@@robertoaiello9342 lol, the largest Alaskan moose individuals would still get trashed by a bison (just learned of a bison emoji 🦬)because the bison could break its legs with a charge and the moose would be helpless >:)
@@regularjoe4613I guess they can because here in New Zealand a lot of our wapiti/elk herd is made up of red cross wapiti hybrids. They're very closely related so they have compatible genetics
@@bumbackgroundacc female red deer and North American elk are the size of a large mule deer doe. Bull elk and red deer bulls/stags are pretty massive. More like a small horse as far as their bodies go.
I love how half way through it the red stag is like oh cool there is a bee and looks the other way and the elk is just there in a fighting stance and the red stag goes oh right the fight
They are actually the same species believe it or not... both are Cervus Elaphus. Elk are just a sub species, but they can interbreed. Same idea as Grizzly Bears, Brown Bears, and Kodiak Bears. All three are subspecies of the overarching species Ursus Arctos.
@Teo Lobot, actually you are incorrect, they are actually separate species, the Cervus genus now contains only six extant species: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), meaning the Cervus genus is now restricted to only the red deer and extant species that used to be conspecific with it, members of the Cervus genus are referred to as common deer.
It's interesting to see these two together as they're very very closely related (They are both one of the only Cervus species, other realtives being Corsican, Barbary and Traim deer), but what's funny is how vastly different they sound, and man the Red Stag sounds so much bigger than what it looks lmao.
@Black Spectre, correct, the genus Cervus (Common Deer) currently has six extant members being the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), of the six extant species of this genus, the red deer is the most basal, then followed by the split between two clades, one that is constituted by the mediterranean deer and barbary deer and the other that is constituted by the caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti.
Oh the stag isn't small... The elk is just closer to moose as far as height goes. Red deer are normaly the size of a person give or take a couple inches
@@indyreno2933Those are subspecies, not species. The five extant species of Cervus are as follows: Red Deer ( Cervus elaphus) Central Asian Red Deer (Cervus hanglu) Thorold's Deer (Cervus albirostris) Sika Deer (Cervus nippon) Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis) "C. barbarus, C. corsicanus C. maral" are all subspecies of Red Deer.
@ScaleHunt, actually, there are six extant species in the genus Cervus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), the thorold's deer and sika deer are no longer part of the Cervus genus, the thorold's deer belongs to the monotypic genus Przewalskium, where its scientific name is actually Przewalskium albirostris, while sika deer now constitute the genus Ocellelaphus as four separate polytypic species: the Southeast Asian Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus pseudaxis), the Chinese Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus mandarinus), the Formosan Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus taiouanus), and the Japanese Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus nippon), the correct english name for Cervus hanglu is "hangul" not "central asian red deer" as the term "red deer" refers exclusively to Cervus elaphus, the hangul is a distinct poltypic species that is more closely related to the elk, the caspian deer is also now a separate species that is more closely related to both the hangul and elk, the mediterranean deer and barbary deer are both considered separate species that form a clade that is the sister clade to the one that contains the caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti, the thorold's deer (Przewalskium albirostris) is more closely related to the Père david's deer (Elaphurus davidianus) of the monotypic genus Elaphurus, while the sika deer (genus Ocellelaphus) are more closely related to the fallow deer (genus Dama), chitals (genus Axis), and hog deer (genus Hyelaphus), you should know there are actually now seventy extant deer species under twenty genera.
@indyreno2933 As of 2011 ICUN has put the Thorold's Deer in the Cervus genus. " This species was formerly classified in a distinct genus as Przewalskium albirostris, however, morphological, behavioural and genetic analyses align this species with the Red Deer clade (Wilson and Mittermeier 2011). No subspecies are recognized."
Hard to imagine that until recently, we thought they were the same species. Also, the bigger elk sounds like a wailing banshee while the smaller red deer has such a mighty roar that it would make a lion feel inadequate.
