I agree with human intervention..Robert Fuller has a channel where he has nest cams capturing footage of different bird species and I have watched several clips of him checking in on the ones who look weak and intervening by taking in the ones who need a bit of extra food and warmth..so thanks to human intervention they made it to fledging day!
When watching wildlife, YOU acknowledge and accept the responsibility of knowing that every nest isn’t going to turn out like a Disney movie. If you mentally can’t handle the reality of wildlife, stick with Disney and/or Robert Fuller. 😉 Btw, being weak does NOT make a species live on. If a chick isn’t getting the nutrition needed for growth, it will be weak. Mother Nature has been doing her job for thousands upon thousands of years. She knows what she’s doing and should be respected. Humans have done enough damage to our wildlife!
Nou heel leuk ,maar je kan al zien ,een teveel . En dat vind ik altijd zielig ....dat i s met ooievaars ook die worden gewoon uit het nest gegooid...kan ik niet tegen. 🤷♀️😮
The smallest chick didn't get much, if any at all, because the bigger, older chicks are self feeding, and you can see the prey is snatched to the corner and shielded by the bigger chicks. The most aggressive chicks get the most food. Always.
It doesn’t realize it’s only purpose was to be backup food storage for the largest ones. 5 of these will never make it to fledging, they get large and aggressive. The 2 parent birds will never be able to catch enough prey for themselves and 5 chicks.
When prey got scarce and food aggression set in, an intervention should've taken place! Pet stores that sells reptiles have fresh frozen and/or live newborn rodents called pinkies and a few days older are called fuzzies, they could have been made available for the parent birds to pick up from a platform near the nest box! Sometimes, human intervention is necessary for the survival of important bird and animal species!
This many birds of prey chicks in a nest doesn’t usually end very well for all of them. This nesting spot isn’t even large enough to fit all of these to fledgling size. They just get more and more aggressive as they grow. There would never be enough prey coming into the nest to support 5, by time they fledge they are almost the size of the parent birds. Realistic it is likely only 3 of these will make it to fledge, and that is if conditions stay this good.
That is not the natural order of things. Even if the whole nest died, kestrels won't go extinct. If they do, that is the natural order of things. The truth is never what we want, it just is. We must bend to it's will, or live life in a lie.
Şu andaki insanların yaşadığı gibi, güclüler her zaman gücsüzleri yenmiye calışıyor yeniyorda. Hayvanlarda aynı şekilde.Saten insanlarda bir hayvandır .Insanlar düşüne düşüne Hayvanlarda koklaşı koklaşı.
The littlest of babies are often overlooked in the huddle with the bigger siblings. They most often end up the last and least to get food. They die of starvation and end up getting fed to the same bigger siblings. Nothing is wasted in nature but it's still unfortunate and cruel.
There aren't cameras on nests everywhere in nature and unfortunately it's always the weaker chicks that die because they can't compete with their siblings to get food. But one could have intervened here.
Yes, intervention is often resorted to, to help preserve an endangered species. Any other plentiful species in numbers are left alone to the mercy of nature as it has always been.
I agree with human intervention..Robert Fuller has a channel where he has nest cams capturing footage of different bird species and I have watched several clips of him checking in on the ones who look weak and intervening by taking in the ones who need a bit of extra food and warmth..so thanks to human intervention they made it to fledging day!
How does the mother intervene to leave the nest if she senses humans at her nest?
When watching wildlife, YOU acknowledge and accept the responsibility of knowing that every nest isn’t going to turn out like a Disney movie. If you mentally can’t handle the reality of wildlife, stick with Disney and/or Robert Fuller. 😉
Btw, being weak does NOT make a species live on. If a chick isn’t getting the nutrition needed for growth, it will be weak. Mother Nature has been doing her job for thousands upon thousands of years. She knows what she’s doing and should be respected. Humans have done enough damage to our wildlife!
The poor little baby doesn’t even move anymore 🥲
Nou heel leuk ,maar je kan al zien ,een teveel . En dat vind ik altijd zielig ....dat i s met ooievaars ook die worden gewoon uit het nest gegooid...kan ik niet tegen. 🤷♀️😮
At best, it is likely only 3 of these will make it to fledge and that is if conditions stay this good.
