@@ilovetati91 desensitized at wild animals doing what they do in the wild? Just because we may not feel the same as you about this event doesn't mean we are desensitized, even if you could be desensitized to it.
My cat did something similar to this. She had 4 kittens in our closet. After a few days she took one of them and put it under our bed. The kittens werent walking yet so we knew it would die. We brought it back to the closet with the other kittens and the mom cat ended up accepting it. When they got a little older we realized this kitten was not like the others. It seemed "slow" maybe even dumb. Luckily when we gave the kittens away the lady took one of the brothers as well. Turned out pretty good.
I was watching the livestream of this nest, when this incident happened. From what I recall, the majority opinion was that this parent killed off this youngster, due to the food situation. The other parent had died, after flying into hydro wires. It was too much work for this remaining parent, to try and gather enough food to feed all of the offspring. So a sacrifice had to be made. And if I remember correctly, it was after this little one's demise, that the landowner started climbing up a ladder each day and dumping a bucket of fish into the nest, to try and help insure the survival of the remaining youngsters.
This is not an uncommon practice for storks even with two parents, they will yeet the littlest one to preserve resources for the ones most likely to survive.
This stork looked a bit "off" something was wrong. You could tell when it was at the edge of the nest. We have a word for it in the medical field, yt won't let you type it.
@@transformersrevenge9 "mother cares for baby, does everything for it" -mothers love "Mother tosses baby out to its death because its weaker and she doesn't want to feed it" -mothers love Cmon bud
@@HaxxorElite Actually many animals are. Runts often are weaker, sicker, and attract predators. Unless food is plentiful, it is a waste to feed a runt that has a lower chance of survival. A runt also takes longer to care for. Living in a safe home with a human is nothing like life in the wild where animals need to mature as fast as possible.
I had a pup that was the runt. He never got big, but he was smarter than any dog I ever knew, and he was a CRUEL and remorseless opponent to other dogs if they attacked him. He used to fight dirty AF. And none of this growling and putting the hackles up to let them know he was going to fight, either, he looked exactly as if he was unconcerned and peaceable, WHICH HE WAS if they wanted to stop their shit . . . but if it was their idea, they were in trouble.
From all the videos Im seeing, it looks like storks are savage parents and siblings as well. There must be a reason for the harsh odds of stork survival success.
Yeah there was a study that showed starts that committed infanticide actually had more successful births and fledgings in a season. It was only one study over one season but they studied like 69 nests and I think something like 9 out of the 69 at infanticide. And they were a little bit more successful and brooding and fledging successful nesrs. Surely it's some kind of method to triage limited resources and food. It's hard to watch. You also wonder like when exactly do they make their decision... All of a sudden they're feeding the thing and treating it like any bird and then just one second they make that calculation that this isn't going to work out.
@@marx9619Right although in this case I think the reason it killed it the child was because of limited food and it had to triage. Study shows storks that commit infanticide actually have more successful fledgings and overall more of their chicks make it to adulthood. I forget the specific study but they looked at 69 nests. Or something. Maybe 9 or 10% of them committed infanticide and they on average produced more living fledgings that made it out of the nest and into adulthood. So there is a reason for it and it's possible if it didn't do it and then some of the other chicks might not have made it but... As a human I refuse to call it good parentinh. 😢
Wrong, storks will force the youngest/weakest child to fly, it fails 99.9% of times. That small 0.1 percent is also not guaranteed living rest of life.
It's birds in general.. they are evil creatures.. also one of the few animals that have shown the mental capacity for revenge (tigers, elephants, primates, birds, camels, dogs)..
My favorite is how animals generally don't have language like humans do, so there's no prolonged melodramas and manipulations. The mama stork isn't really even swift and efficient, but constantly observing and curious in her killing.
@@Leg3ndKilla687that's only bc you can't read that birds body language. Animals are very complex and we are just used to dogs, cats, horses and the like where it's more obvious. Bunnies are often horribly mistaken by us bc they are very quiet, but their body language tells you everything about their emotions.
@Leg3ndKilla687 I think she had emotion, in the beginning she was preening the runt baby which is a show of affection. She tilts her head a lot while looking at the baby, and she doesn't rush. There's no anger or malice, more a thoughtful decision making process than anything else.
it's a vicious cycle. one chick is hatched weaker or is just a little unlucky and doesn't get fed, which makes it weaker and weaker, so it has less strength to fight for food, so it gets fed less and less. wild animals can't waste their energy on nursing the runt, so a sacrifice like that was the best what the stork mom could do for herself, her chicks and the smallest chick too probably
Not that its weak, but eggs are laid either at 3-5 days intervals. So naturally there will be chicks that are ahead compared to its other siblings. This time though, food maybe hard to comeby.
@@smidgen Birds hatch eggs this way so when times are tough the parents can just feed the smallest child to its older siblings, when times are good and food are plenty the parents have no desire to raise the runt and therefore threw it out.
Everybody talks about it being a fighter, but honestly it was probably starving (being the smallest) and pecking at the others so much for that reason. Also that may be another reason mom made a choice.
@@nouse4name368We are no different from animals. Only thing that separates us is our intelligence, if animals were as smart as we were they would act exactly the same as us
@@NicholeStevens-im1xn What? No. They have to make a sacrifice Because of Mom is working hard to get food. It’s just because other animals is getting all food and the mom is struggling to get food. So they have to make Sacrifice and after that they will grow like mom
It’s so sad, you can tell when the baby realizes what the mother is trying to do and tries to hide under its siblings to keep away from her. See how desperate it was to wake up one of the bigger siblings to try and get help?
I'm guessing the little bird was agitated and was acting out _having their right eye literally pecked out and eaten._ I seriously doubt it was trying to wake its sibling to "get help". How would they even do that?
You have to give it to the little one....he had the instinct of survival, even taking on his mother by lunging at her a few times which had her on the back foot! Such a truly sad ending though. He clearly didnt stand a chance.
He seemed to be hiding amongst his sibling initially, which made me think she might have been after him for a while prior to this video. For some reason I became aware that he might be the intended victim before the actual attack. They were so bunched together that it took me a while to see there were actually five of them, and he seemed to want to stay right in the middle.
@@TiagoNYC Though hard to judge without much history, even if that chick did make a few wobbly, confused pecks and its siblings, don't you the mother's response was a bit out of proportion?
It's more common with birds who nest higher up and build perch-nests. Ground dwelling birds and ground-nesting birds don't do this as much. Also, happens more with larger species than with smaller, as it takes more resources to feed
Times must be hard, parents will usually get rid of weakest/youngest chicks when food is scarce in order to give the bigger ones a higher chance of survival.
When your mom kicks you out the house for being too old to live off her groceries anymore, and you point out that your brother and sister still live there rent free…
She sacrificed the weakest to give the other ones a better chance to make it. Very sad and difficult to watch, especially the last attack with her beak, and the noisy lethal fall of the poor chick...nature is cruel sometimes. RIP little chick ;(.
I wasn’t sure I wanted to watch this, but I did. It’s heartbreaking to see the little one struggle, but nature can be harsh. This is survival of the fittest in action.
