I love the method of presentation! Perfect, beautiful & striking photography. No people, only snakes and nature! Just the slightest hint of human intervention to get them to display defensive behavior. The sounds of nature are wonderful, the lack of narration is refreshing. No excited snake handlers waving their poles around, grabbing these beautiful wonders of nature! Absolutely lovely!
You guys get the best shots.. you bring out their colors and body motion in a way I rarely see on TH-cam.. I really appreciate your videos and the opportunity to see so many beautiful species.
Wow, thank you! We are very respectful to these amazing animals and therefore we manage to capture their natural behavior very often :) We are sure you will love our future videos!
Another superb video, without doubt the best on YT. My favourite Australian snake is the Death Adder because of its colouring, shape and unique caudal luring. I hope you enjoyed your time in Australia.
Thank you! 4 more episodes of this series will come and 2 more species of death adders :) We loved our trip to Australia, we hope to visit once again in the future!
Always soothing to watch your videos. Beautiful scenery, wonderful snakes in motion and no distraction. I also love the peace and quiet of your videos showing shy and usually very slow moving animals that are despised and feared by so many unfortunately. Good education is the only answer to that problem so many thanks to you. 😊
I love the striking images. Just beautiful snakes in motion in their habitat. The sound of the nature is so nice. I am from Austria and a snake lover and I always wanted to visit Australia because of the nature. Now even more after your perfect presentation. Thanks a lot.
A brilliant channel without an American saying "look at me I've got a huge snake"! More information than ego and beautiful views of faraway places I've never visited, although I have been to a few. Arabia would be a good place to go next. 👍
So nice of you! We did this years before our TH-cam channel got a decent number of viewers. Our goal was always to educate people around the world about these misunderstand animals. The difference between scary and beautiful is KNOWLEDGE.
@@LivingZoology Because of you I'm now supporting TAAF (Taylor-Ashe Antivenom Foundation) with a monthly donation. Excellent work you guys. I'm off to Oman next week to camp in the desert, I wonder if I'll catch a glimpse of Echis omanensis. have you see the new book "Field Guide to Snakes of the Middle East" by Damien Egan?
@@welshskies That is awesome, great that you support them! Good luck in Oman! We haven’t seen the book yet! Middle East is one of the regions of the Earth which we haven’t explored yet 🙂
@@johncee853 We did not feel the need to comment on that as we don’t want to be involved in discussions which criticize different nations. Our goal here is to spread knowledge about snakes 🙂 We criticize the showmanship in general when it comes to snake videos. It might happen a lot among Americans, but it is happening elsewhere too.
Thank you for showing these gorgeous Aussie snakes. Found a carpet python peacefully sleeping in my dirty clothes basket only yesterday. They are such calm easy going snakes. Unlike the Coastal Taipan who came to watch tv with me in my lounge room. Not sure which of us got the biggest surprise! ♥️ From Australia
We will keep showing more! Aussie snakes are awesome and the nature is awesome too! Wow, Carpet python sleeping in dirty clothes, what a sighting! Haha, watching TV with a Coastal taipan also sounds cool 😃 Greetings from the Czech Republic!
I used to live a block from cutheringa park in Townsville and I used to see carpet pythons in and around the culvert. Sadly they had all passed on which was a shame as they are Harmless snakes who make excellent rodent and cane toad control
You guys are not only superb photographer and video producers, but you also have atomic balls. I have been shot at, had a gun pointed to my face, and had to sly my way in the desert, alone, in cartel land. I even saw a couple of rattle snakes, but since we both pose no threat to each other, we continued on our way. I tell you what, both those times, my adrenaline went ten-fold. I knew to back out a little so they could make their escape. Both times, when the rattlers felt no danger, they both made their escape quickly and swiftly. Stay safe and keep filming these majestic creatures.
Thank you very much for watching our videos! :) We are absolutely used to work with deadly venomous snakes in difficult conditions, snakes are such peaceful animals! If you don't threaten them, they are very calm. We would be very stressed if someone was pointing a gun at us or even shooting! Hats off that you stayed calm there! Stay safe, greetings from the Czech Republic!
What's the name of those birds with that "boor-bor" (similar sound to a new zealand morepork) sound between 0:01 and 1:35 of the video. Those birds are heard in and around Townsville yet during my 16 months living there i never knew the name of them or saw them just heard them
@@coraltown1 We know about them, we exchanged few messages with Ruppert :) They are doing amazing work! Let's see if we can make it to Thailand this year or next year...