@@Bignfluffy yah, cuz compared to the elk literally right next to him, he don’t look much bigger than a mule deer, so, in my opinion yes, small bodied! I hunt elk every year, thrm things big
Whoa, you guys have elk in NZ?? I knew NZ had introduced deer populations, but I thought they were smaller Eurasian species like we have in South-Eastern Australia. Living in Canada for years I've seen elk in the wild, they're magnificent creatures, on a whole different level to other deer. Bagging a trophy bull elk is high up on my bucket list, envious you Kiwis have a local population (although Wikpedia tells me there's been so much interbreeding with red deer there's probably no pure elk lineage left anymore).
@@MsAggie78 I know they're not native, NZ has no native mammals except a few bats - that's why I said "introduced deer populations". The video description saying "We have both Elk and Red Stag on our Ranch in New Zealand" clued me in to the captive stock part, but the relevant point is that the species was introduced and there's a self-sustaining population inhabiting the island(s). There is no such population in Australia.
They are actually the same species believe it or not... both are Cervus Elaphus. Elk are just a sub species, but they can interbreed. Same idea as Grizzly Bears, Brown Bears, and Kodiak Bears. All three are subspecies of the overarching species Ursus Arctos.
Nope, Elk are Cervus Canadensis. They are used to be recognised as same species but not anymore. But yeah, they're still same genus so they can interbred
@Kotaro Jujo, correct, there are now only six extant species under the Cervus genus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis).
It seems like they are both standing their ground. There's a lot of posturing going on, which is another form of displaying dominance in the deer world.
Right, Caucasian red deer or red deer from the Carpathians can rival wapiti in size. In general red deer seem to have been bigger historically in western Europe than they are today, probably becase of poaching pressure
@@gutemorcheln6134 Definitely. The monarchs of the Glen are more the runts of the Glen these days, due to poor habitat, heavy selective pressure against the largest stags and little in the way of natural predators doing their job.
@@rewild6134 Could be interesting to see how their size develops in the European Rewilding regions, like velebit, carpathians or the danube delta, without any hunters or human caused stress in general, and where they can migrate and roam in an almost natural way, like they have done the thousands of years before
Wrong , red deer arent max to 200kg , they can get higher then 250kg , my friend shot a 278kg stag , they can probably get to 310, a full grown gets to 220cm high from head to the ground ( bigger than u ) a elk gets bigger than 3 metters probably and get to 480 to 500 mx kg
What is the difference between an elk and a moose? In german translation i got elch as elk which means also moose? The typical swedish moose has different sovel anklers
In America, the elk is the large deer in the video. They are also known as the wapiti, which is their original name in Cree language. In Europe, an elk is what Americans call moose, with moose coming from Algonquian language.
All of these people complaining how small the red stag is don't understand the meaning of subspecies. It's probably a Scottish subspecies. Carpathian and Caspian subspecies are very much comparable in size to wapities (elk), at 400 kgs for a good-sized male. Only the Alaskan elk and the ones from Northern Canada would actually be visibly bigger than Carpathian or Caspian red deer. This comparison is not relevant if you want to represent the entire species.
@FirebonE_88, not anymore, the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) is an exclusively European species, there are now only six extant deer species included in the Cervus genus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis).