I grew up on a farm as a kid. Birds (turkeys, chickens and ducks.) we had babies ever spring. Every couple of years there was always a young bird of the 3 kinds they got picked on/killed off by the others. I was told at the time that the parents can sense sickness or weakness in their babies. It was a natural selections to weed them out.
Everyone saying he is nasty cuz he was biting the siblings.... He didn't know his mom was the one hurting him so he took it out on them. Prolly thinking since he is the smallest his siblings are trying to get him. I think mama stork did this intentionally.
What a stupid comment. It was pecking at the siblings because it was hungry. It had nothing to do with its mother hurting it. And you really think the mother did this intentionally? Really? What else would it be trying to do when it drops it off the edge? Absolute moron comment.
What a moronic comment. It had nothing to do with its mother hurting it. The baby was pecking it’s siblings because it was hungry. And you really think it was intentional? What else would it be doing by dropping it off the edge?
I like being human. For how incredibly complicated and stressful our lives are compared to animals, we have an appreciation of other creatures that animals don’t. We have a greater capacity to love and experience the beauty of it.
If it was scared it would stop the self induced aggression. It was typical youngest rascal bastard. Which would eventually pierce thru skin of the older ones and make them susceptible to diseases and eventually death.
@@bosesebi6685 All of the babies were doing this. They attack the others to weaken them so they won’t get thrown out of the nest. But they lack the self-awareness to know when THEY are the weakest.
@@bosesebi6685 All offspring do this in most animal groups. There's no good or bad babies, they all want to survive and consequently will do what it takes to survive.
Yeah to cite an example Chimps engage in war for fun, sometimes resort to cannibalism. Dolphin males often team up, kidnap females and turn them into sex slaves. I could write a book on lions, but the males 9 times out of 10 kill all of a female's existing cubs, when they take over a pride. To ensure their own bloodlines.
I still prefer them to humans. At least the stork had a reason as to why she did what she did. Some humans will do worse for a flimsy reason- or even worse, no reason. Animals are at the very least predictable and follow sets of ingrained behaviors. Humans are too diverse and selfish. They inflict harm on each other beyond what animals can do.
Complex thought makes "evil" actions worse. Humans don't HAVEt to hurt things but they still do and some do it without conscience. The stork didn't do this to be evil. I hope you just don't understand this because if you do, then it means you have a problem with perspective lol
Honestly that lil runt was being a straight bully anyway. Seemed like the parent was getting sick of the problem it was causing, stealing food from other babies the parent gave food to, pecking and assaulting siblings for no reason, causing chaos lmao
It isn’t just storks that do this, most birds do. Most of the time it’s because they sense something wrong with it, another reason is they struggle to feed more than two (depends on the breed).
That includes you ya know since modern science is the only reason half the human population exists and why the human race is as big as it is, it's all very fine getting all matter of fact about it but that would mean you wouldn't have survived a natural unassisted birth either then. So are you still bla bla about that? Most of us owe our existence to modern science. Very few humans would survive without all that either. Which is why people were dead by 30 in the middle ages. That really was the age of natural selection.
The little guy was the toughest one in the family! He would have fought his way to a successful existence had his mother not taken the opportunity away from him.
Well that would depend if the mother could provide enough food for it. It wasn't capable of flying around in yet so the mother was singularly responsible for feeding it. Unless the dad is around I don't know.
I find it interesting how long it takes for the mother to actually dump the chick out of the nest. I see this in other videos too. If it were prey, the mother would use precise strikes and try not to let go. Here we see the mother loosely grabbing the chick, letting go, and repeating.
@@Draconina I’m not associating it with human behavior. I said, “it’s like”, not, “it must be,” or, “it’s a fact.” I agree animals don’t have human behavior. However they also show anger, aggression, pain, retaliation, sadness, anxiety, fear, happiness, etc. Who’s to say it wasn’t taking it out on its siblings? It’s not a human behavior, aggression while under attack is instinct. The difference between us is we understand right and wrong, good and evil, cognizant thinking, and advanced psychological thinking. Otherwise animals do express many of the same things we do. So this isn’t just human behavior. I’ve seen monkeys being attacked Attack smaller monkeys out of frustration. Same goes with birds, alligators, other mammals, etc.
Interesting the one was buried so deeply inside "his" siblings. (For a while I wasn't able to see there were (so many as!) five.) Eventually, I noticed him and suspected he might be the one for some reason, even before she started to go after him. (Perhaps "she" had been after him for a while, causing him to hide? Any history to support that?)
Baby birds usually go on top of each other to get more food, the reason why that one was below everyone was probably because he was too weak to compete with his siblings
It had survived numerous removal attempts over the previous 10 days or so... it had almost had its neck broken a half-dozen times by being picked up and shaken, and it's head had been crushed in the parent's beak a few times, it was basically brain damaged at this point.
If I ever come back as a stork, look around the nest, and realize I was last to hatch..... think I'll probably just go ahead and take a nosedive off the ledge.
@@KE-yq2eg I'm no expert, but have followed various species of bird nests for many years now. No matter the species, 99% of the time, the last to hatch is the smallest..... as the lasts' siblings have often been eating for days before he/she even enters the world.
@@dirkdiggler7253 It's probably almost guaranteed as the next sibling to hatch is likely hours away, at least. And you were great in Boogie Nights, Mr. Diggler..... big fan.
7:12 I like how the siblings are trying to protect him and then he starts pecking them and they're like "ok, you get what's coming to you". 9:40 the dude that was protecting him is so done with his shit.
They're not protecting him. They're trying to get to their mothers beak for the food first. But she isn't attempting to feed. She is gauging and has already selected the smallest for removal. The others are just getting the way.
The runt thought it was being bullied by its sibling but it was really its own parent. Maybe the parent thought it was food cause it was smaller than the others? The parent did not like it retaliating against the other siblings. In its final moments the Runt finally stood up for itself and attacked the parents feet then got taken out for it.
Yall are doing everything in your power to keep mom on her pedestal. The baby acted up in protest to its mom biting the shit out of his head, eventually injuring it. As soon as it would calm down mom would start picking on it again, hurting it then it would act out again. Mom was fucking him up and his only instinct was to fight back, even if he wasnt aware of what he was fighting against.
Dude it's just how nature works. It is absurd judge a freaking stork. They don't get to go to the grocery store and buy food. This happens in about 9% of stork nests and the ones that do actually have more successful fledglings than the ones that don't. Don't get me wrong it makes me upset to see it but you can't judge a stork through your human lens. Entirely possible that killing that chick made it possible for all the other chicks to survive. It's literally why they have multiple checks, it's a redundancy. The goal in life is not you provide the best life possible for each chick... That's how human's handle it. My mom would give me her last meal for her entire life! Would never give up on me. But humans are not storks and it's just a fact that among birds and other species runts off and are killed by either their parents or their siblings or intruders Think of it this way. That little baby had a short and unpleasant life but it's existence it's part of a system of reproduction that has enabled the species to survive for a lot longer than humans. It's sad but that mother knows what it's doing instinctively.. and it doesn't understand death and the finality of it and the moral implications of it. Birds aren't capable of empty or understanding the nature of existence!
And it didn't kill the bird because of the bird was misbehaving, the bird was chirping because it was hungry because there was not enough food. Baby's aggression was a side effect of a lack of resources. But it was the lack of resources that led to its death not the mother being annoyed with its constant bickering or whatever.