I really like death adders. Despite them being true elapids, they look very much like adder as the name suggests. Children's python were very common in and around Darwin, unfortunately I saw quite a few dead on the roads. Great film, I love the quality of your films and I also like the pure sound of nature, its almost like I am back in the Northern Territory when I am listening to the above film.
Death adders were really high on our list before the trip and we ended with 3 species! We got lucky, but we worked really hard to find them :) Next time we want to explore the Darwin region. Awesome that you love our footage and also the sounds! ;)
Three weeks before I moved to New Zealand I was walking back to my door from my washing line in the dark (porch light was on though) in Townsville and lo and behold in front of me about a metre popped up a death adder i slowly backed away and saw the snake jump up and go back under the house. It didn't scare me as I knew it was probably frightened of me.
Very good video. I'm excited to see some taipan's in the future. What's weird to me is Death Adders resemble vipers, everything about them screams viper, yet we say they are elapid. Is there a reason for this?
Thank you! Taipans will come! Death adders are elapids which are adapted to ecological niche which is occupied by vipers on other continents. Vipers never reached Australia due to its isolation. When different animals (not closely related) evolve into similar body shape and behavior, it is called the convergent evolution.
Very amazing footage.I love your work 💖💖 I am wondering : 1.Is Mulga snake immune to other snake's venom including Inland Taipan's venom? 2.I am confused about species of the term "gwardar".Is it Pseudonaja mengdeni or Pseudonaja nuchalis? 3.Do Australian death adders have fastest strike in the world among snakes?
Thank you very much! Yes, Mulga snakes are immune to venoms of many other snakes in Australia. Gwardar is Pseudonaja mengdeni. Yes, usually death adders are mentioned as snakes with the fastest strike of all venomous snakes.
thank you very much for these videos! Makes such a change to just see the snake doing it own thing and not being handled by some macho man. Makes them all the more fascinating!
Good question! Vipers simply did not reach Australia. They evolved in Tertiary, probably in Asia and managed to colonize Americas, but not Australia, which was separated.
Probably for similar reasons as to why elapids in the Americas are represented exclusively by coral snakes. North and South America are pit viper continents.
That looks more like Stimson's Python (Antaresia stimsoni) to me. They do look very similar but Children's Python is more tropical than desert. Nice video all round. Haha, just watched further.
@@LivingZoology it’s great too see different videos from you guys you do amazing work and filming well done , oh just remember when you are in Australia filming our snakes always carry pressure bandages it will save your life if bitten by one of our venomous snakes 👍🐍🐍
Somebody got bitten by a death adder. The snake was killed and taken with the patient to hospital to be identified. A doctor went to inject formalin into the snake to preserve it. The "dead" snake struck the syringe, shattering it.
@@LivingZoology I heard it many years ago on ABC TV news in Sydney. There was a photo of the snake and the doctor with a syringe. That had been posed for the news.
Hi Bro ,I am a fan of your channel,your photography & Music are one of the best ,I would like to give you a suggestion please Make videos on TRIBAL people of AMAZON , AFRICA ,ASIA & All around the World ,Their lifestyles & Their Culture,,This Series of videos on TRIBAL people will make This Channel No1 , remember the Movie ANACONDA in which the group visited Amazon jungle in search of TRIBAL SaiShama ,. You can Research more on This & you can Also make a video on TRIBAL people of Andaman and Nicobar Islands 🙏🙏👍👍
It is awesome that you love our channel! :) We still have so many snakes to find and film! But who knows, maybe in the future we will focus on tribal people too.
The King Brown aka Mulga snake , The Eastern Brown #2 on LD50 SCALE , Antivenine will not work on the bite from of both , bit by Eastern Brown and thats the antivenom you want
Do they die if you accidentall run over them or do they survive and chase you. Lets say at night you cant see them and accidentally run over them During day if you swerve around them.with car would they chase your car or jump on car
King browns eat other snakes, but also various other animals! King cobra eats snakes and monitor lizards, Kingsnakes also don’t eat exclusively snakes 🙂
@@LivingZoology I'm sure they eat other things, but I'm also fairly sure that the name "king" is given to strong snakes that eat a lot of other snakes, because they're top of the species.
@@LivingZoology Looks like Dr.Louis may have learned something from Victor for a change! I've learned a lot about snakes from you, and I appreciate your channel.
