I would say that Australian beaches would far outclass any of these with sharks, crocs, jellies, stonefish, and a host of other creatures lined up to do you in.
But the odd byproduct of having the most venomous 'everything' on the planet is we lead the world in toxicology, as as a side effect of that there is almost 0 deaths that every occur based on aquatic animal. . . It surprises most people to know that cows and horses kill more people in Australia than everything else combined lol. Kinda anticlimactic I know, but we have some INCREDIBLE antivenoms here :D
@@thokim84 ocean rips that take you out to see are also dangerous, since most of Australia's north coast has no swimming signs on pristine beaches I would say at least it's more dangerous then the Nile. jellyfish are probably the most dangerous and common encounters. These jellies are no joke lethal and incredibly painful with limited anitvenom and some species no antevenom. I understand your argument and respect it but throw a thought out there.
@@calebharders3347 can't say over the Nile, hippos kill more people than any other water animal. The highest percentage of animal fatalities in water occur in the Nile. Should have been a list of 6 and include australia. I swan along the easy coast when I was there. Beaches are gorgeous. Apparently there was a salty seen close to the area around cairns (green island) I was swimming a couple days after I was there, or so I was told. I seen sharks but they where small reef ones. Had a keep a keen eye out for the falling bears though.
You forgot Northern Australia. There's so many things in the water that can kill you. Box Jellyfish, Irukanji, Saltwater Crocodiles, Tiger Sharks, Bull Sharks, Sea Snakes, Stonefish, Conesnails, Blue Ringed Octopus and Stingrays.
Honestly the Amazon river is terrifying. Besides the species you listed there are SO many more, such as the river dolphin, aropaima (not sure how to spell that) other snakes, and so many more
Nothing in the Amazon river will actually eat you except a caiman if you are very very unlucky that A. It’s big enough and B. It’s the dry season and it’s extremely hungry. I have very safely swam in the Amazon with caiman not bothered by humans
The scariest things about arapaimas are that if one decides to go for you, there’s no going out of the water. The fish will literally JUMP OUT OF THE WATER TO FOLLOW YOU. The fish can literally stay out of water for 24 hours
@@TsukiCove So welcome! Would love 2 see a Video based on Flying Fish Species! They are such an evolutionary miracle that I got one tattooed in March 😅🎣
Aside from weather (undertows being the most dangerous, since not anticipated; you know about potential hurricanes a week or so in advance), how is Florida any different than other warm beaches? Plenty of lionfish offshore (thanks idiot pet owners!), but those are throughout the Gulf and Caribbean now. Even when I was a kid, stingrays were common along the Northern Gulf Coast (ie the Panhandle, where I was raised), but that is also true further west and probably in any warm, sandy shallows. Jellyfish aren't too bad in the Gulf, certainly nothing compared to Australia. Man of War were prevalent washed up on Atlantic beaches (Flagler) the few times I visited, but that is a very visible warning to stay out of the water. Red Tides happen, especially near rivers and urban areas where nutrients outflows happen, but they give warnings on the radio when that happens. Again, any warm water subject to algal blooms (ie nutrient pollution), not just Florida, will get those. Any warm ocean will be at least as bad, really.
@@mdf3530 Believe me it's 10x worse here in Australia. You have Saltwater Crocodiles twice the size of your tiny gators, Extremely Venomous sea snakes only second to taipans which are found in Australia as well! as well as killer Jellyfish just to name a few. No one and I mean no one enters the water off Northern Australia's coast line (6809 miles long). While I see plenty of people do so in Florida?
@@IronOrbs So because things are "more" dangerous there, does that mean there is no dangers in the waters surrounding and found in Florida? You know danger can exist in more than one place, right, and you don't lose any cred where you live when someone else points out dangers that exist where they live. 😂
I think the waters off townsville, QLD, Australia, they have saltwater crocs, irukandji, box jellyfish, bull sharks, great whites, tiger sharks, sea snakes, stonefish, cone snails, need I go on?
Ye pretty much any river system North of Mackay. I'd probably say the Mary and Adelaide Rivers in the NT are worst on earth. I honestly don't think anyone would survive 5 min due to the sheer number of murder lizards.