@@michael_c2It's funny how we always say "it's how nature works" about any fcked up sh*t we see in the animal kingdom but never use it to humans as we ain't part of the nature that happened to be more intelligent and creative.
The smallest was incredibly disruptive and aggressive towards it's siblings. Every-time mum picked it up it would be after it was attacking one of the other babies. There is probably something wrong with it and she realized the little food she had was being wasted on it and it could potentially hurt her other much more healthier babies.
What gets me is how casually she goes about it. She spends a bunch of time fixing up the nest, and then goes after the chick. And even when she does, it's not immediate; it almost looks as if she might be changing her mind.
It may seem brutal and obviously storks outright are/can be (and I am aware: storks very easily and very commonly reduce their own brood quantity), but I also think there is more to it. Birds and similar predators usually use various ways to check which off their offspring seem strong, healthy and feisty and which aren't. Considering it was smaller than the other chicks the stork parent already had its eyes on this one. Although one or two pecks of the parent looked a bit tough, I think initially it was fine as the parent stork was also keen to mostly ignore the small stork once it responded and then passively rejoined the brood... until it kept pecking at its siblings. That didn't look playful anymore. It wouldn't be weird if the parent stork caught on to that by instinct which may have lead to some matter of animalistic realization that if that little stork grows up and continues with that behaviour, it could cause severe injuries in the rest of the brood. Or in other words, the parent stork probably instinctually saw the little stork as problematic either way and decided it might as well be thrown out then.
It seemed like the other chicks didn´t really feel the pecking by the small chick. It seems like the mom discharged it because she thought it was sick and wouldn´t make it to adulthood anyway. It propably was half the weight of the other chicks. And the surrounding area doesn´t look like it´s sparse of food.
What?! It’s just how wild animals treat their weakest offspring. Birds eliminate the smallest and weakest in their brood, outrightly kill them off and feed them to the remaining baby birds. For the birds, it’s one less mouth to feed and thus ensure the survival of the rest. It’s all instinct not emotions with animals.
That is a very Interesting observation, and i wish we had more footage to actually see if this smaller chick was much more hostile than it’s siblings to prove it tbh
The smallest doesn't usually start pecking the siblings until after its initially grabbed by the mother. I've seen this in several stork nests and I think that pecking is them attempting to get the larger siblings to pick their heads up so they can draw the attention away from the runt and allow them to burrow in the middle to hide under them. The parents just generally get rid of the runt in most of their broods.
It's interesting watching everyone project their impressions onto mama stork while having little to no clue of the operation of this creature's mind. I doubt there's little understanding how emotional or apathetic this event actually is. That being said, why i did i watch this 😭
It indiscriminately killed its offspring. None of the babies look starving they are all fat in fact. Killed its baby for no reason that’s not an impression it’s a fact
According to someone on the livestream it happened cause the birds mate died to getting wrapped up into powerlines. The momma couldn’t keep up with the demand for food on her own so got rid of the smallest and weakest. It’s a survival thing. By doing so she’s giving her others a better chance to survive. But yeah they def don’t have emotions in the same way humans do though they do have some form of them it’s just a lot more instinctual than thought out.
@ShadowFox1412 I appreciate the context from their community. Sounds like many things I've seen in nature. I don't doubt that they have emotions though. I just saw a video a couple days ago where a guy was speculating on whether or not his stag beatle had emotions based on some interesting behaviors. At least he was considering multiple possible subjective experiences it may be having, not just saying "look how angry he is!"
Wrong choice by mama Stork, the little one was gutsy. It's not the size of the Stork in the fight, but the size of the roof on which it lands. By the way, show starts at 8:40
My cat had kittens. 5 of them. I woke up one night and heard a crunching sound. Mother cat had taken one of the kitten under the bed and was eating her. Head. First. Utterly disgusted and I never looked at that cat the same again. No idea if the kitten had died already or if she put the final boot in, but damn.
That's very common, the eating of dead offspring. Can't give up a meal like that in nature. Also, get your cat spayed and this sort of thing can be avoided. 😘
See that's kind of strange because there was no shortage of food. I assume you are providing the cats with plenty of food. I don't know I'm not an expert maybe it wasn't producing a milk or something. I'm curious why a cat would kill it's young but I guess tons of films. But in captivity I find it a little strange since there's basically endless food for them But pandas will only raise one kid even if they have two. In rescue centers they will actually trick the parent by rotating them. In
That's actually normal behavior when their babies die, believe it or not. If she were a stray, it would have been absolutely necessary to eat it, not only because she would need the meal but the body would attract other animals, and potentially make her other babies sick just being near it. Eating it would be the best way for her to dispose of any babies that passed away. The fact she was a pet just shows it's instinctual behavior and not necessarily dependent on the environment. I only say all this to give you an insight as to why your cat did that, since I imagine it was disturbing to see.
@@Oswald_Thatendswald Very interesting, thanks for this. She was a rescue, so she was previously a stray before I took her in. Makes a lot of sense, what you typed there.
So I have to be honest here. The runt was mean. Like really mean. It was attacking the other siblings and even the mom just for being there. On top of that it was the smallest so it seemed like she gave it a chance. If it was a good issue she would have just killed it and canibalized it and separated it between the kids which I’ve seen other birds do so yeah idk just my take on it.
Seems like the stork that was thrown out was pretty aggressive towards the other storks in the nest. Have to think the mother wouldn’t want that behavior in the nest.
Mom seems to be reacting to the cries of one baby which is instigated by a different one, which the little one gets blamed for I think. 6:37 the one stork laying down in front starts crying louder as its being poked and prodded on its wing by the other one in the middle. Then the little one next to him is subtly touching it with its beak just as mother stork notices at 7:00 and 7:10. Must think hes the one thats causing problems, so she pushes him off. And instead of taking the admonishing and quieting down, he goes into fight mode and starts pecking all of them. Mom has no time for it and out he goes.
She seems to have had it in for the little mite from the get-go. Strange as I thought there were less active storks in the nest and the one she discarded seemed like a bit of a fighter.
@@KebabMusicLtd im not sure, she gave him several chances after the first time and he kept pecking the hell out of his siblings. i think she was just being reactive
It's so kind of the stork to allow some scavengers to eat her weakest baby that probably wouldn't have survived anyways. And a smart way to keep her family line strong. Also, not having a decaying baby in her nest helps keep disease and pests away.
@@xxuncexx The old nazis also thought that and performed eugenics. Since nobody after WW2 wanted to be like a nazi, it was declared unethical and therefore banned.
@@Gaia_Seraphina And with modern day abortions available, weaker genetics can be rooted out safely and legally depending on the state. However, that is currently under attack in the US by republicans. And is why we must take a stand - to ensure that weak and undesirable genes cannot be allowed to pass on.
Storks do this when the babie is the weakest and can’t provide enough food or when it behaves abnormally which shows signs of weakness illness or disability
It got real quiet real quick in that nest.
😂🤣
😂😂😂
😂 awe naw I legit laughed out loud
Y’all are so desensitized damn
@@ilovetati91 desensitized at wild animals doing what they do in the wild? Just because we may not feel the same as you about this event doesn't mean we are desensitized, even if you could be desensitized to it.