@@victorcarbino8736 It is certainly an interesting idea, those who created common names for these snakes probably thought in a similar way as you 🙂 We are happy that you are learning new things from our videos! 🙏🙂
Always great stuff! Looks like you two had yet another awesome adventure. In so many snake videos the term "most venomous" is used. This by itself is ambiguous. Does it mean it has the greatest potential venom yield, or the most toxic venom (as in LD-50)? I assume you use it to mean the latter, but I think it would be wise to avoid the ambiguity and comment explicitly, especially since snakes are so often misrepresented in the first place. Of course venom toxicity is only one factor among several that contribute to a snakes alleged "deadliness" , another commonly used and abused term which I don't recall you using, as I'm sure you know better. Generally I avoid any snake videos which use either "most deadly" or "most venomous" in the title or thumbnail as it indicates clickbait hype. Please take these as very respectful comments. Your work is always outstanding, educational, ethical, and of highest quality :) I'm also envious of your wonderful endeavors and always look forward to the next.
Thank you very much for watching and interesting comment! 🙂 We know that we write in this video that the Western brown snake is one of the most venomous snakes in the world. It is based on LD50. We usually try to distinguish between a snake with the very toxic venom and a dangerous snake (maybe not so toxic, but common, living close to people etc.). Inland taipan is the most venomous snake in the world according to LD50, but is is not dangerous (it lives far from people and it is shy). Australia simply has many of the most venomous snakes in the world. We don’t hate the term deadly venomous, it is commonly used and has a realistic meaning. If a snake has a very toxic venom and enough of it to kill an adult human, it is deadly venomous. More people also watch these videos and if they click on our video, we have a chance to educate them! 🙂 Of course we never misinform and we don’t like clicbaits. Our goal is to show that even deadly venomous snakes are beautiful and amazing animals which deserve our respect.
@@LivingZoology Excellent and detailed reply thanks. I'm sure some of your viewers benefited by it.. To clarify, not for a second did I think you abused the term. Just a picky comment on my part that I was sure you'd agree with. I totally agree with the need to bring your message to the broader public :)
As any other venomous snake, in venom glands. Brown snakes have a very toxic venom and they produce a small amount compared to taipans or Mulga snakes.
@@LivingZoology I realised venom glands, but whereas triangular headed snakes seem to have a widened head and presumably plenty of space for venom glands, some sleeker snakes seem to have little obvious space. I thought I heard on the video that the king brown or western brown delivered a lot of venom.
@@davidhowse884 King brown delivers a lot of venom and it is not a brown snake 🙂 As we mention in the video, the common name is confusing and the other used name is Mulga snake. Brown snakes deliver less venom but it is far more toxic.
The first one isnt so. Maybe people in the west call it a king brown snake but it isnt. Its a mulga snake and looks totally different to a king brown. King browns live in the east and look just like a huge eastern brown. I have a valley near us where they breed in mass. People here are afraid of king browns as they think they have the same aggressive defensive attitude as esstern browns, but they dont because king browns are actually a species of black snake
Australia has the most venomous snakes in the world, but the human population is only 25 million. People living there are smart enough not to inflate their human population to over a billion more people than the U.S. When it comes to venomous snakes, the Australian people are educated and have a health care system to treat snake bite effectively. They also tend to take fundamental precautions like not leaving piles of garbage to accumulate which attract rodents.
The video says Snakes of AUSTRALIA 5 Species from the Desert What's the green snake doing in this video it's not from the Desert it's from the Rainforests 😂😂
I miss them sounds in the background of the Zebra Finches I bred them for 30+ years might get back into it again nothing better then sitting back with a cold beer & enjoying the different chirping sounds of the breeds I had 7 different breeds in 1 big aviary with waterfalls & multicoloured lights.
I love the method of presentation! Perfect, beautiful & striking photography. No people, only snakes and nature! Just the slightest hint of human intervention to get them to display defensive behavior. The sounds of nature are wonderful, the lack of narration is refreshing. No excited snake handlers waving their poles around, grabbing these beautiful wonders of nature! Absolutely lovely!
Thank you very much! Our goal is to show snakes in their natural habitat, their natural behavior and their amazing beauty.
Very well said, fully agree with you.
Totally! The quality of these videos is as good as it gets.
Amazing stuff you guys 💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽🔥🔥🔥
Keep up with the good work ❤️❤️❤️❤️
@@valterbrunojorge9540 Thank you very much!! Don’t miss our new video about the Inland taipan! Coming out today!
Never enough about Living Zoology! This channel is a TH-cam's gem! No doubt! :) Greetings from Hungary!
Wow, thank you! It is so good to read a comment like this! 🙏🙂❤️
hi magyar
You guys get the best shots.. you bring out their colors and body motion in a way I rarely see on TH-cam.. I really appreciate your videos and the opportunity to see so many beautiful species.