Sharks aren't all too bad honestly. While only a game and highly exaggerated, Maneater, opened me up to sharks 🤔 I had fun playing it despite the previously mentioned over exaggeration.
My favorite is the "shark attacks are extremely rare" statistics. Yeah of course they are, because they aren't just actively hunting us, but I feel like we don't talk about how your odds are still upped a bunch when you go into a predator's territory. You just need to accept you aren't invulnerable and sometimes it just happens. When I was in Hawaii I knew of stories of people taking tiger shark bites or dying off the coastline while spearfishing. In Alaska your odds of getting attacked by a bear go up considerably because there are fewer people, larger swaths of bushlands and all three kinds of North American bear lives in that state.
Hey Tsuki, love your content, and great job on factual, interesting content - what I do like to see from you is a more cohesive brand identity... maybe think about ditching the yellow and making your text also the same red as your logo (or cover pic) - ...and say "hi to the beautiful dog!"
St. Lucia Estuary is a place that might be a contestant. It's on South-Africa's northeastern shore where lake St. Lucia and the Mfolozi river enter the Indian Ocean. It's home to Nile croccodiles, bull sharks, hippo's, tiger fish and on the shore the hippo's and elephants walk around at dusk and dawn. (The locals joke about having the best behaved hippo's in Africa because, if you give them distance (as in walking on the other side of the street when you meet them) they won't harm you. I've been there when on holiday in 2018 and I've seen all these animals around there. The sharks are especially ferocious because, during the dry season the estuary is closed of by a sandbank and the water is only 1-1,5m deep. There's also a big game park close to it with giraffes (who stay in the park), leopards and many antilope/ungulate species like wildebeest and Cape buffalo. I recall them even saying a few lions roam the park but, I don't know for certain. It's a pretty cool and touristy place to visit with a lot of eagle species too.
If you want to go swimming where sharks are remember these 3 rules, 1, no swimming at dusk or dawn, 2, when the water is foggy or cloudy, 3, do not panic and try to swim away or plush, they just attracts their inner killer.
So long story short, don’t go to Africa lmao. However I do think that Northern Australia deserves a spot. The beaches have white, tiger, and bull sharks, box jelly’s alongside other dangerous types, stonefish, and all kinds of stuff.
Many years ago I spent time in the northern territories of Australia (Darwin) I was stupid enough to swim in the sea on several occasions. Looking back I was lucky to live.
Take a swim in lake Nickargwa and play with the Bull Shark's, Also remote parts of Australia box jelly fish blue ring octopus and salt water Crockadiles.
I had an Aba Aba in a large aquarium. I never thought once about reaching into my tank. I'm not sure why it would be mentioned here. it's a very shy fish and preferred to stay in it's PCV tube house when not feeding. They are completely innocuous to people.
The east coast in FL has the most recorded shark attacks in the world. The Everglades is the only place in the world that has alligators, crocodiles, and sharks all together.
Generally speaking, the green anaconda really wouldn't pose much of a threat seeing that they do not view humans as prey. Just keep your distance, they can be cantankerous and don't like to be disturbed, but the general consensus is that they have no interest in eating you.
7:57 That is not quite correct. Jaguars do go for caimans, but mostly smaller ones like the spectacled caiman. Infact black caimans are to big and even prey on jaguars sometimes.
What about Southern Florida? You got Alligator’s, American Crocodile’s, Sharks, Dangerous invasive species ( Pythons); And Brian Laundrie, before he died.
Yeh north australia is number one, maybe amazon although people swim there wirh anaconda, caïmans, piranha, jaguars and more . Africa too for hippo, crocs. In nile like
So we gonna act like the entire ocean isn't out to kill you in Northern Australia. Believe me as an Australian myself. No one enters the water in the north despite the constant 35-45 degree celcius 100% humidity tropical weather. Crocodiles, Jellyfish, Sharks, Sea Snakes just to name a few.