@FirebonE_88, Cervus elaphus is rendered as polyphyletic, which is the reason why the mediterranean deer, barbary deer, caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti are all now considered separate species from the red deer, the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus) is a polytypic species with two recognized subspecies: the Corsican Deer (Cervus corsicanus corsicanus) and the Sardinian Deer (Cervus corsicanus sardinianus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus) is a monotypic species, the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral) is a monotypic species, the Hangul (Cervus hanglu) is a polytypic species with three recognized subspecies: the Kashmir Hangul (Cervus hanglu hanglu), the Bactrian Hangul (Cervus hanglu bactrianus), and the Yarkand Hangul (Cervus hanglu yarkandensis), and the Elk or Wapiti (Cervus canadensis) is a polytypic species with fifteen recognized subspecies: the Tibetan Elk (Cervus canadensis wallichii), the Kansu Elk (Cervus canadensis kansuensis), the Sichuan Elk (Cervus canadensis macneilli), the Mongolian Elk (Cervus canadensis mongoliensis), the Alashan Elk (Cervus canadensis alashanicus), the Tian Shan Elk (Cervus canadensis songaricus), the Manchurian Elk (Cervus canadensis xanthopygus), the †Korean Elk (Cervus canadensis coreanus), the Siberian Elk (Cervus canadensis sibiricus), the Roosevelt's Elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti), the Rocky Mountain Elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni), the Tule Elk (Cervus canadensis nannodes), the †Merriam's Elk (Cervus canadensis merriami), the Manitoba Elk (Cervus canadensis manitobensis), and the †Algonquin Elk (Cervus canadensis canadensis), leaving the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) to have now only ten recognized subspecies: the Crimean Red Deer (Cervus elaphus brauneri), the Pannonian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus pannoniensis), the Alpine Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hippelaphus), the Mesola Red Deer (Cervus elaphus italicus), the Iberian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hispanicus), the Swedish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus elaphus), the Norwegian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus atlanticus), the Scottish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus), the English Red Deer (Cervus elaphus englandensis), and the Irish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hibernicus).
Left in the wild they hybridise freely (wild ones in NZ are a mix, despite attempts to cull out the reds). And the reds displace the wapiti, so strongly suggests the waps are not that good at scrapping. Likewise, Sika displace the reds. Part competition, part aggression it seems.
When your little brother wants to fight you
That mother flicker gonna scratch
@@kookielvrs5084 yep
LOL
@@kookielvrs5084 bite*
The older brother was being nice. If you would not have been nice, mommy will ground you
This is literally:
" who are you?"
" im you.. but bigger."
“Like this?”
“Nono you gotta put your shoulders into it like this”
“Ahhh I see”
Yeah...
@Purple Emerald (moose charges in and tramples em) amateurs!
(Bison tramples moose) look who's talking!
@Baldhina Asnake the same as people on new Zealand, they were introduced. Odds are this is a private piece of land.
@@robertoaiello9342 lol, the largest Alaskan moose individuals would still get trashed by a bison (just learned of a bison emoji 🦬)because the bison could break its legs with a charge and the moose would be helpless >:)
*Moose has entered the chat*
*Elk and Red Deer have left the chat*
Megaloceros Giganteus has entered the chat, Moose has left the chat
Trophyhunter has entered the game.... stag, elk and moose went into a bar
@@royalmv9258 Alaska moose has entered the chat, Megaloceros giganteus has left the chat
@@Rayquaza676 megaloceros was the same size as the Alaskan Moose, except with much larger antlers. My bet would be on the Megaloceros.
@@brandonwalker7932 my bet would be on the bull elk, because the megaloceros (Irish elk) are well extinct
I like that the stag kinda moves off at one point like "We're not even competing for the same thing, why are we doing this?"
They can cross breed
@@connorboyd4534 can the doe strag even support the weight of the elk
@@regularjoe4613I guess they can because here in New Zealand a lot of our wapiti/elk herd is made up of red cross wapiti hybrids. They're very closely related so they have compatible genetics
@@connorboyd4534 damn making love with a whole another species
@@connorboyd4534 So wapiti and red deer not only inhabit the same environment and occasionally crossbreed, but form mixed herds as well ?
really puts into perspective how big elk are
Merica.
And how small deer are
VandyMan84 elks are not only in america lol
In fact this video is in new zeland
@@recipoldinasty They aren't native to New Zealand though. There are Wapiti in Asia though.
Ford f-150 vs Ford Ranger
Just two John Deere at work
You mean trash and bigger trash? Lol
Leg Humper naw
Ford vs chev
So true
I've never seen a red stag in person, I didn't realize how much smaller they were.
They aren’t small elk are just huge
@@theawkwarddog5364 how big are they compared to a mule deer?
@@theawkwarddog5364 I hunt mule deer and elk so idk how big a stag is
@@theawkwarddog5364 The comment was not that stags are small but how much smaller than elk they are. Wow......