Wow, thank you! We are very respectful to these amazing animals and therefore we manage to capture their natural behavior very often :) We are sure you will love our future videos!
Another superb video, without doubt the best on YT. My favourite Australian snake is the Death Adder because of its colouring, shape and unique caudal luring. I hope you enjoyed your time in Australia.
Thank you! 4 more episodes of this series will come and 2 more species of death adders :) We loved our trip to Australia, we hope to visit once again in the future!
Always soothing to watch your videos. Beautiful scenery, wonderful snakes in motion and no distraction. I also love the peace and quiet of your videos showing shy and usually very slow moving animals that are despised and feared by so many unfortunately. Good education is the only answer to that problem so many thanks to you. 😊
We are very happy that you find our videos educative and relaxing to watch! 🙂Hopefully more and more people will watch and start to love snakes! 🐍❤️
Excellente footage. No talk, no music. Just the sound and vision of nature.
Thank you! This is our style! :)
@@LivingZoology I like your style.
Please don't change it ☺
Steve Irwin would say "have a look at this little beauty's". Another amazing video guys ❤️
Wow, thank you! It is great that you love this video! 🙏🙂
I'm always amazed at your cinematography! Beautiful and not a human in sight.
Thank you very much! We want to show snakes as the main heroes of our videos, not us 😉
😊😊😊
Gotta love the King Brown Snake, Especially how it head and gaze does tend resemble (At 2:22) an Opheophagus Hannah - King Cobra.
We also had that feeling! :) Soon we will post a video about the King cobra too!
The death adder was the most beautiful one I've ever seen. Thanks for another amazing video.
Thank you for watching! The Desert death adder is such a stunning species!
Great video! We have some beautiful snakes here in Australia. And it seems to be that the deadlier that they are, the more beautiful they are too
We agree that you have very beautiful snakes in Australia! We hope to come back soon! 🙂
I love the striking images. Just beautiful snakes in motion in their habitat. The sound of the nature is so nice. I am from Austria and a snake lover and I always wanted to visit Australia because of the nature. Now even more after your perfect presentation. Thanks a lot.
Thank you very much! Australia has some amazing natural places! Greetings from the Czech Republic!
Great presentation very entertaining and informative thanks for the great input🎉🎉🎉
Thank you very much for watching! Great, that you love this video!
Delightful to watch,thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Amazing. The quality is excellent, you can see every part of the snake. Incredible channel.
We always try to film snakes from every possible angle! 🙂 We are happy that you love our channel!
Australian is home to amazing snakes 🐍 Thanks for showing them 👏
More episodes to come! 🙂
@@Rob-rh5bc no they didn’t show that one they were looking for In Particular species for episode
This is excellent. I would love to see more.
Thank you! More episodes will come! In the meantime you can check other snake videos from Australia here! th-cam.com/video/QAaW3U18rzQ/w-d-xo.html
A brilliant channel without an American saying "look at me I've got a huge snake"! More information than ego and beautiful views of faraway places I've never visited, although I have been to a few. Arabia would be a good place to go next. 👍
So nice of you! We did this years before our TH-cam channel got a decent number of viewers. Our goal was always to educate people around the world about these misunderstand animals. The difference between scary and beautiful is KNOWLEDGE.
@@LivingZoology Because of you I'm now supporting TAAF (Taylor-Ashe Antivenom Foundation) with a monthly donation. Excellent work you guys. I'm off to Oman next week to camp in the desert, I wonder if I'll catch a glimpse of Echis omanensis. have you see the new book "Field Guide to Snakes of the Middle East" by Damien Egan?
@@welshskies That is awesome, great that you support them! Good luck in Oman! We haven’t seen the book yet! Middle East is one of the regions of the Earth which we haven’t explored yet 🙂
Quite sad and pathetic how you feel the need to berate Americans here. Sad that Living Zoology didn't address it. There was zero need for it.
@@johncee853 We did not feel the need to comment on that as we don’t want to be involved in discussions which criticize different nations. Our goal here is to spread knowledge about snakes 🙂 We criticize the showmanship in general when it comes to snake videos. It might happen a lot among Americans, but it is happening elsewhere too.
Thank you for showing these gorgeous Aussie snakes. Found a carpet python peacefully sleeping in my dirty clothes basket only yesterday. They are such calm easy going snakes. Unlike the Coastal Taipan who came to watch tv with me in my lounge room. Not sure which of us got the biggest surprise!