Suddenly the story of the white stork "delivering" (ie dropping off) a little baby takes on a frighteningly dark dimension.
😂😂Nice
Lmao right smh
Humans are foolish to trust these things with the care of their newborn, especially now when we know the whole story
Tbf, when that myth was created, they didn't have 24 hour we cams showing every horror imaginable
Haha definitely 😂
My cat did something similar to this. She had 4 kittens in our closet. After a few days she took one of them and put it under our bed. The kittens werent walking yet so we knew it would die. We brought it back to the closet with the other kittens and the mom cat ended up accepting it. When they got a little older we realized this kitten was not like the others. It seemed "slow" maybe even dumb. Luckily when we gave the kittens away the lady took one of the brothers as well. Turned out pretty good.
sheesh
@@tardwrangler survival my dude this universe is brutal
@@eastbow6053 my autistic ass is sweating rn, not sure if I’m grateful or not that nature never weeded me out 💀
@@bannedwagoner69 yeah your ass would be dead rn if it weren’t for modern advancements in technology
My cat ate the runt. Walked in and it's butt was hanging out mom's mouth, rear legs kicking. Bit of a shock!
I was watching the livestream of this nest, when this incident happened. From what I recall, the majority opinion was that this parent killed off this youngster, due to the food situation. The other parent had died, after flying into hydro wires. It was too much work for this remaining parent, to try and gather enough food to feed all of the offspring. So a sacrifice had to be made. And if I remember correctly, it was after this little one's demise, that the landowner started climbing up a ladder each day and dumping a bucket of fish into the nest, to try and help insure the survival of the remaining youngsters.
Why didn’t they eat it?
This is not an uncommon practice for storks even with two parents, they will yeet the littlest one to preserve resources for the ones most likely to survive.
This stork looked a bit "off" something was wrong. You could tell when it was at the edge of the nest. We have a word for it in the medical field, yt won't let you type it.
@@mayoluck Infanticide?
Don't have babies if you can't afford it
" A mothers love is unconditional "
Storks: "Nah"
For an equal drama among humans, watch movie "Sophie´s choice" with Sally Fields
I didn't like that movie, for OBVIOUS reasons.
It was mother's love though. She cared about the entire family, by making a sacrifice and thus ensuring the family survives.
@@AmauriFontes Meryl Streep, I think.
@@transformersrevenge9 "mother cares for baby, does everything for it" -mothers love
"Mother tosses baby out to its death because its weaker and she doesn't want to feed it" -mothers love
Cmon bud
“And THAT, kids, is what will happen if you get sassy like Wilbur did”
Yes, mother.
LOL
😂
And parents to
underrated comment😂😂😂😂
Lol i imagined that "yes mother" was answered by 4 storks with photoshopped gigachad heads
I had a dog that was the smallest of the litter. Ended up he lived the longest of the whole litter and grew to be the biggest one of all of them.
Animals aren't known for their intelligence
@@HaxxorElite Actually many animals are. Runts often are weaker, sicker, and attract predators. Unless food is plentiful, it is a waste to feed a runt that has a lower chance of survival. A runt also takes longer to care for. Living in a safe home with a human is nothing like life in the wild where animals need to mature as fast as possible.
I had a pup that was the runt. He never got big, but he was smarter than any dog I ever knew, and he was a CRUEL and remorseless opponent to other dogs if they attacked him.
He used to fight dirty AF. And none of this growling and putting the hackles up to let them know he was going to fight, either, he looked exactly as if he was unconcerned and peaceable, WHICH HE WAS if they wanted to stop their shit . . . but if it was their idea, they were in trouble.
Super foolish of you to say that not gonna lie. Shows quite a bit of arrogance with all due respect.@@HaxxorElite
Neither are humans unfortunately
Bro went out like a G though, fighting and pecking all the way until the end.
He said F** all y’all on the way out
The constant starting fights with its siblings, while being the runt, is probably why the mom kicked it out of the nest.
It seemed retarded. Attacking its other siblings.
Death before Dishonor
True G, was even having a go back at mom...
Lol, the other four started behaving so well after seeing what happened to him.
Didn't they...!!
Her*
@7Tomb7Keeper7 how could you tell?
@@7Tomb7Keeper7nobody has time for your nonsense
@@noctyd9322 Saw someone playing assumptions game and thought I could join; besides,..nvm just move the hell on
It was the smallest, but it was definitely a fighter!
It was hungry. It kept pecking at the black spots on the other chicks. There were too many mouths to feed. So the mother got rid of a mouth
@@Phoenixrises113it was too rowdy, she gave it multiple warnings and two chances after it attacked the mom too.
@@Phoenixrises113 It was defending itself. It was just a little tiny and maybe had a cold. Bad mom.
@@jayzeuskhrist1877that’s not why the chick was dropped. If the parents can’t comfortably feed all the chicks, the smallest one goes
@@calvinhoward3808i don't know where you think the mom stork gets food but i can guarantee to you thats It's not from a grocery store
From all the videos Im seeing, it looks like storks are savage parents and siblings as well. There must be a reason for the harsh odds of stork survival success.
Yeah surely hawks, owls, foxes and raccoons have nothing to do with it.
Yeah there was a study that showed starts that committed infanticide actually had more successful births and fledgings in a season. It was only one study over one season but they studied like 69 nests and I think something like 9 out of the 69 at infanticide. And they were a little bit more successful and brooding and fledging successful nesrs.
Surely it's some kind of method to triage limited resources and food. It's hard to watch. You also wonder like when exactly do they make their decision... All of a sudden they're feeding the thing and treating it like any bird and then just one second they make that calculation that this isn't going to work out.
@@marx9619Right although in this case I think the reason it killed it the child was because of limited food and it had to triage. Study shows storks that commit infanticide actually have more successful fledgings and overall more of their chicks make it to adulthood. I forget the specific study but they looked at 69 nests. Or something. Maybe 9 or 10% of them committed infanticide and they on average produced more living fledgings that made it out of the nest and into adulthood.
So there is a reason for it and it's possible if it didn't do it and then some of the other chicks might not have made it but... As a human I refuse to call it good parentinh. 😢
Wrong, storks will force the youngest/weakest child to fly, it fails 99.9% of times. That small 0.1 percent is also not guaranteed living rest of life.
It's birds in general.. they are evil creatures.. also one of the few animals that have shown the mental capacity for revenge (tigers, elephants, primates, birds, camels, dogs)..
My favorite is how animals generally don't have language like humans do, so there's no prolonged melodramas and manipulations.
The mama stork isn't really even swift and efficient, but constantly observing and curious in her killing.
It's like she's not even planning it. The runt just stood out and she takes action.
The stork mother maybe felt bad while killing the little so she stopped for a while
You can feel almost zero emotion. As it was getting aggressive she said f this. And she stared at it ..Cold af
@@Leg3ndKilla687that's only bc you can't read that birds body language. Animals are very complex and we are just used to dogs, cats, horses and the like where it's more obvious. Bunnies are often horribly mistaken by us bc they are very quiet, but their body language tells you everything about their emotions.