@@bumbackgroundacc female red deer and North American elk are the size of a large mule deer doe. Bull elk and red deer bulls/stags are pretty massive. More like a small horse as far as their bodies go.
I love how half way through it the red stag is like oh cool there is a bee and looks the other way and the elk is just there in a fighting stance and the red stag goes oh right the fight
Holy size difference...
Plot twist: they're both looking for the contact lense that the elk accidentally dropped..
You do have to admit that the red stags rack is quite impressive, especially when in comparison to the elks.
The stags have the most bautifull set of antlers
Meh, the Elk is polishing his antler tips. They are just playing.
When you box at the wrong weight class!!
The elk probably just looks like a weirdly big red deer to the red, while the red looks like a weirdly small elk to the elk.
The stag is like “I have got this, never mind, well maybe... yeah heck no I don’t got this.”😂🤣😂
I always had the idea that those 2 species were closer in size!
That stag has some serious balls to stand up to that bull elk!
🤯
They are actually the same species believe it or not... both are Cervus Elaphus. Elk are just a sub species, but they can interbreed. Same idea as Grizzly Bears, Brown Bears, and Kodiak Bears. All three are subspecies of the overarching species Ursus Arctos.
@Teo Lobot, actually you are incorrect, they are actually separate species, the Cervus genus now contains only six extant species: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), meaning the Cervus genus is now restricted to only the red deer and extant species that used to be conspecific with it, members of the Cervus genus are referred to as common deer.
It's interesting to see these two together as they're very very closely related (They are both one of the only Cervus species, other realtives being Corsican, Barbary and Traim deer), but what's funny is how vastly different they sound, and man the Red Stag sounds so much bigger than what it looks lmao.
@Black Spectre, correct, the genus Cervus (Common Deer) currently has six extant members being the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), of the six extant species of this genus, the red deer is the most basal, then followed by the split between two clades, one that is constituted by the mediterranean deer and barbary deer and the other that is constituted by the caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti.
Oh the stag isn't small... The elk is just closer to moose as far as height goes. Red deer are normaly the size of a person give or take a couple inches
@@indyreno2933Those are subspecies, not species. The five extant species of Cervus are as follows:
Red Deer ( Cervus elaphus)
Central Asian Red Deer (Cervus hanglu)
Thorold's Deer (Cervus albirostris)
Sika Deer (Cervus nippon)
Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis)
"C. barbarus, C. corsicanus C. maral" are all subspecies of Red Deer.
@ScaleHunt, actually, there are six extant species in the genus Cervus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis), the thorold's deer and sika deer are no longer part of the Cervus genus, the thorold's deer belongs to the monotypic genus Przewalskium, where its scientific name is actually Przewalskium albirostris, while sika deer now constitute the genus Ocellelaphus as four separate polytypic species: the Southeast Asian Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus pseudaxis), the Chinese Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus mandarinus), the Formosan Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus taiouanus), and the Japanese Sika Deer (Ocellelaphus nippon), the correct english name for Cervus hanglu is "hangul" not "central asian red deer" as the term "red deer" refers exclusively to Cervus elaphus, the hangul is a distinct poltypic species that is more closely related to the elk, the caspian deer is also now a separate species that is more closely related to both the hangul and elk, the mediterranean deer and barbary deer are both considered separate species that form a clade that is the sister clade to the one that contains the caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti, the thorold's deer (Przewalskium albirostris) is more closely related to the Père david's deer (Elaphurus davidianus) of the monotypic genus Elaphurus, while the sika deer (genus Ocellelaphus) are more closely related to the fallow deer (genus Dama), chitals (genus Axis), and hog deer (genus Hyelaphus), you should know there are actually now seventy extant deer species under twenty genera.
@indyreno2933 As of 2011 ICUN has put the Thorold's Deer in the Cervus genus.
" This species was formerly classified in a distinct genus as Przewalskium albirostris, however, morphological, behavioural and genetic analyses align this species with the Red Deer clade (Wilson and Mittermeier 2011). No subspecies are recognized."