♥️ From Australia
We will keep showing more! Aussie snakes are awesome and the nature is awesome too! Wow, Carpet python sleeping in dirty clothes, what a sighting! Haha, watching TV with a Coastal taipan also sounds cool 😃 Greetings from the Czech Republic!
I heard the Aussie trick was to use fabric softener on those carpet pythons. Can't wear 'em myself; they itch.
@@thebenefactor6744 You can't pull the wool over my eyes 🙂
He came to watch Living ZOOLOGY with you!
I used to live a block from cutheringa park in Townsville and I used to see carpet pythons in and around the culvert. Sadly they had all passed on which was a shame as they are Harmless snakes who make excellent rodent and cane toad control
i love death adders they look like and behave like vipers convergent evolution is amazing
Exacty! It was amazing to see various elapid snakes occupying ecological niches which are used by vipers or colubrids on other continents :)
Sounds good to me. Again many thanks guys you're ace
We hope that you love this video!
You guys are not only superb photographer and video producers, but you also have atomic balls. I have been shot at, had a gun pointed to my face, and had to sly my way in the desert, alone, in cartel land. I even saw a couple of rattle snakes, but since we both pose no threat to each other, we continued on our way. I tell you what, both those times, my adrenaline went ten-fold. I knew to back out a little so they could make their escape. Both times, when the rattlers felt no danger, they both made their escape quickly and swiftly. Stay safe and keep filming these majestic creatures.
Thank you very much for watching our videos! :) We are absolutely used to work with deadly venomous snakes in difficult conditions, snakes are such peaceful animals! If you don't threaten them, they are very calm. We would be very stressed if someone was pointing a gun at us or even shooting! Hats off that you stayed calm there! Stay safe, greetings from the Czech Republic!
Congrats! Australia. You finally made it! Brilliant work as always. Thanks.
Yes, finally! It was an awesome trip!
Why do this channel not have more views? It is the best snake channel on YT.
Oh, thank you very much! We are presenting snakes in a calm documentaristic way, there is probably not enough drama to attract masses :/
Beautifully done video! I really enjoyed that it was nicely filmed, Thank you for sharing 🙂
Thank you very much! Another episode from tropical forests of the Cape York peninsula is also out now! m.th-cam.com/video/RAN2Uem-6I8/w-d-xo.html
@@LivingZoology I'll check it out 🙂
What's the name of those birds with that "boor-bor" (similar sound to a new zealand morepork) sound between 0:01 and 1:35 of the video. Those birds are heard in and around Townsville yet during my 16 months living there i never knew the name of them or saw them just heard them
Never seen a children’s python or shovel nosed snake b4. Great video
Great that you saw some new snake species! Thank you for watching! 🙂
Thank you, beautifly filmed
Glad you enjoyed it!
Awesome BBC level quality, as always. Thanks! Please film in Thailand.
Thank you so much!!! :) We really want to come to Thailand!
@@LivingZoology DAVIDSFEED channel continuously shows herps in Thailand. They started doing tours, and they KNOW where the snakes are. Just FYI.
@@coraltown1 We know about them, we exchanged few messages with Ruppert :) They are doing amazing work! Let's see if we can make it to Thailand this year or next year...
Brilliant ❤
Thank you!
FANTATIC PHOTGRAPHY>>>
Thank you so much!!! 🙏❤️
Excellent, as always! Thank you.
Thank you too!
Love this channel!!
Awesome, thank you!!! 🙏🙂
I hate but love em😜😁👍England
It is difficult not to love snakes! :D Thanks for watching!
This is what animal documentary should be. Fewer car chases, noise, common narrative.
Thank you I have not seen a couple of these before
Thank you for watching!
I really like death adders. Despite them being true elapids, they look very much like adder as the name suggests. Children's python were very common in and around Darwin, unfortunately I saw quite a few dead on the roads. Great film, I love the quality of your films and I also like the pure sound of nature, its almost like I am back in the Northern Territory when I am listening to the above film.
Death adders were really high on our list before the trip and we ended with 3 species! We got lucky, but we worked really hard to find them :) Next time we want to explore the Darwin region. Awesome that you love our footage and also the sounds! ;)
Three weeks before I moved to New Zealand I was walking back to my door from my washing line in the dark (porch light was on though) in Townsville and lo and behold in front of me about a metre popped up a death adder i slowly backed away and saw the snake jump up and go back under the house. It didn't scare me as I knew it was probably frightened of me.
Beautiful stuff as always. Thank you
Thank you! Cheers!
I agree with a lot of the other comments. The lack of talking helps focus attention on the animal and its surroundings. Great content.
Thank you very much, it is great that you also love our style of presenting footage!