@Leg3ndKilla687 I think she had emotion, in the beginning she was preening the runt baby which is a show of affection. She tilts her head a lot while looking at the baby, and she doesn't rush. There's no anger or malice, more a thoughtful decision making process than anything else.
it's a vicious cycle. one chick is hatched weaker or is just a little unlucky and doesn't get fed, which makes it weaker and weaker, so it has less strength to fight for food, so it gets fed less and less. wild animals can't waste their energy on nursing the runt, so a sacrifice like that was the best what the stork mom could do for herself, her chicks and the smallest chick too probably
Not that its weak, but eggs are laid either at 3-5 days intervals. So naturally there will be chicks that are ahead compared to its other siblings. This time though, food maybe hard to comeby.
Survival of the fittest
@@pyron674 that's what i thought, he simply looks like the last one to hatch
@@smidgen Birds hatch eggs this way so when times are tough the parents can just feed the smallest child to its older siblings, when times are good and food are plenty the parents have no desire to raise the runt and therefore threw it out.
@@JustDaniel6764No. Survival of the fit enough.
Everybody talks about it being a fighter, but honestly it was probably starving (being the smallest) and pecking at the others so much for that reason. Also that may be another reason mom made a choice.
The sound of it hitting the ground, roof, or whatever . . . kinda hurts my soul
Humans: We need to be more like animals in nature!
Animals:
I still agree to that point, maybe not the way they want it though.
@@nouse4name368We are no different from animals. Only thing that separates us is our intelligence, if animals were as smart as we were they would act exactly the same as us
Who said that? You don’t speak for us you 🪳
Correction:
*Liberals: We need to be more like...
@@KooroshFarahanithat's based on the assumption that every intelligent species would be as violent and barbaric as humans
The way the mother watches it until it hits the deck.
Evil
@@NicholeStevens-im1xn
What? No. They have to make a sacrifice Because of Mom is working hard to get food. It’s just because other animals is getting all food and the mom is struggling to get food. So they have to make Sacrifice and after that they will grow like mom
It’s so sad, you can tell when the baby realizes what the mother is trying to do and tries to hide under its siblings to keep away from her.
See how desperate it was to wake up one of the bigger siblings to try and get help?
It was not getting help. Dont put that on a baby bird like he has the conscious of a human adult
I'm guessing the little bird was agitated and was acting out _having their right eye literally pecked out and eaten._ I seriously doubt it was trying to wake its sibling to "get help". How would they even do that?
You think too much.
Stork parent: Nothing personal, kid. This is an act of mercy to save you from death of hunger.
💀💀💀
Nah, she got tired of him being a little asshole and threw him off the roof.
@@MrJ567wrong
@@xMorbidArtx everything I say is correct.
@@MrJ567incel life
You have to give it to the little one....he had the instinct of survival, even taking on his mother by lunging at her a few times which had her on the back foot!
Such a truly sad ending though. He clearly didnt stand a chance.
Actually I lost all empathy after it started packing its siblings, unprovoked. It got annoying fast
He seemed to be hiding amongst his sibling initially, which made me think she might have been after him for a while prior to this video. For some reason I became aware that he might be the intended victim before the actual attack. They were so bunched together that it took me a while to see there were actually five of them, and he seemed to want to stay right in the middle.
@@TiagoNYC it likely did so to show its mother that it was stronger than it looked, so it would avoid being killed.
@@TiagoNYC Though hard to judge without much history, even if that chick did make a few wobbly, confused pecks and its siblings, don't you the mother's response was a bit out of proportion?
@@AmaanStormIt did It because he was starving, fights among siblings are common especially If food is running low
The people’s whose house it hits at 10:35 must’ve jumped when they heard that thump.
It is a work shed. Šandor's house is the roof above the nest in these videos.
😅😂
Chicken-A-Go is knocking- they have another delivery.
Legend!
Thank you ☺️
This stork was literally like, "Duck, duck, duck................GOOSE!"
every other bird:living a happy life
Storks:Somebody is going to die right now!
eagle siblings do this too!
other birds also throw away weak chicks
Dont think theres a single Bird species which never done something like that bro.
@@isaac-p6126 I've never seen a duck or a chicken do it (chickens do kill their offspring on accident though).
It's more common with birds who nest higher up and build perch-nests. Ground dwelling birds and ground-nesting birds don't do this as much. Also, happens more with larger species than with smaller, as it takes more resources to feed
Times must be hard, parents will usually get rid of weakest/youngest chicks when food is scarce in order to give the bigger ones a higher chance of survival.
Not necessarily. Storks practice infanticide, killing off the youngest.
It was bc he was too aggressive
That obviously isnt what was happening here
@@itzvincentx3 i would guess it’s because that bird would have the lowest chance of finding a mate & having offspring
Look at tree size difference. The others were out competing the small one for food…. He was weak so he died
10:30 well that was brutal
There was even a loud thud after that. Like, damn...
Next time you think life isn't fair for you, remember this little guy.
No, remember Jesus instead. This comparison is a disgrace
@@brunopenava7198oh shut up how’s it a disgrace? This is the animal kingdom.
@@brunopenava7198Jesus is indeed a better comparison, but what makes this comparison a disgrace?
@@D4rkkay You just said it
It's so sad. I hate seeing them throw out a chicken, especially when the chick is fighting, saying" mom, what are you doing? I want to live"
When your mom kicks you out the house for being too old to live off her groceries anymore, and you point out that your brother and sister still live there rent free…
She sacrificed the weakest to give the other ones a better chance to make it. Very sad and difficult to watch, especially the last attack with her beak, and the noisy lethal fall of the poor chick...nature is cruel sometimes. RIP little chick ;(.
I think it was quite funny to watch 😂
Nature choose the fittest....😭
Maybe the mom just thought the chick was to sick to be raised further
@@jor7137 I think so indeed, but it's sad.
Он не был самым слабым, просто вылупился последним. Не повезло.
With all the beautiful stories of storks dropping off babies now I find out what a stork mom is like😮…
I mean, it technically did drop off a baby, might be where the stories originated.
@@rogueisolation5395 haha! nice
10:32 theirs your baby drop
Humans are the rejected babies which are dropped by storks
Storks hell
I wasn’t sure I wanted to watch this, but I did. It’s heartbreaking to see the little one struggle, but nature can be harsh. This is survival of the fittest in action.
No DEI in nature
@@rtrddyouuuthat is making the case for DEI you realize… remember not everyone is a psychopath without empathy
I grew up on a farm as a kid. Birds (turkeys, chickens and ducks.) we had babies ever spring. Every couple of years there was always a young bird of the 3 kinds they got picked on/killed off by the others. I was told at the time that the parents can sense sickness or weakness in their babies. It was a natural selections to weed them out.
Everyone saying he is nasty cuz he was biting the siblings.... He didn't know his mom was the one hurting him so he took it out on them. Prolly thinking since he is the smallest his siblings are trying to get him. I think mama stork did this intentionally.
What a stupid comment.
It was pecking at the siblings because it was hungry. It had nothing to do with its mother hurting it.
And you really think the mother did this intentionally? Really? What else would it be trying to do when it drops it off the edge? Absolute moron comment.
What a moronic comment. It had nothing to do with its mother hurting it. The baby was pecking it’s siblings because it was hungry. And you really think it was intentional? What else would it be doing by dropping it off the edge?