It looks like incredibly friendly sparring.
It's amazing how elk are bigger and have a high pitch scream and red deer are smaller and have a low pitch bellow
Itt sound like a cow moo and a lion roar , thats why stags roar
This is like most of the fights in my middle school. Lots of posturing, then the bell rings and nothing happens.
Hard to imagine that until recently, we thought they were the same species. Also, the bigger elk sounds like a wailing banshee while the smaller red deer has such a mighty roar that it would make a lion feel inadequate.
this is the coolest thing ever
Holy crap, i never imagine that Elk were that big compared to Red Stags. Its not even contest lol
Lol same
Oh for sure. The largest elk recorded was 1500lbs compared to the largest moose being 1800lbs.
They're basically moose with short legs
Guys guys!! you are fighting for two completely different things here 😭😂😂
mean while the other deer in the back just eating gracefully
Fun fact: you aren’t watching this full screen
Jokes on you the video is paused
I am literally watching this on full screen .
True, couldn't be bothered switching.
I love the dramatic background music (courtesy of the cicadas)
All I know is that the Elk being much bigger makes a high pitch screech and the red deer being smaller makes a huge bellowing sound.
I red it as "Rad Stag vs Elk" and was like "wth it only has one head"
All I see is a 2-for-1 cooking special.
When a level 50 wants to fight you but you're at level 200:
Elk: "Oh? You're approaching me?"
Brave stag, did they fight? ?
The Elk was a bit unsure.
Very Interesting video, a lot of power right there.
The elk was polishing his antler tips.
Red Bull gives you wings...
Video is mis-titled.
Should be 'Pallet Jack vs Forklift'
real life pokemon battle
Stantler vs Sawsbuck
Lil bro: Yo your antlers are too big.
Big bro: I'll be nice.
🤣🤣
ELK ARE SO MASSIVE compared to the smaller cousins we call deer!
i like when two different species communicate peacefully
I have now decided that these two are separate species, not subspecies as some claim.
That stag is kind of tiny. Cute. I’ll stick with my elk
They look like they're bowing tbh
I wasn't quite ready for that size difference..
Brilliant capture!!! Fantastic
Elk: omae wa no shinderiou
Red stag: Nani!?
Whos tougher red stag or bull elk
that elk is just saying "Mines bigger"
Never knew stags were so small bodied!
They aren’t the elk is huge
Stags are anything but small😂
@@Bignfluffy yah, cuz compared to the elk literally right next to him, he don’t look much bigger than a mule deer, so, in my opinion yes, small bodied! I hunt elk every year, thrm things big
Dont bring a red deer to an elk fight
I love how when a moose met an elk it didnt care but when an elk meets a red stag its immediately fighting time.
Wow the size difference is crazy
Dear god.. I thought the elk in red dead where bigger but this is bigger
You vs the guy she tells you not to worry about
Whoa, you guys have elk in NZ?? I knew NZ had introduced deer populations, but I thought they were smaller Eurasian species like we have in South-Eastern Australia. Living in Canada for years I've seen elk in the wild, they're magnificent creatures, on a whole different level to other deer. Bagging a trophy bull elk is high up on my bucket list, envious you Kiwis have a local population (although Wikpedia tells me there's been so much interbreeding with red deer there's probably no pure elk lineage left anymore).
No, Elk are not native to NZ. This is a hunting farm.
@@MsAggie78 I know they're not native, NZ has no native mammals except a few bats - that's why I said "introduced deer populations". The video description saying "We have both Elk and Red Stag on our Ranch in New Zealand" clued me in to the captive stock part, but the relevant point is that the species was introduced and there's a self-sustaining population inhabiting the island(s). There is no such population in Australia.
@@lachlanbell8390 Ok, sorry, bud. I live in Colorado, we have to shove these guy's heads our of our horses' hay, lol.