Very good video. I'm excited to see some taipan's in the future. What's weird to me is Death Adders resemble vipers, everything about them screams viper, yet we say they are elapid. Is there a reason for this?
Thank you! Taipans will come! Death adders are elapids which are adapted to ecological niche which is occupied by vipers on other continents. Vipers never reached Australia due to its isolation. When different animals (not closely related) evolve into similar body shape and behavior, it is called the convergent evolution.
Great video as always, greatly appreciated.
If I may, a recommendation ONLY if possible & not too much trouble...60 fps recordings?
Thank you!!! We shoot in 50fps and render in 25 so the videos don’t get too big. We are from Europe so we use 50fps instead of 60 🙂
The snake at the 1:00 mark looks eerily similar to an American Water Moccasin.
That’s the Common death adder 🙂
Some species of death adders are suggestive of North American copperheads. Venom potency is where the comparison ends, however.
Sweet, I've been wondering when you guys will get to Oz.
We finally went there last year! 🙂 It was awesome!
Very amazing footage.I love your work 💖💖 I am wondering :
1.Is Mulga snake immune to other snake's venom including Inland Taipan's venom?
2.I am confused about species of the term "gwardar".Is it Pseudonaja mengdeni or Pseudonaja nuchalis?
3.Do Australian death adders have fastest strike in the world among snakes?
Thank you very much! Yes, Mulga snakes are immune to venoms of many other snakes in Australia. Gwardar is Pseudonaja mengdeni. Yes, usually death adders are mentioned as snakes with the fastest strike of all venomous snakes.
@@LivingZoology thanks👌💖
@@gundulpacul3 Welcome!
The King Brown or Mulga snake is one of the few creatures in Australia that can pick a fight with an inland taipan and win.
thank you very much for these videos! Makes such a change to just see the snake doing it own thing and not being handled by some macho man. Makes them all the more fascinating!
Glad you like our videos!!! We have many more!
Thanks for this new vid.
Hope you enjoyed it! 🙂
The western brown is also known as the gwarder and is very common in the Wheatbelt of Western Australia not just in very arid regions.
Yes, Gwardar, correct. They have quite a wide range, but most of it is in the arid regions.
Love the footage and all the drone shots too! Was it hard to find that shovel nosed snake??
Thank you Hasani! We found the shovel-nosed while road cruising, we did not expect it, just a bit of luck :)
Do you guys know why there are no vipers in Australia? Great shots as always, i love it!
Good question! Vipers simply did not reach Australia. They evolved in Tertiary, probably in Asia and managed to colonize Americas, but not Australia, which was separated.
@@LivingZoology Yeah, that should make sense, because it was separated. Thanks for your quick response.
@@TheGForceJunkie Welcome!
Probably for similar reasons as to why elapids in the Americas are represented exclusively by coral snakes. North and South America are pit viper continents.
Those 5 are mean looking to me.The english was perfect.
Really, all 5? Thank you, we have a native speaker to check our scripts 🙂
That looks more like Stimson's Python (Antaresia stimsoni) to me. They do look very similar but Children's Python is more tropical than desert. Nice video all round. Haha, just watched further.
Thanks for watching! So it seems that you watched longer up to the point where we explain the current status of Stimson's python :)
Thank you for this video! ✨
You're so welcome! We hope that you love it! :)
Beautiful animals.
They are! Thank you for watching!
Great video thanks for showing some of the most venomous snakes in the world, Australia has number 1, inland taipan, 2 eastern brown, 3 coastal taipan
Thank you for watching! Don’t worry, we will show you the other extremelly venomous species too! 😉
@@LivingZoology it’s great too see different videos from you guys you do amazing work and filming well done , oh just remember when you are in Australia filming our snakes always carry pressure bandages it will save your life if bitten by one of our venomous snakes 👍🐍🐍
@@JohnLee-vj9lh We are very happy that we could finally film amazing snakes from Australia 🙂 We had those bandages with us!
Nice bro ❤️❤️
Thanks 🔥
Superbs snakes !!!
Many thanks!! 🙂
Somebody got bitten by a death adder. The snake was killed and taken with the patient to hospital to be identified. A doctor went to inject formalin into the snake to preserve it. The "dead" snake struck the syringe, shattering it.
Is that a story or a documented case?
@@LivingZoology I heard it many years ago on ABC TV news in Sydney. There was a photo of the snake and the doctor with a syringe. That had been posed for the news.
@@ianlowery6014 That sounds like it was hopefully a true story, even though news tend to exaggerate sometimes 🙂
Superb sir
Thank you!
super thank's !