@michaelrobbins9168 embarrassing, stupid comment
What a pointless non-comment. 🤡
I like being human. For how incredibly complicated and stressful our lives are compared to animals, we have an appreciation of other creatures that animals don’t. We have a greater capacity to love and experience the beauty of it.
I dont. Being humans eats assholes if youre a man
While I don’t disagree, there’s a certain brutal math problem that is going on here that the stork solved.
humans used to commit child sacrifices religously. no pun intended.
@@9forMortalMen I'm sure there have been times of great difficulty where humans have performed the same calculus.
It's easy to say that in times of plenty. When every day is a fight and you're not sure when your next meal is the calculus will change real fast
It's sad. the baby seems to understand what's happening and it's scared.
If it was scared it would stop the self induced aggression.
It was typical youngest rascal bastard.
Which would eventually pierce thru skin of the older ones and make them susceptible to diseases and eventually death.
@@bosesebi6685 All of the babies were doing this. They attack the others to weaken them so they won’t get thrown out of the nest. But they lack the self-awareness to know when THEY are the weakest.
@@bosesebi6685 All offspring do this in most animal groups. There's no good or bad babies, they all want to survive and consequently will do what it takes to survive.
It is not sąd . That is exactly the way human babies are being aborted .
You may be watching too much Disney
This video should be mandatory for all people who say "I prefer animals over humans".
On the other hand, storks could be good as pets who knows?
Yeah to cite an example Chimps engage in war for fun, sometimes resort to cannibalism. Dolphin males often team up, kidnap females and turn them into sex slaves. I could write a book on lions, but the males 9 times out of 10 kill all of a female's existing cubs, when they take over a pride. To ensure their own bloodlines.
I still prefer them to humans. At least the stork had a reason as to why she did what she did. Some humans will do worse for a flimsy reason- or even worse, no reason. Animals are at the very least predictable and follow sets of ingrained behaviors. Humans are too diverse and selfish. They inflict harm on each other beyond what animals can do.
Complex thought makes "evil" actions worse. Humans don't HAVEt to hurt things but they still do and some do it without conscience.
The stork didn't do this to be evil. I hope you just don't understand this because if you do, then it means you have a problem with perspective lol
@@JAMJAMUNOI’ve never seen such a bad take spoken so condescendingly. LOL
Looking for the “I wish people were as kind as animals” comment 😂
That thud it made must’ve scared the hell out of whoever heard it.
Bro is probably trying to assert dominance somewhere else in the universe 😭
I feel bad for the little guy, he might have been small but he had a fighting spirit, nature is cruel
Nature isn’t cruel at all. It’s pure and unbiased. Your emotional design makes you think it’s cruel.
@@Stahe yeah I think he got that lmao
@@StaheA baby being killed by its mother is cruel lol
@@Stahe you're overcomplicating it. Yes, nature is indeed cruel.
@@StaheMost moral relativist
wow I would hate to be a baby stork and I wonder who started the story of storks delivering babies thats a terrifying idea.
The Undertaker throwing Mankind off the Hell in the Cell.
Omg lol
LMAOOOO
His sibling straight snitches him out
Mother stork: "hi kids!"
Each baby stork: "hi mom, look how big I am!"
Honestly that lil runt was being a straight bully anyway. Seemed like the parent was getting sick of the problem it was causing, stealing food from other babies the parent gave food to, pecking and assaulting siblings for no reason, causing chaos lmao
Bottom stork: “stand still, you guys-its vision is based on movement.”
He may have been the smallest but he was definitely the most feisty! He would've been a survivor but mother never gave it a chance.
It isn’t just storks that do this, most birds do. Most of the time it’s because they sense something wrong with it, another reason is they struggle to feed more than two (depends on the breed).
The little guy is trying so hard to "not" be noticed by Mom... he can sense treachery is on her mind!
What are you talking about? She went after him every time he pecked at one of his siblings.
@@jeremyalmquist27he might be trying to hide in between
When people say “oh… we should learn from animals… bla bla”. 🥲 Half of the population wouldn’t survive childhood.
That includes you ya know since modern science is the only reason half the human population exists and why the human race is as big as it is, it's all very fine getting all matter of fact about it but that would mean you wouldn't have survived a natural unassisted birth either then. So are you still bla bla about that? Most of us owe our existence to modern science. Very few humans would survive without all that either. Which is why people were dead by 30 in the middle ages. That really was the age of natural selection.
Who says that 💀?
@@Promix08Literally every single gd animal video- especially when the animals in question are cute.
Ya, I’m not getting eaten by my mom.
Moms already be offing their offspring it’s no difference
The little guy was the toughest one in the family! He would have fought his way to a successful existence had his mother not taken the opportunity away from him.
Well that would depend if the mother could provide enough food for it. It wasn't capable of flying around in yet so the mother was singularly responsible for feeding it. Unless the dad is around I don't know.
No, he would've probably dragged the others down with him. I don't think nature just evolves behaviour that aren't following a logic.
@@AeraleachIt absolutely can, it's just that the circumstance doesn't allow it.
@@YukiXKohaku you know what i mean smartass
He coulda been a contender
That lil dude was gangster he was the smallest but was tough and kept KOing his bigger brothers 😂
I think the mother threw him out because of that more than his size. He kept making a disturbance in the nest.
@@sammylong3704 He was starving and trying to feed himself. It wasn't aggression but pain and desperation.
Lil dude was born as psychopath
@10:32 middle stork is like "imma just put my head between ya'll real quick"
"Steven, you're up for adoption."
"To who?"
"Jesus Christ." *YEET*
F*** that's cruel and VERY FUNNY! 😂
I find it interesting how long it takes for the mother to actually dump the chick out of the nest. I see this in other videos too. If it were prey, the mother would use precise strikes and try not to let go. Here we see the mother loosely grabbing the chick, letting go, and repeating.
i mean it has to be careful to not harm or scare the other chicks in the nest
you can actually see she did a more aggressive strike towards the end when the problem chick was properly separated from the nest
I wonder why tho
It is interesting how the 1 that is being outed by the parent, takes it out on the other chicks.
I found that interesting also. It’s almost like it’s like, “I’m in pain so you should be.”
STOP associating animals with human BEHAVIOR! It’s just nature!! Perhaps he was hungry, WE DON’T KNOW! 🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️
@@Draconina I’m not associating it with human behavior. I said, “it’s like”, not, “it must be,” or, “it’s a fact.” I agree animals don’t have human behavior. However they also show anger, aggression, pain, retaliation, sadness, anxiety, fear, happiness, etc. Who’s to say it wasn’t taking it out on its siblings? It’s not a human behavior, aggression while under attack is instinct. The difference between us is we understand right and wrong, good and evil, cognizant thinking, and advanced psychological thinking. Otherwise animals do express many of the same things we do. So this isn’t just human behavior. I’ve seen monkeys being attacked Attack smaller monkeys out of frustration. Same goes with birds, alligators, other mammals, etc.
No actually, this is game of dominance. It is showing his/her mom that he/she is stronger than others by biting them.
@@Draconinait’s really not that serious
3:03 - *No one's gonna talk about the kid droppin' a deuce like somebody slammed their foot onto a tube of toothpaste?*
That was nasty I hate you for that lol
Man hört den Aufprall. Extrem brutal!