7:25 Archer: "... And maybe even... Are we in the Orinoco drainage basin?" Cyril: "How should I know?" Archer: "Okay, so maybe Crocodylus intermedius in in play. Not to mention *four* kinds of caiman; including the black caiman, which can grow up to twenty-two feet!" Ray: "Is that why you're on those goddamn cans?" Archer: "Yea! If a big bull croc slithers up on the raft I'm gonna pour a ring of gas around me and set it on fire!" Cyril: "Why...?" Archer: "Cyril, they can't chomp through fire! ... Although I have no reason to think that." Cyril: "Why are you so scared of crocodiles?" Archer: "Gee! I dunno, Cyril! Maybe deep down I'm afraid of *any* apex predator that lived through the KT extinction!" Cyril: "The...?" Archer: "Physically unchanged for a hundred million years because it's the perfect killing machine! A half-ton of cold-blooded fury, with a bite force of twenty thousand newtons! And stomach acid so strong it can dissolve bones and hooves! And now we're surrounded, those snake eyes are watching from the shadows, waiting for the night-"
A good point to make is, even if an animal like a hippo is primarily vegetarian, almost all animals are opportunistic if they are lacking nutrients or proper amount of food to sustain themselves. There are instances of hippos killing and eating part of animals, even horses have been seen eating freshly hatched chickens or deer picking at the corpse of another deer. Or even wild hogs, they’ll steal lambs from farms, and the only part they can’t digest is the hooves
Offtopic but just admiring the work of the person behind this channel, the research. Look at the sources, all sort as it should be. If YT channels (many with millions of followers) would do 20% of so deep research - animals, universe, politics, showbusiness youtube would be quality content place🫡👏👏 anyways idk is it the voice or maybe the accent - narrator sounds as Brian Cox
The way the Ganges is being treated by humans is absolutely absurd! It’s stupid the way they dump toxic waste into the water! And then, go and bathe in that wretched water. Stupidly cared for.
I totally thought Thailand was going to be in this list or the Philippines. With their giant sting rays, crocodiles, etc. There is a ton of threats there.
Can you please do a video on the most dangerous places to swim, that aren't focused on the biological dangers in the future as well? Love this tho. Love all your videos
It doesn't need food to burn to just keep its blood temperature high (we do), just to move and to grow. People who raise fish (also cold blooded) for food often starve them for a week before slaughter, to reduce feed related off-flavors. I have never heard of doing that with warm blooded livestock. People feed corn to opossums to remove the flavor of the garbage they were eating, not starve them.
Just came across. Great video but crocodiles can eat up to 23% of their body weight. Nowhere near their entire mass in one setting. I did enjoy the overall content
Definitely the Ganges in India, Nothing says pollution quite like the river catching fire, or makeshift pipe in varying sizes spewing what I am telling myself was muddy water.
I would say that Australian beaches would far outclass any of these with sharks, crocs, jellies, stonefish, and a host of other creatures lined up to do you in.
But the odd byproduct of having the most venomous 'everything' on the planet is we lead the world in toxicology, as as a side effect of that there is almost 0 deaths that every occur based on aquatic animal. . .
It surprises most people to know that cows and horses kill more people in Australia than everything else combined lol. Kinda anticlimactic I know, but we have some INCREDIBLE antivenoms here :D
Nope. Coldwater is far more dangerous. Also fast currents.
I also came here to express my disappointment that Australia wasn’t mentioned
@@thokim84 ocean rips that take you out to see are also dangerous, since most of Australia's north coast has no swimming signs on pristine beaches I would say at least it's more dangerous then the Nile. jellyfish are probably the most dangerous and common encounters. These jellies are no joke lethal and incredibly painful with limited anitvenom and some species no antevenom. I understand your argument and respect it but throw a thought out there.
@@calebharders3347 can't say over the Nile, hippos kill more people than any other water animal. The highest percentage of animal fatalities in water occur in the Nile. Should have been a list of 6 and include australia. I swan along the easy coast when I was there. Beaches are gorgeous. Apparently there was a salty seen close to the area around cairns (green island) I was swimming a couple days after I was there, or so I was told. I seen sharks but they where small reef ones. Had a keep a keen eye out for the falling bears though.
You forgot Northern Australia. There's so many things in the water that can kill you. Box Jellyfish, Irukanji, Saltwater Crocodiles, Tiger Sharks, Bull Sharks, Sea Snakes, Stonefish, Conesnails, Blue Ringed Octopus and Stingrays.