Our pleasure! Great tha you like this video!
The python is absolutely gorgeous (and not just because it isn't venomous!)
Yes, Children's pythons are really interesting and beautiful!
Very beautiful but deadly
Very beautiful, we agree!
Snakes, Spiders, People - are all venomous in Australia.
Thanks for watching!
Hi Bro ,I am a fan of your channel,your photography & Music are one of the best ,I would like to give you a suggestion please Make videos on TRIBAL people of AMAZON , AFRICA ,ASIA & All around the World ,Their lifestyles & Their Culture,,This Series of videos on TRIBAL people will make This Channel No1 , remember the Movie ANACONDA in which the group visited Amazon jungle in search of TRIBAL SaiShama ,.
You can Research more on This & you can Also make a video on TRIBAL people of Andaman and Nicobar Islands 🙏🙏👍👍
It is awesome that you love our channel! :) We still have so many snakes to find and film! But who knows, maybe in the future we will focus on tribal people too.
super
Thank you!
The King Brown aka Mulga snake , The Eastern Brown #2 on LD50 SCALE , Antivenine will not work on the bite from of both , bit by Eastern Brown and thats the antivenom you want
There is antivenom against bites of both Eastern brown snake and the Mulga snake.
Thanks
Welcome!
They should have named that one giant worm snake. Just saying 😂
They're all so beautiful ❤️
Haha :D We agree that all these species were really beautiful!
How do people live comfortably in Australia?
We were very well educated from kids
People are used to live with snakes and there is a good education.
Chtělo by to alespoň české titulky. Myslím mít možnost zapnout.
Do budoucna zvážíme, vše je otázka času, kterého máme málo...
And when will you show the snakes successfully hunting and eating?
Enjoy: th-cam.com/video/3jAXQP5uDRw/w-d-xo.html
Cute
@@rameesha5838 Thanks for watching!
I learnt the scientific name for the fierce snake...sounds like a Tool album.
You can learn much more about the Inland taipan in this video! th-cam.com/video/QAaW3U18rzQ/w-d-xo.html
At 0:28; uh-oh. Look out!
Thank you for watching our new video! 🙂
Do they die if you accidentall run over them or do they survive and chase you.
Lets say at night you cant see them and accidentally run over them
During day if you swerve around them.with car would they chase your car or jump on car
If you run over a snake it will almost certainly die. Snakes don't chase cars or people.
@@LivingZoology thanks
Doesn't the king brown mainly eat other snakes? Isn't eating other snakes how some get the name king?
King browns eat other snakes, but also various other animals! King cobra eats snakes and monitor lizards, Kingsnakes also don’t eat exclusively snakes 🙂
@@LivingZoology I'm sure they eat other things, but I'm also fairly sure that the name "king" is given to strong snakes that eat a lot of other snakes, because they're top of the species.
@@victorcarbino8736 There is probably something about it, yes! 😉
@@LivingZoology Looks like Dr.Louis may have learned something from Victor for a change! I've learned a lot about snakes from you, and I appreciate your channel.
@@victorcarbino8736 It is certainly an interesting idea, those who created common names for these snakes probably thought in a similar way as you 🙂 We are happy that you are learning new things from our videos! 🙏🙂
Always great stuff! Looks like you two had yet another awesome adventure.
In so many snake videos the term "most venomous" is used. This by itself is ambiguous. Does it mean it has the greatest potential venom yield, or the most toxic venom (as in LD-50)? I assume you use it to mean the latter, but I think it would be wise to avoid the ambiguity and comment explicitly, especially since snakes are so often misrepresented in the first place.
Of course venom toxicity is only one factor among several that contribute to a snakes alleged "deadliness" , another commonly used and abused term which I don't recall you using, as I'm sure you know better. Generally I avoid any snake videos which use either "most deadly" or "most venomous" in the title or thumbnail as it indicates clickbait hype.
Please take these as very respectful comments. Your work is always outstanding, educational, ethical, and of highest quality :) I'm also envious of your wonderful endeavors and always look forward to the next.
Thank you very much for watching and interesting comment! 🙂 We know that we write in this video that the Western brown snake is one of the most venomous snakes in the world. It is based on LD50. We usually try to distinguish between a snake with the very toxic venom and a dangerous snake (maybe not so toxic, but common, living close to people etc.). Inland taipan is the most venomous snake in the world according to LD50, but is is not dangerous (it lives far from people and it is shy). Australia simply has many of the most venomous snakes in the world. We don’t hate the term deadly venomous, it is commonly used and has a realistic meaning. If a snake has a very toxic venom and enough of it to kill an adult human, it is deadly venomous. More people also watch these videos and if they click on our video, we have a chance to educate them! 🙂 Of course we never misinform and we don’t like clicbaits. Our goal is to show that even deadly venomous snakes are beautiful and amazing animals which deserve our respect.