Die kleine Ratte hat bekommen, worum sie gebettelt hat :)
That little one was fiesty, seems like mom was chill until he started acting out
Yeah. It started repeatedly poking at the others and maybe was seen as a threat. On top of being of course the smallest.
In which country is this place?❤
bingo! first intelligent comment
Interesting the one was buried so deeply inside "his" siblings. (For a while I wasn't able to see there were (so many as!) five.) Eventually, I noticed him and suspected he might be the one for some reason, even before she started to go after him. (Perhaps "she" had been after him for a while, causing him to hide? Any history to support that?)
Baby birds usually go on top of each other to get more food, the reason why that one was below everyone was probably because he was too weak to compete with his siblings
It was like they were trying to protect him 😢
It had survived numerous removal attempts over the previous 10 days or so... it had almost had its neck broken a half-dozen times by being picked up and shaken, and it's head had been crushed in the parent's beak a few times, it was basically brain damaged at this point.
If I ever come back as a stork, look around the nest, and realize I was last to hatch..... think I'll probably just go ahead and take a nosedive off the ledge.
I think it's whoever is first to get fed, will become the biggest, not the last one to hatch.
@@KE-yq2eg I'm no expert, but have followed various species of bird nests for many years now. No matter the species, 99% of the time, the last to hatch is the smallest..... as the lasts' siblings have often been eating for days before he/she even enters the world.
@@KE-yq2eg look at the feathering compared to the others. it's younger.
If you're first to have hatched there's a good chance you'll be first to get fed
@@dirkdiggler7253 It's probably almost guaranteed as the next sibling to hatch is likely hours away, at least. And you were great in Boogie Nights, Mr. Diggler..... big fan.
7:12 I like how the siblings are trying to protect him and then he starts pecking them and they're like "ok, you get what's coming to you". 9:40 the dude that was protecting him is so done with his shit.
He tried to be aggressive to elude his mother IDing him, but he could not hide the fact that he was too small in size comparing to his siblings.
They're not protecting him. They're trying to get to their mothers beak for the food first.
But she isn't attempting to feed. She is gauging and has already selected the smallest for removal.
The others are just getting the way.
They don't protect, they think for themselves not for their siblings
They're not protecting it.
bot
The runt thought it was being bullied by its sibling but it was really its own parent. Maybe the parent thought it was food cause it was smaller than the others? The parent did not like it retaliating against the other siblings. In its final moments the Runt finally stood up for itself and attacked the parents feet then got taken out for it.
Yall are doing everything in your power to keep mom on her pedestal. The baby acted up in protest to its mom biting the shit out of his head, eventually injuring it. As soon as it would calm down mom would start picking on it again, hurting it then it would act out again. Mom was fucking him up and his only instinct was to fight back, even if he wasnt aware of what he was fighting against.
Dude it's just how nature works. It is absurd judge a freaking stork. They don't get to go to the grocery store and buy food. This happens in about 9% of stork nests and the ones that do actually have more successful fledglings than the ones that don't. Don't get me wrong it makes me upset to see it but you can't judge a stork through your human lens. Entirely possible that killing that chick made it possible for all the other chicks to survive. It's literally why they have multiple checks, it's a redundancy. The goal in life is not you provide the best life possible for each chick... That's how human's handle it. My mom would give me her last meal for her entire life! Would never give up on me.
But humans are not storks and it's just a fact that among birds and other species runts off and are killed by either their parents or their siblings or intruders
Think of it this way. That little baby had a short and unpleasant life but it's existence it's part of a system of reproduction that has enabled the species to survive for a lot longer than humans.
It's sad but that mother knows what it's doing instinctively.. and it doesn't understand death and the finality of it and the moral implications of it. Birds aren't capable of empty or understanding the nature of existence!
And it didn't kill the bird because of the bird was misbehaving, the bird was chirping because it was hungry because there was not enough food. Baby's aggression was a side effect of a lack of resources. But it was the lack of resources that led to its death not the mother being annoyed with its constant bickering or whatever.
@@michael_c2It's funny how we always say "it's how nature works" about any fcked up sh*t we see in the animal kingdom but never use it to humans as we ain't part of the nature that happened to be more intelligent and creative.
The smallest was incredibly disruptive and aggressive towards it's siblings. Every-time mum picked it up it would be after it was attacking one of the other babies. There is probably something wrong with it and she realized the little food she had was being wasted on it and it could potentially hurt her other much more healthier babies.
I had gerbils once. They had 6 babies and a few days later noticed the mother eating them. she ended up eating them all.
What gets me is how casually she goes about it. She spends a bunch of time fixing up the nest, and then goes after the chick. And even when she does, it's not immediate; it almost looks as if she might be changing her mind.
It looks to me as if she plotted for a while. She tries to grab hime once but he resisted. She literally stalked him down🤔
It may seem brutal and obviously storks outright are/can be (and I am aware: storks very easily and very commonly reduce their own brood quantity), but I also think there is more to it. Birds and similar predators usually use various ways to check which off their offspring seem strong, healthy and feisty and which aren't. Considering it was smaller than the other chicks the stork parent already had its eyes on this one. Although one or two pecks of the parent looked a bit tough, I think initially it was fine as the parent stork was also keen to mostly ignore the small stork once it responded and then passively rejoined the brood... until it kept pecking at its siblings. That didn't look playful anymore. It wouldn't be weird if the parent stork caught on to that by instinct which may have lead to some matter of animalistic realization that if that little stork grows up and continues with that behaviour, it could cause severe injuries in the rest of the brood. Or in other words, the parent stork probably instinctually saw the little stork as problematic either way and decided it might as well be thrown out then.
It seemed like the other chicks didn´t really feel the pecking by the small chick. It seems like the mom discharged it because she thought it was sick and wouldn´t make it to adulthood anyway. It propably was half the weight of the other chicks. And the surrounding area doesn´t look like it´s sparse of food.
Huh
What?! It’s just how wild animals treat their weakest offspring. Birds eliminate the smallest and weakest in their brood, outrightly kill them off and feed them to the remaining baby birds. For the birds, it’s one less mouth to feed and thus ensure the survival of the rest. It’s all instinct not emotions with animals.
That is a very Interesting observation, and i wish we had more footage to actually see if this smaller chick was much more hostile than it’s siblings to prove it tbh
The smallest doesn't usually start pecking the siblings until after its initially grabbed by the mother. I've seen this in several stork nests and I think that pecking is them attempting to get the larger siblings to pick their heads up so they can draw the attention away from the runt and allow them to burrow in the middle to hide under them. The parents just generally get rid of the runt in most of their broods.
It's interesting watching everyone project their impressions onto mama stork while having little to no clue of the operation of this creature's mind. I doubt there's little understanding how emotional or apathetic this event actually is. That being said, why i did i watch this 😭
It indiscriminately killed its offspring. None of the babies look starving they are all fat in fact. Killed its baby for no reason that’s not an impression it’s a fact
According to someone on the livestream it happened cause the birds mate died to getting wrapped up into powerlines. The momma couldn’t keep up with the demand for food on her own so got rid of the smallest and weakest. It’s a survival thing. By doing so she’s giving her others a better chance to survive. But yeah they def don’t have emotions in the same way humans do though they do have some form of them it’s just a lot more instinctual than thought out.