Death ally
Wait you forgot stonefish
@@justaotter2085 no he didn’t
Had to leave the stingrays in there 😢
@@seagk1343rip that boy Steve
You have the best intro man super calming
haha thanks im glad you like it :)
Very good video, but the speaker speaks, in my opinion, too fast
I love the honesty about sharks and how polluted the Ganges rive
I think "Most intelligent fish" is a great idea.
But it will be biased because there most people don’t care enough to research their intelligence, even though some fish may be extremely smart
Yeah!
Great idea
@@zhang6754 nice profile picture
same
Honestly the Amazon river is terrifying. Besides the species you listed there are SO many more, such as the river dolphin, aropaima (not sure how to spell that) other snakes, and so many more
Nothing in the Amazon river will actually eat you except a caiman if you are very very unlucky that A. It’s big enough and B. It’s the dry season and it’s extremely hungry. I have very safely swam in the Amazon with caiman not bothered by humans
It’s Arapaima
The scariest things about arapaimas are that if one decides to go for you, there’s no going out of the water. The fish will literally JUMP OUT OF THE WATER TO FOLLOW YOU. The fish can literally stay out of water for 24 hours
@@mikomakowski7907 They usually don't bother people and I doubt they'd come for you they aren't a hungry predator looking to get you haha
The river dolphins don't attack humans
The waters of Northern Australia can be dangerous in the summertime due to saltwater crocodiles and box jellyfish
Not to mention tiger sharks and irrukandji
Biggest fish ever caught on rod and reel sounds like a good vid to me
It would just be a list of sharks
@@simongrefstad7410 i mean....
you have a good point
This channel is an Aquamarine Gem
thanks man i appreciate it :)
@@TsukiCove
So welcome!
Would love 2 see a Video based on Flying Fish Species! They are such an evolutionary miracle that I got one tattooed in March 😅🎣
You should make a “ biggest fish of all time”
I've been thinking about doing that video but it's hard to get images that I can use in a video unfortunately
@@TsukiCove i think he was just joking
@@uwuowo4856 it’s no joke
@@boognish. he posted so many biggest fish video already so...how many biggest fish are there
@@uwuowo4856 a humpback whale is big but not dangerous. A lionfish is small but very dangerous.
I love that you find so many new video ideas about fishs
thank you sir, I'm sure i'll run out in a few years
Keep the different content rolling👍🏻👍🏻
Heyyy I see that Arthur Morgan reference! Keep up the great vids!
I really liked this new style of video.
I liked the length and the content of this video.Your content is very interesting,especially the fish videos.
Yes! Your experiment with broadening the subject base is brilliant and successful too.
Tsuki: (puts out a video titled “Most Dangerous Places to Swim”)
Any body of water in Florida: AM I A JOKE TO YOU?
Aside from weather (undertows being the most dangerous, since not anticipated; you know about potential hurricanes a week or so in advance), how is Florida any different than other warm beaches? Plenty of lionfish offshore (thanks idiot pet owners!), but those are throughout the Gulf and Caribbean now. Even when I was a kid, stingrays were common along the Northern Gulf Coast (ie the Panhandle, where I was raised), but that is also true further west and probably in any warm, sandy shallows. Jellyfish aren't too bad in the Gulf, certainly nothing compared to Australia. Man of War were prevalent washed up on Atlantic beaches (Flagler) the few times I visited, but that is a very visible warning to stay out of the water. Red Tides happen, especially near rivers and urban areas where nutrients outflows happen, but they give warnings on the radio when that happens. Again, any warm water subject to algal blooms (ie nutrient pollution), not just Florida, will get those. Any warm ocean will be at least as bad, really.
@@Erewhon2024 Alligators, pythons and brain eating amoebae
@@mdf3530 Believe me it's 10x worse here in Australia. You have Saltwater Crocodiles twice the size of your tiny gators, Extremely Venomous sea snakes only second to taipans which are found in Australia as well! as well as killer Jellyfish just to name a few. No one and I mean no one enters the water off Northern Australia's coast line (6809 miles long). While I see plenty of people do so in Florida?
