mark...Ankylosaurs were actually that big? Edmontosaurus is the second largest hadrosaurid known to date, right? I thought Ankylosaurus was a bit shorter, or is that Edmontosaurus is shorter than i thought?
Eotriceratops is worth mentioning, being the largest ceratopsian dinosaur ever discovered.
I think you mean the vast majority of (very) large herbivorous dinosaurs evolved back into being quadrupedal.
The smaller ones often stayed bipedal, especially among therapod species who were mostly herbivorous.
Even some of the big herbivorous dinosaurs like hadrosaurs were facultative bipeds.
Also, smaller animals tend to have more species and fossilise worse, so I would imagine taking all herbivorous non-avian dinosaurs into account would have them being mostly bipdeal, or at least it being close to 50/50.
But the large herbivorous non-avian dinosaurs were likely mostly quadrupedal.
Obviously even more bipedal herbivorous dinosaurs would be counted if you include the birds of the Mesozoic.
Adding onto this, I know of at least one other group of herbivorous theropods as well, Therizinosaurs, and they were also bipedal.
It makes sense when you take into account the adaptations needed for being a massive herbivore. Like a big barrel gut, weight distribution etc.
The Mighty Tri Horns🔥🔥🔥
Very interesting indeed
I've wondered if any creatures of this family ever filled the niche of a beaver. Big head, powerful bite, stomach of steel. Possible paddle tail derived from elongated feather/scales upon the sides ofthe tail.
No, because no dinosaurs had heterodonty.
The animal dinosaurs evolved from was "theropod like" but not an actual theropod.
Good work. 🙂👍
Check out "Walking With Dinosaurs Remake || Third Chapter : Clash Of Dynasties", it's independent documentary about parallel evolution of Ceratopsians and Tyrannosaurids.
Great video thank you for making it, Very interested👌🏻
Moth Light Media - more welcome today than Black Friday.
One of the illustrations of the triceratops had flowering plants included at 56 second of the video; I do not believe that there were flowering plants at the time of the triceratops; please confirm Moth Light Media.
There were flowering plants appeared in the mid cretacous while styracosaurus appeared in the late
Flowering plants, angiosperms, evolved in the early Cretaceous, and became steadily more common through the period. By the late Cretaceous, they were quite diverse and common, comprising about half of all plant species (it would be after the extinction that they would absolutely dominate in diversity though).
First of all, that isn't a Triceratops, its a Styracosaurus. Secondly, flowering plants evolved early on in the Cretaceous and became very widespread moving on (this is what Moth Light Media said in the video as well). Both Triceratops and Styracosaurus evolved during the Cretaceous, making them co-exist with flowering plants.
Science of horny dinosaurs. My favorite thing to watch while having morning coffee.
Absolutely fascinating
It's great seeing the evolution of my favorite dinosaur
I am fascinated by the early north American primate's that died out, they've been finding fossils like crazy and now they're just getting to know them crazy.
Nice
Judging the evolution of predatory hooved mammals I think there are also predatory ceratopsians as well.
3:55 hey can you tell us how you make these Size Comparison Charts what tool/app you use..???
Life is so marvelous. Beyond quantification.
There is also a theory that the Pachiselaphoraur had a horn made of keratin just like the Rhinos.
*babe wake up‚mothlight media just dropped.*
Please upload more videos more frequently when you can ! Love the content and I’m fascinated so much by prehistoric life be it dinosaur, reptile or mamal 🙌🏾
Brilliant as ever ! Have you ever doing plants too? We need someone as enthusiastic and rigourous as you to tackle plant evolution !!
Cheese toastie meat ranking:
1. Roast beef
-flavour doesn’t overpower the cheese
-heats nicely as cheese melts
-breaks apart with each bite so you don’t have to separate/rip with fingers
2. Turkey breast
-slightly bland flavour
-thicker satisfying chewing experience
-best protein per gram
3. Sliced ham
-most flavourful (outflavours the cheese)
-Doesn’t break as you bite; meat is pulled from toastie unless you pinch bread together
-Slightly too cold when bread and cheese are done
This looks like a interesting topic
There are birds and a few other clades of theropods that were herbivorous.
Love your videos
My fave dinos list:
1. Carnotaurus
2. Quetzalcoatlus ("It's a reptile!" I KNOW! :) )
3. Triceratops
Ah yes, my favorite Dinosaur family.
Does anyone know where can i contact this guy? I have a question for him about his video on the large flightless birds. If anyone else is an expert on the subject, please let me know
you favourite dinosaur as a kid
I’d love a video covering the evolution of anseriform waterfowl.
Great video
Man I utterly adore this channel, but please look up the pronunciation for these animals! It's 'kasmosaurs' not 'shazmosaurs' 👍
They were in large herds which gave them safety in numbers. Occasionally a predator may get one in a hunt. Many times they wouldn't.
probably my favorite Dino..
wait wasn't kulinda a basal ceratopsian? or was it a basal marginocephalian? the one that was covered in feathers.
I would love to see a evolution of stegosaurs and ankylosaurs
What's that big "rat" at 03:08?
What is clade of animals with most it's species alive today that would be comparable in species size (estimated) to the Dinosauria clade during the lade Cretaceous?
Dinosaurs were so dominant and widespread yet now non exist
Makes you wonder if same can happen to mamals or birds in the future
They do exist, birds are dinosaurs.
Didn't know birds were extinct.
Psittacosaurus is so adorable i want one.
ch is pronounced K in latin, so it's not chasmosaur ( shazmosaur ) it is chasmosaur ( Kazmosaur )
So have any ceratopsians been discovered outside of Asia or North America
Ceratopsians fossil completely abscent in gondwana
the frill most likely was for muscle attachment. they would have needed these powerful muscles to be able to eat the tough fibrus plants.
There WERE in fact herbivorous therapods
There was a theory at one time that the frill functioned as an anchor for massive jaw muscles so the animals could eat woody vegetation. The frill would have been mostly internal, encased in skin and muscle. What's the current status of this idea?
I just wrote an elaborate response to this that somehow got eaten by the algorithm before I was able to hit post. Basically, I agree. And I compared it to our own hyoid bone.
The frill doubled the skull's length. That's a little excessive for a muscle attachment.
@@anyascelticcreationsI'm sorry I didn't get to see your response!
How could they turn their heads, especially nod their head up and down to get food and water?
@@valivali8104 I don't know. Perhaps by relaxing the jaw muscles? A dinosaur jaw is organised differently than a mammalian jaw. At any rate, I'm curious about the current status of the theory.
Yoooo! I cheered when I saw this title, and autoclicked
I would like to see an evolution of bacteria or fungi video similar to the evolution of virus one.
Another goddamn banger
If only more Dinosaur fossils were as well preserved as Psittacosaurus
stegosaurus next dude!!!
I think saying 'putting them all in the same group is misleading' is a tremendous understatement. It is fine to some degree, but grouping this cat sized bipeds with elephant sized quadrupeds would be like grouping humans with squirrels. Even if we are closer related to rodents than we are to cats or whales. Maybe as a clade, or something between the class mammalia and the order primate/rodent, but anything beyond that is such a stretch.
There are many dinosaurs that are herbivores, but not ornithischian or sauropods. Therizinosaurus, for example, was a theropod.
The Y is silent and the O is a long O sound in Yinlong