@ShadowFox1412 I appreciate the context from their community. Sounds like many things I've seen in nature. I don't doubt that they have emotions though. I just saw a video a couple days ago where a guy was speculating on whether or not his stag beatle had emotions based on some interesting behaviors. At least he was considering multiple possible subjective experiences it may be having, not just saying "look how angry he is!"
Storks are brutal. I'm going back to watch my panda live cams. LOL
should we tell him, guys?
@@lolbotswhat? Are pandas fucked up too? I thought they were just cute dumbasses
You can hear it CRASH at the bottom, holy hell
POV the mother: Welp guess I don’t have a smaller children now
they grow up so fast
부족한 먹이탓인가요? 제일 작은 녀석을 제거하네요. 안타까운 광경을 보니 가슴이 무거워 집니다.
Wrong choice by mama Stork, the little one was gutsy.
It's not the size of the Stork in the fight, but the size of the roof on which it lands.
By the way, show starts at 8:40
Nah bro I stayed for the whole movie
The thump at the end shows how much fight he had😂
yeah keep telleing that to yourself you must be 5 foot. 🤣😂🤣
@@Snakeshit294 the dudes obviously trolling. Way to be too stupid to catch the joKe
@@Snakeshit294 look up Audie Murphy. Tiny dude that makes everyone here look like little girls.
Poor little creature, this is heartbreaking 😢
Damn.. He just got voted out of the nest.. 😂
You could hear him hit when he landed.. Survival of the fittest.
My cat had kittens. 5 of them. I woke up one night and heard a crunching sound. Mother cat had taken one of the kitten under the bed and was eating her. Head. First. Utterly disgusted and I never looked at that cat the same again. No idea if the kitten had died already or if she put the final boot in, but damn.
That's very common, the eating of dead offspring. Can't give up a meal like that in nature. Also, get your cat spayed and this sort of thing can be avoided. 😘
See that's kind of strange because there was no shortage of food. I assume you are providing the cats with plenty of food. I don't know I'm not an expert maybe it wasn't producing a milk or something. I'm curious why a cat would kill it's young but I guess tons of films. But in captivity I find it a little strange since there's basically endless food for them
But pandas will only raise one kid even if they have two. In rescue centers they will actually trick the parent by rotating them. In
@@michael_c2 Kitten could've been disabled or stillborn since OP didn't know if the kitten had died beforehand.
That's actually normal behavior when their babies die, believe it or not. If she were a stray, it would have been absolutely necessary to eat it, not only because she would need the meal but the body would attract other animals, and potentially make her other babies sick just being near it. Eating it would be the best way for her to dispose of any babies that passed away. The fact she was a pet just shows it's instinctual behavior and not necessarily dependent on the environment. I only say all this to give you an insight as to why your cat did that, since I imagine it was disturbing to see.
@@Oswald_Thatendswald Very interesting, thanks for this. She was a rescue, so she was previously a stray before I took her in. Makes a lot of sense, what you typed there.
They will usually kill the runt, especially with that many. Its hard to take care of that big a nest.
So I have to be honest here. The runt was mean. Like really mean. It was attacking the other siblings and even the mom just for being there. On top of that it was the smallest so it seemed like she gave it a chance. If it was a good issue she would have just killed it and canibalized it and separated it between the kids which I’ve seen other birds do so yeah idk just my take on it.
Nothing in the Wild happens for no reason. That’s the misterious balance of Nature.
The way she even watched it fall and corked her head like “alrighty then” 😬
Lol that thunk at the end 😂
Seems like the stork that was thrown out was pretty aggressive towards the other storks in the nest. Have to think the mother wouldn’t want that behavior in the nest.
The others were like “oh shit we better stfu or we are next”
Moral of this story, don't be a jerk.
Nature is wild! I think the mama Stork actually broke the chicks neck before she dropped it off
i think the chick was pretending to be dead in that last moment but the mother grabbed it and down it went
10:32 I feel lil bros pain 😭😭😭
Seems like the siblings were protecting him at first, them realised, no, I'll save my own skin. That beak though😮
Note to self: set up a safety net under that stork nest in my yard.
Or let nature take it's place.
Storks don't raise disabled babies like we do
@@williamhollaway1960 🗿
@@williamhollaway1960 💀🤣
Good idea but now you have to raise it
THIS STORK IS LIKE JHONN WHICK
"Yo! This vid hits different with Freebird!!"
Mom seems to be reacting to the cries of one baby which is instigated by a different one, which the little one gets blamed for I think. 6:37 the one stork laying down in front starts crying louder as its being poked and prodded on its wing by the other one in the middle. Then the little one next to him is subtly touching it with its beak just as mother stork notices at 7:00 and 7:10. Must think hes the one thats causing problems, so she pushes him off. And instead of taking the admonishing and quieting down, he goes into fight mode and starts pecking all of them. Mom has no time for it and out he goes.
She seems to have had it in for the little mite from the get-go. Strange as I thought there were less active storks in the nest and the one she discarded seemed like a bit of a fighter.
@@KebabMusicLtd im not sure, she gave him several chances after the first time and he kept pecking the hell out of his siblings. i think she was just being reactive
* gets both my eyes gouged out and tossed off a cliff *
" it's just naaaaaaatuuuuuure !! "
- * splat *
It's so kind of the stork to allow some scavengers to eat her weakest baby that probably wouldn't have survived anyways. And a smart way to keep her family line strong. Also, not having a decaying baby in her nest helps keep disease and pests away.
What about humans? As medical practices improve, people who would have died pass on undesirable genes.
@@xxuncexx dark, but true
@@xxuncexx like being black
@@xxuncexx
The old nazis also thought that and performed eugenics.
Since nobody after WW2 wanted to be like a nazi, it was declared unethical and therefore banned.
@@Gaia_Seraphina And with modern day abortions available, weaker genetics can be rooted out safely and legally depending on the state. However, that is currently under attack in the US by republicans. And is why we must take a stand - to ensure that weak and undesirable genes cannot be allowed to pass on.
Storks do this when the babie is the weakest and can’t provide enough food or when it behaves abnormally which shows signs of weakness illness or disability
Little stork: *whining*
Mother: get your @zz outta here
Lol
『命に嫌わている』(カンザキイオリ) 楽曲。
⇧
命のシステムは、残酷かもしれません。
10:46以降からも、4匹の幼鳥から更に口減らしされて、2匹の幼鳥しか残らないと思いました。
Birds are just vicious creatures. When someone tells me they're an avid bird-watcher, but gut reaction is always the same: "lol, *why?"*
Imagine your mom being like "wake up, its time to die"
So this is why I sometimes heard a loud thump on my roof
Are you trying to be funny? You're not.
@@DanielTAKD dumbass, hes talking about the noise in the roof of his house, not bout the fucking joke. (Anyways sorry btw)
This reminds me of what Mom used to say would happen if I misbehaved.
birds are creepy asf lowkey
fr fr bussin ong ngl lfg
@@Jagar_Tharn no cap Fr fr ngl
@@SimulatedGoat facts