@@lachlanbell8390 Oh, that's so cool. I love bats. What bats do you guys have??❤❤❤
@@lachlanbell8390 wow boring ass country whith no wildlife😂😂
“Uhm bro, the parts don’t fit.”
Stannis Baratheon vs Renly Baratheon.
Irish Elk has entered the chat:
Elks have...An issue with Frogs.
I didn’t realize how much bigger elk are
Mike Tyson vs Jake Paul
I grew up hunting elk I knew they were bigger but did not realize how much bigger until now
That elk had a red stag of his own 😳
That must be one long fuse of dynamite holding the camera
They are actually the same species believe it or not... both are Cervus Elaphus. Elk are just a sub species, but they can interbreed. Same idea as Grizzly Bears, Brown Bears, and Kodiak Bears. All three are subspecies of the overarching species Ursus Arctos.
Nope, Elk are Cervus Canadensis. They are used to be recognised as same species but not anymore. But yeah, they're still same genus so they can interbred
@Kotaro Jujo, correct, there are now only six extant species under the Cervus genus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis).
It seems like they are both standing their ground. There's a lot of posturing going on, which is another form of displaying dominance in the deer world.
Their best friends, that's on a game ranch.
That Stag is huge,not to mention the monster in the background!
VS? More like trying to kiss but their antlers were in the way.
0:03 at the right is what species ?.
I think that's just another Red Deer...
I didn’t realize that elk were that much bigger body wise, but antlers to body the red stag wins
but the deer is under the elk in the terrain
The elk is a whiole lot bigger anyway
We all mentioned how much smaller the Stag is but can we also comment on how BIG the Stag actually is... I mean that is one BIG BUCK
Stag has ADHD.
Looks like a small red deer to me. I've seen some pretty large stags in Europe.
Right, Caucasian red deer or red deer from the Carpathians can rival wapiti in size. In general red deer seem to have been bigger historically in western Europe than they are today, probably becase of poaching pressure
@@gutemorcheln6134 Definitely. The monarchs of the Glen are more the runts of the Glen these days, due to poor habitat, heavy selective pressure against the largest stags and little in the way of natural predators doing their job.
@@rewild6134 Could be interesting to see how their size develops in the European Rewilding regions, like velebit, carpathians or the danube delta, without any hunters or human caused stress in general, and where they can migrate and roam in an almost natural way, like they have done the thousands of years before
Idk man I live in Arizona in the states, bull elk are pretty big, I don’t know too much about stags but you could ride on an elk.
@@jaeger6379 same here. I hunt elk. They are absolutely massive when you're 10 yards away with a drawn back bow. Amazing animals
If the elk tried instead of the red stag it would be red Stabbed
Elk:"wait man you way smaller dan me"
Red stag:"wait man this guy is way bigger dann me"
This is so small red deer, max 200 kg one, in carpathian mountains red stags weighs up to 500 kg..
that can't be true
@@sword3607 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_deer
Wrong , red deer arent max to 200kg , they can get higher then 250kg , my friend shot a 278kg stag , they can probably get to 310, a full grown gets to 220cm high from head to the ground ( bigger than u ) a elk gets bigger than 3 metters probably and get to 480 to 500 mx kg
Difficulty 5 : medium
A for confidence
You and your siblings over the last slice of pizza be like
how girl’s see 6’0 and 5’10
You vs the guy she tells you no to worry about 🥴
Red "Back off buddy im WAAAAAY bigger than you"
elk bull walks over "were you speaking to me? i couldn't hear you waaaay over there."
"Why do I hear boss music?"
What is the difference between an elk and a moose? In german translation i got elch as elk which means also moose? The typical swedish moose has different sovel anklers
In America, the elk is the large deer in the video. They are also known as the wapiti, which is their original name in Cree language.
In Europe, an elk is what Americans call moose, with moose coming from Algonquian language.
All of these people complaining how small the red stag is don't understand the meaning of subspecies. It's probably a Scottish subspecies. Carpathian and Caspian subspecies are very much comparable in size to wapities (elk), at 400 kgs for a good-sized male. Only the Alaskan elk and the ones from Northern Canada would actually be visibly bigger than Carpathian or Caspian red deer. This comparison is not relevant if you want to represent the entire species.