Mom's sizing up that chick to be the next meal. 42:20
oui
一番小さくみえる雛だけは、あまり餌がもらえないような気がします。( 間違っていたら、このコメントは無視、または、削除して下さい。)もしも、そうだとすれば、可愛そうだなぁーーー。
The smallest chick didn't get much, if any at all, because the bigger, older chicks are self feeding, and you can see the prey is snatched to the corner and shielded by the bigger chicks. The most aggressive chicks get the most food. Always.
Küçük kuş açlıktan ölüyor
Un milagro para los bb peques creo que no existe 😢😢😢😢
An nacido para ser comidos
The little one is dying
No shit Sherlock
It doesn’t realize it’s only purpose was to be backup food storage for the largest ones. 5 of these will never make it to fledging, they get large and aggressive. The 2 parent birds will never be able to catch enough prey for themselves and 5 chicks.
Out of the 5 chicks only 3 survived to fledge.
When prey got scarce and food aggression set in, an intervention should've taken place! Pet stores that sells reptiles have fresh frozen and/or live newborn rodents called pinkies and a few days older are called fuzzies, they could have been made available for the parent birds to pick up from a platform near the nest box! Sometimes, human intervention is necessary for the survival of important bird and animal species!
Agree.
@Peter Sundry Aren’t they all important? Certainly ones that are endangered and struggling with breeding would be a priority.
This many birds of prey chicks in a nest doesn’t usually end very well for all of them. This nesting spot isn’t even large enough to fit all of these to fledgling size. They just get more and more aggressive as they grow. There would never be enough prey coming into the nest to support 5, by time they fledge they are almost the size of the parent birds. Realistic it is likely only 3 of these will make it to fledge, and that is if conditions stay this good.
That is not the natural order of things. Even if the whole nest died, kestrels won't go extinct. If they do, that is the natural order of things.
The truth is never what we want, it just is. We must bend to it's will, or live life in a lie.
😊
Estos crios tienen saquito sin fondo
Porque si estuvieran llenos lo dejarian al bb comer
Hay alguien que puede ir en rescate al pequeñin? Ya sabemos que terminra muriendo antes que se muera podemos mandar a los salvavidas
Die Feuerwehr könnte auch kommen.
Şu andaki insanların yaşadığı gibi, güclüler her zaman gücsüzleri yenmiye calışıyor yeniyorda. Hayvanlarda aynı şekilde.Saten insanlarda bir hayvandır .Insanlar düşüne düşüne Hayvanlarda koklaşı koklaşı.
촬영자는 먹이를 제공해서 막내를 살릴수 있었는데도 그렇게 하지않았고
굶어죽어가는 막내의 그 과정을 촬영을 하며 즐겼다 나쁜 인간이다
구할수 없다면 촬영도 하지말아라
It is nature
Thankfully there's footage of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
@@didamnesia3575😅That's Korean words
@@NathanMiao-cj4ll Google translate
The littlest of babies are often overlooked in the huddle with the bigger siblings. They most often end up the last and least to get food. They die of starvation and end up getting fed to the same bigger siblings. Nothing is wasted in nature but it's still unfortunate and cruel.
ชีวิตอยู่ได้ต้องแข็งเแกร่ง นี้หรือ ชีวิตของสัตว์
Ja, ist es. Das ist die Natur.
老五就这样饿死了!
Sometimes human intervention is necessary
There aren't cameras on nests everywhere in nature and unfortunately it's always the weaker chicks that die because they can't compete with their siblings to get food. But one could have intervened here.
Yes, intervention is often resorted to, to help preserve an endangered species. Any other plentiful species in numbers are left alone to the mercy of nature as it has always been.
The 5th reminds me of today's millenialls... waiting for a handout.
Their end is the same
Junior's right leg was broken above his foot, that caused his final demise!
Your wrong he stopped breathing that’s how he Croaked
He looks like he’s using both feet pushing himself rather well at 4:43.
He was just so much smaller than the other chicks and couldn’t compete.
They hatch in the order they are laid. The last ones hatched are most often the 1st to die.