@@LivingZoology Excellent and detailed reply thanks. I'm sure some of your viewers benefited by it..
To clarify, not for a second did I think you abused the term. Just a picky comment on my part that I was sure you'd agree with. I totally agree with the need to bring your message to the broader public :)
@@bradsillasen1972 We are always happy to reply and discuss interesting snake topics :) Yes, we really try to bring our message to more people! :)
🙏👌 s
Thanks for watching!
Where does a sleek headed snake like brown snake, which has a lot of venom, store its venom?
As any other venomous snake, in venom glands. Brown snakes have a very toxic venom and they produce a small amount compared to taipans or Mulga snakes.
@@LivingZoology I realised venom glands, but whereas triangular headed snakes seem to have a widened head and presumably plenty of space for venom glands, some sleeker snakes seem to have little obvious space. I thought I heard on the video that the king brown or western brown delivered a lot of venom.
@@davidhowse884 King brown delivers a lot of venom and it is not a brown snake 🙂 As we mention in the video, the common name is confusing and the other used name is Mulga snake. Brown snakes deliver less venom but it is far more toxic.
You definitely would not want to be too far from help if it got bit
Yes, it is always better to be close to a hospital.
The first one isnt so. Maybe people in the west call it a king brown snake but it isnt. Its a mulga snake and looks totally different to a king brown. King browns live in the east and look just like a huge eastern brown. I have a valley near us where they breed in mass. People here are afraid of king browns as they think they have the same aggressive defensive attitude as esstern browns, but they dont because king browns are actually a species of black snake
King brown is a Mulga snake (two different names for the same species) and they are not brown snakes, but black snakes (you wrote this correctly).
In the West it is known as a king Brown.
♥ 🙏
Thank you very much!
Nothing in front of what we have in India. The actual most dangerous country when it comes to dangerous animals
Enjoy watching this video: m.th-cam.com/video/WXVLPS2jYkY/w-d-xo.html&pp=ygUObGl2aW5nIHpvb2xvZ3k%3D
Australia has the most venomous snakes in the world, but the human population is only 25 million. People living there are smart enough not to inflate their human population to over a billion more people than the U.S. When it comes to venomous snakes, the Australian people are educated and have a health care system to treat snake bite effectively. They also tend to take fundamental precautions like not leaving piles of garbage to accumulate which attract rodents.
I “Soooooooo Wish” someone would talk us through the videos. We have to take our focus off the snakes to READ..
Talking would ruin the feeling of being there with us thanks to only natural sounds :)
Try to never miss yinz.
Thank you, that is great!
everybody is welcome for more animals videos
Thank you for watching!
The video says Snakes of AUSTRALIA 5 Species from the Desert What's the green snake doing in this video it's not from the Desert it's from the Rainforests 😂😂
At the beginning there is a general introduction to snakes of Australia you know...
@@LivingZoology Ok my Bad my apologies👍
❤
Missed Tiger snake
It does not live in deserts…
Vipers vs Elapids
Thanks for watching.
No I didn't like it 🤪Darn it I wanted to see more 🤣 LAMO 😂😹...
It was freaking great thank you
Glad you enjoyed it! More species next time! ;)
Lee Jason Jackson Donna Clark Karen
North American venomous snakes look way cooler.
Both continents have cool snakes in our opinion :)
Australia sejatinya Tanah wilayah milik Aborigin bukan milik.orang europa
Who is saying that Australia belongs to European people?
@panjisukma2070 Australia belongs to Australians! It doesn't matter where you come from. If you feel Australian in your heart, you are Australian.
@@SuperGazza5 iam from Papua,that right
I miss them sounds in the background of the Zebra Finches I bred them for 30+ years might get back into it again nothing better then sitting back with a cold beer & enjoying the different chirping sounds of the breeds I had 7 different breeds in 1 big aviary with waterfalls & multicoloured lights.
Thanks for watching! Great that you like the soundscape!
What are the birds at the beginning. I lived in Townsville for 16 months and heard them every morning yet never saw them or knew what they were
👍
Thank you! 🙂
Acrochordus arafurae ?
("file snake")
What about it?
The king Brown despite its name is in the black snake family. Proper meme is the Mulga
If you read the text in our video, you will find the same info.