Actually, the caspian deer is actually now a separate species more closely related to both the hangul and elk/wapiti.
@@indyreno2933, it's still a subspecies from what I've read.
@FirebonE_88, not anymore, the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) is an exclusively European species, there are now only six extant deer species included in the Cervus genus: the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus), the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral), the Hangul (Cervus hanglu), and the Elk/Wapiti (Cervus canadensis).
@@indyreno2933, any scientific article that proves it that you can provide?
@FirebonE_88, Cervus elaphus is rendered as polyphyletic, which is the reason why the mediterranean deer, barbary deer, caspian deer, hangul, and elk/wapiti are all now considered separate species from the red deer, the Mediterranean Deer (Cervus corsicanus) is a polytypic species with two recognized subspecies: the Corsican Deer (Cervus corsicanus corsicanus) and the Sardinian Deer (Cervus corsicanus sardinianus), the Barbary Deer (Cervus barbarus) is a monotypic species, the Caspian Deer (Cervus maral) is a monotypic species, the Hangul (Cervus hanglu) is a polytypic species with three recognized subspecies: the Kashmir Hangul (Cervus hanglu hanglu), the Bactrian Hangul (Cervus hanglu bactrianus), and the Yarkand Hangul (Cervus hanglu yarkandensis), and the Elk or Wapiti (Cervus canadensis) is a polytypic species with fifteen recognized subspecies: the Tibetan Elk (Cervus canadensis wallichii), the Kansu Elk (Cervus canadensis kansuensis), the Sichuan Elk (Cervus canadensis macneilli), the Mongolian Elk (Cervus canadensis mongoliensis), the Alashan Elk (Cervus canadensis alashanicus), the Tian Shan Elk (Cervus canadensis songaricus), the Manchurian Elk (Cervus canadensis xanthopygus), the †Korean Elk (Cervus canadensis coreanus), the Siberian Elk (Cervus canadensis sibiricus), the Roosevelt's Elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti), the Rocky Mountain Elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni), the Tule Elk (Cervus canadensis nannodes), the †Merriam's Elk (Cervus canadensis merriami), the Manitoba Elk (Cervus canadensis manitobensis), and the †Algonquin Elk (Cervus canadensis canadensis), leaving the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) to have now only ten recognized subspecies: the Crimean Red Deer (Cervus elaphus brauneri), the Pannonian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus pannoniensis), the Alpine Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hippelaphus), the Mesola Red Deer (Cervus elaphus italicus), the Iberian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hispanicus), the Swedish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus elaphus), the Norwegian Red Deer (Cervus elaphus atlanticus), the Scottish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus), the English Red Deer (Cervus elaphus englandensis), and the Irish Red Deer (Cervus elaphus hibernicus).
Is it even possible to have a hybrid between these two? (they only really fight in rutting season so i'm wondering who they plan to breed :eyes:
Yes
Left in the wild they hybridise freely (wild ones in NZ are a mix, despite attempts to cull out the reds). And the reds displace the wapiti, so strongly suggests the waps are not that good at scrapping. Likewise, Sika displace the reds.
Part competition, part aggression it seems.
Coming here after I just started playing Fallout 4 again. Misread rad stag and almost expected to see them get vats targeted.
This is Tacoma vs Ford F-350
If you’ve ever played Oregon trail you know stags are small
It almost looks like they're trying to get something off their antlers. Not fighting.
Is this a vs or just two homies chillin before the big game
Reality vs expectations.
and the stag is more beautiful
I like elk more
Elk are better
@@kremit6361 Stag is better
I think they're both beautiful one is just bigger lol
Some wicked looking antlers
y'all got any whitetail deer on the ranch? I'd like to see them side by side with an elk.
Which one is the elk
The larger one
Forever I thought red deer were bigger than elk
When yur cat tries to fight a lion