@@IronOrbs So because things are "more" dangerous there, does that mean there is no dangers in the waters surrounding and found in Florida? You know danger can exist in more than one place, right, and you don't lose any cred where you live when someone else points out dangers that exist where they live. 😂
@@vanhattfield8292 I said the danger in Australia was worse than Florida never said Florida had nothing. 💀 putting words in my mouth
Here in Brazil, in Recife city since 1992 there was 68 shark attacks with more than half ending in death, so it could make the list
Really appreciate the conversions bud.
I think the waters off townsville, QLD, Australia, they have saltwater crocs, irukandji, box jellyfish, bull sharks, great whites, tiger sharks, sea snakes, stonefish, cone snails, need I go on?
Ye pretty much any river system North of Mackay. I'd probably say the Mary and Adelaide Rivers in the NT are worst on earth. I honestly don't think anyone would survive 5 min due to the sheer number of murder lizards.
Love your videos, coming from the home of the boiling late Dominica 🇩🇲
Your voice is soothing. Good narrating.
thank you I appreciate it :)
Sharks aren't all too bad honestly. While only a game and highly exaggerated, Maneater, opened me up to sharks 🤔 I had fun playing it despite the previously mentioned over exaggeration.
th-cam.com/video/F--HdzvmZ7A/w-d-xo.htmlsi=TzFzVbNegceHkoSj
You should consider doing a list relating to crabs. My personal favorite is the Puget Sound King Crab
The pathogens alone make the Ganges the worst, from a medical perspective. It's revolting.
Butt saaarrr izzz our hoolleeee rivaaarr saaaarrrr💩💩💩💩
It's hideous how a SACRED RIVER has so much raw sewage pumped into it
@@daniellewillis2767. Not only that but Dead bodies thrown into it means bacteria and other nasty stuff.
i love the little arthur morgan cameo in there!
Make a list of fish that are toxic or not edible for 1 reason or another.
I like your mention of food being snapped up it’s pretty funny 😄
Love the content btw
thanks i appreciate it :)
My favorite is the "shark attacks are extremely rare" statistics. Yeah of course they are, because they aren't just actively hunting us, but I feel like we don't talk about how your odds are still upped a bunch when you go into a predator's territory. You just need to accept you aren't invulnerable and sometimes it just happens. When I was in Hawaii I knew of stories of people taking tiger shark bites or dying off the coastline while spearfishing. In Alaska your odds of getting attacked by a bear go up considerably because there are fewer people, larger swaths of bushlands and all three kinds of North American bear lives in that state.
Hey Tsuki, love your content, and great job on factual, interesting content - what I do like to see from you is a more cohesive brand identity... maybe think about ditching the yellow and making your text also the same red as your logo (or cover pic) - ...and say "hi to the beautiful dog!"
Loved the video,
Do a top ten picky eater fish.
St. Lucia Estuary is a place that might be a contestant. It's on South-Africa's northeastern shore where lake St. Lucia and the Mfolozi river enter the Indian Ocean. It's home to Nile croccodiles, bull sharks, hippo's, tiger fish and on the shore the hippo's and elephants walk around at dusk and dawn. (The locals joke about having the best behaved hippo's in Africa because, if you give them distance (as in walking on the other side of the street when you meet them) they won't harm you. I've been there when on holiday in 2018 and I've seen all these animals around there. The sharks are especially ferocious because, during the dry season the estuary is closed of by a sandbank and the water is only 1-1,5m deep. There's also a big game park close to it with giraffes (who stay in the park), leopards and many antilope/ungulate species like wildebeest and Cape buffalo. I recall them even saying a few lions roam the park but, I don't know for certain. It's a pretty cool and touristy place to visit with a lot of eagle species too.
Love your happy German Sheppard !!!
One thing I noticed with the Ganges too is many, MANY snakes that swim and hide on the river
If you want to go swimming where sharks are remember these 3 rules, 1, no swimming at dusk or dawn, 2, when the water is foggy or cloudy, 3, do not panic and try to swim away or plush, they just attracts their inner killer.
As from the Amazon a very dangerous mammal killer, the pink river dolphins, they’ve been known to knock fishermen out of their boat and drown them
So long story short, don’t go to Africa lmao.
However I do think that Northern Australia deserves a spot. The beaches have white, tiger, and bull sharks, box jelly’s alongside other dangerous types, stonefish, and all kinds of stuff.
Many years ago I spent time in the northern territories of Australia (Darwin) I was stupid enough to swim in the sea on several occasions. Looking back I was lucky to live.
Next episode: Australia has the nicest beaches in the world, but this is why you should never enter the water :D
Take a swim in lake Nickargwa and play with the Bull Shark's, Also remote parts of Australia box jelly fish blue ring octopus and salt water Crockadiles.
This video was great
Arnie is so adorable hope he/she is doing well and hope you are too Tsuki
there's also the canadian house hippo
I had an Aba Aba in a large aquarium. I never thought once about reaching into my tank. I'm not sure why it would be mentioned here. it's a very shy fish and preferred to stay in it's PCV tube house when not feeding. They are completely innocuous to people.
Waiting for a mad lad willing to swim the whole nile river for the Guinness world record.
I think, some water in Florida should be on the list. Like in the Everglades. All the creepy stuff that lives there…
The east coast in FL has the most recorded shark attacks in the world. The Everglades is the only place in the world that has alligators, crocodiles, and sharks all together.
I was thinking about the Bramaputra River which flows into the ganges and bull sharks swim upstream and attack humans relatively often
Generally speaking, the green anaconda really wouldn't pose much of a threat seeing that they do not view humans as prey. Just keep your distance, they can be cantankerous and don't like to be disturbed, but the general consensus is that they have no interest in eating you.
Hey can we get another invasive fish ep i like those a lot
7:57 That is not quite correct. Jaguars do go for caimans, but mostly smaller ones like the spectacled caiman. Infact black caimans are to big and even prey on jaguars sometimes.
You forgot a tank at sea world 😂
You are one epic TH-camr
Any videos on the species of North American bass would love one of those videos !! How I can support youu in my next budget!! #daveramsey
I'll add it to the list :)
I am really glad u immediately cleared up that sharks should not be villanized.
I’ve always wanted to fish for great whites from a float tube at the Farallon Islands. Maybe throw a tournament.
Yesssss
What about Southern Florida? You got Alligator’s, American Crocodile’s, Sharks, Dangerous invasive species ( Pythons); And Brian Laundrie, before he died.
If you're an American, Cape Cod is actually one of a few global shark hotspots.
Isn't Chesapeake Bay a shark breeding ground?
My freind was eaten there cape cod eaten by a shark a bull shark to be exact
Bolton Strid, Corryvrekan, Moskstraumen, Saltstraumen, The Inga Rapids
Yeh north australia is number one, maybe amazon although people swim there wirh anaconda, caïmans, piranha, jaguars and more . Africa too for hippo, crocs. In nile like
I didn't know the tiger fish also existed in the nile.
So we gonna act like the entire ocean isn't out to kill you in Northern Australia. Believe me as an Australian myself. No one enters the water in the north despite the constant 35-45 degree celcius 100% humidity tropical weather. Crocodiles, Jellyfish, Sharks, Sea Snakes just to name a few.
7:25
Archer: "... And maybe even... Are we in the Orinoco drainage basin?"
Cyril: "How should I know?"
Archer: "Okay, so maybe Crocodylus intermedius in in play. Not to mention *four* kinds of caiman; including the black caiman, which can grow up to twenty-two feet!"
Ray: "Is that why you're on those goddamn cans?"
Archer: "Yea! If a big bull croc slithers up on the raft I'm gonna pour a ring of gas around me and set it on fire!"
Cyril: "Why...?"
Archer: "Cyril, they can't chomp through fire! ... Although I have no reason to think that."
Cyril: "Why are you so scared of crocodiles?"
Archer: "Gee! I dunno, Cyril! Maybe deep down I'm afraid of *any* apex predator that lived through the KT extinction!"
Cyril: "The...?"
Archer: "Physically unchanged for a hundred million years because it's the perfect killing machine! A half-ton of cold-blooded fury, with a bite force of twenty thousand newtons! And stomach acid so strong it can dissolve bones and hooves! And now we're surrounded, those snake eyes are watching from the shadows, waiting for the night-"
Wanna swim in safe and beautiful place to swim visit the Maldives
good job tsuki
thanks man i appreciate it :)
A good point to make is, even if an animal like a hippo is primarily vegetarian, almost all animals are opportunistic if they are lacking nutrients or proper amount of food to sustain themselves. There are instances of hippos killing and eating part of animals, even horses have been seen eating freshly hatched chickens or deer picking at the corpse of another deer. Or even wild hogs, they’ll steal lambs from farms, and the only part they can’t digest is the hooves
What about the Greenland shark for the Arctic
Video idea: the river/lake with the most fish in
Offtopic but just admiring the work of the person behind this channel, the research. Look at the sources, all sort as it should be. If YT channels (many with millions of followers) would do 20% of so deep research - animals, universe, politics, showbusiness youtube would be quality content place🫡👏👏 anyways idk is it the voice or maybe the accent - narrator sounds as Brian Cox
You also have to watch for various jellyfish.
Im pretty sure their is no debate about the amazon being the largest river, especially sense it has almost 74 times more discharge than the nile
That makes since.
I'm very surprised that Australia wasn't mentioned!
The way the Ganges is being treated by humans is absolutely absurd! It’s stupid the way they dump toxic waste into the water! And then, go and bathe in that wretched water. Stupidly cared for.
You should make top most beautiful Snakehead!
I totally thought Thailand was going to be in this list or the Philippines. With their giant sting rays, crocodiles, etc. There is a ton of threats there.
I live in Australia but I think that Amazon river is terrifying
Nile croc with 5000 lbs bite force
At-15 with 0 lbs of bite force: go brrr
Can you please do a video on the most dangerous places to swim, that aren't focused on the biological dangers in the future as well? Love this tho. Love all your videos
I'd imagine that would be a pretty boring list.
Fast currents, pollution, cold, too acidic or just downright poisonous.
Nice
Too good
Ectothermic means that a crocodile gets its heat from outside sources. NOT that it can go long periods without eating.
It doesn't need food to burn to just keep its blood temperature high (we do), just to move and to grow. People who raise fish (also cold blooded) for food often starve them for a week before slaughter, to reduce feed related off-flavors. I have never heard of doing that with warm blooded livestock. People feed corn to opossums to remove the flavor of the garbage they were eating, not starve them.
The Everglades deserve a runner-up mention in this video
I know this is cheating, but technically speaking the deadliest would be the Chernobyl river, as it will kill you 100% via radiation poisoning.
could have mentioned the Greenland shark or possibly the salmon shark in the Arctic waters
Don’t be scared, don’t be shy, come on in the water’s fine
Nilehorse
Another idea for a video is.. animals that look like (or were) around with the Dinosaurs.
What about most popular freshwater game fish
I think the Florida everglades can prove to be pretty dangerous
very true there's even invasive Nile crocs in there too
@@TsukiCove And burmese pythons
@@TsukiCove And Alligators Even Though They Are Native
@@Handlesareawful2008 And Florida man
@@ivanhuang6076 And Skunk Ape As Well As Invasive Monitor Lizards And Green Anacondas
Do a video that includes the califorina yellow tail please.
-5 smallest fish
-5 desert/extreme environment fish
-5 most endangered fish
The first and third were already done.
The Nile crocodile can grow up to 20 feet.. but the majority only have 4
very funny dude
FUELING MY FEAR OF THE SEA THX
Hi Tsuki
Just want to check are you sure there are Goliath Tiger fish in the Nile.
As fare as I understand it only lives in the Congo Basin.
From what I've read they are in the Nile but there isn't a huge population
Dang. Guess I gotta cancel my Artic swim trip.
I would like to see some of the strongest fish in fresh water
I wouldn’t swim in the Ganges even if it didn’t have any dangerous animals, shits disgusting
Same lol idek how those animals r still alive
The Congo should definitely be on the list imo
Just came across. Great video but crocodiles can eat up to 23% of their body weight. Nowhere near their entire mass in one setting. I did enjoy the overall content
Definitely the Ganges in India, Nothing says pollution quite like the river catching fire, or makeshift pipe in varying sizes spewing what I am telling myself was muddy water.
One of the most dangerous predators in the amazon wasn't mentioned, and that is the giant river otter.