A crazy thing, is that pigs left to go feral, almost immediately revert back into the appearance of boars. It's like they have an auto-switch into boar-mode
@@beastmaster0934 but pigs go ful transformation , they start growing fur and tusks , if there are a domesticated animal that would be just ok if we desapear is the pig
@Colin.71 everywhere but it doesn't happen as fast as boars they still do insane damage to the enviroment that foes unnoticed because they look like house pets many islands that have small fauna have had their ecosystem turned upside down as cats have become the apex predators on a lot of islands from off the the coast of antartica to Hawaii but even in mainland continents they threaten several bird species' extinction and are believed to have already causes several's demise
@@ewaszot1243 Well since the query regards 'closer to' without further qualification, that is not hippos or whales either. Those 2 are only the closest among living groups. There are many extinct taxa that are closer.
Yeah... Extreme case of judging by the cover. We know a little bit less than nothing about their behaviour yet you already think they will "randomly kill" you. Simply pathetic coward.
Most modern studies show Suina (Pigs and Peccaries) to be the sister group to a clade containing whippomorphs ( whales, hippos Entelodonts and kin) and ruminants. Within the artiodactyla, camels and kin (tylopods) are the out-group, not pigs.
Nope, even-toed hoofed mammals are divided into two suborders based on both dietary grounds and the structure of their upper jaws The two suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Selenodontia and Bunodontia, the former includes all species with an exclusively herbivorous lifestyle and the possession of dental pads rather than upper incisors in the front of their upper jaws while the latter has all species with a primarily omnivorous lifestyle and the possession of upper incisors in the front of their upper jaws The suborder Selenodontia has four major groups, which are the infraorders Tragulina, Vampyrodonta, Pecora, and Tylopoda while the suborder Bunodontia has two major groups, which are the infraorders Suina and Ancodonta For the Selenodontia suborder, chevrotains (family Tragulidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Traguloidea and the infraorder Tragulina, the yoyongs (genus Hydropotes) and kasturis (genus Moschus) are the only extant genera of the families Hydropotidae and Moschidae respectively, both these monotypic families constitute the superfamily Moschoidea, which is the only extant taxon of the infraorder Vampyrodonta, the Pecora infraorder is split into three superfamilies, which are Giraffoidea for the families Giraffidae (Giraffes and Okapi) and Antilocapridae (Pronghorn and Fossil Relatives), Cervoidea for only the deer (family Cervidae), and Bovoidea for only the bovids (family Bovidae), and the camels (family Camelidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Cameloidea and the infraorder Tylopoda For the Bunodontia suborder, the Suina infraorder is split into two superfamilies, which are Tayassuoidea for only the peccaries (family Tayassuidae) and Suoidea for only the pigs (family Suidae) and the hippos (family Hippopotamidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Hippopotamoidea and the infraorder Ancodonta
@indyreno2933 dude... you just made up the names Bunodontia and Selenodontia, they literally don't even show up in a Google search. Regardless of the names, the classification you're citing is an obsolete one. It's clear from the fact that you didn't even include whales anywhere in it.
@chingizzhylkybayev8575, nope, whales do not belong to Artiodactyla or anywhere else under Ungulata, whales (order Cetacea) are the sole extant order of both the mirorder Pancetacea and the grandorder Cetaceomorpha, Ungulata and Cetaceomorpha are sister taxa, both constitute Cetungulata Even-toed hoofed mammals (order Artiodactyla) are divided into only two suborders (Selenodontia and Bunodontia) based on both dietary grounds and the structure of their upper jaws, just like carnivorans (order Carnivora) are divided into only two suborders (Caniformia and Feliformia) based on the structure of the auditory bullae and rodents (order Rodentia) are divided into only three suborders (Caviomorpha, Sciuromorpha, and Myomorpha) based mainly on the structure of the jaw musculature.
@@indyreno2933 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@@chingizzhylkybayev8575 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
I really liked the Orangutan in the "these guys are kinda generic" section it's amusing how a face so devoid of emotion can convey so much. And to your point... yeah a pig's a pig usually 💀
Pigs are high on my list of animals that would thrive during the cretaceous period. Small enough to avoid the big boys, mean enough to not be worth it for the small ones and a super sense of smell and a taste for eggs.
Pretty fascinating video. Maybe you can do a video on cows, possibly one of the most important animals ever domesticated by people. Most things i find start at the Aurochs but where did the aurochs come from?
In case you should know, aurochsen are defined by the Bos genus as a whole, therefore Bos acutifrons and Bos buaiensis are aurochsen and the modern aurochs is now two separate species: the Paleotropical Aurochs (Bos namadicus (cladistically including the Zebu (Bos namadicus indicus) and Sanga (Bos namadicus africanus))) and the Palearctic Aurochs (Bos primigenius (cladistically including the Taurine Ox (Bos primigenius taurus) and Mandarin Ox (Bos primigenius mandarinus))) just like hartebeests are now two separate species: the Northern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus) and the Southern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus caama).
@@indyreno2933 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
I love how pigs took the generalist feeder omnivorous niche that the first ungulates had and just, never moved away from it. Sure they did get better over time with hooves for better traversal of terrain, nose pads to help them root and tusks to help in defense but they just kept the same lifestyle they always had for 50ish million years.
@MatthewTheWanderer Actually,, many people keep pigs as pets these days. They can be quite cute, especially smaller breeds. But my interest is mainly gastronomical 🥩🥓🍖 🙃
@@melanimatejak6821 I've known about pigs as pets for decades. I don't think it's any more common now than it used to be. I'd love to have one as a pet, but they are difficult and demanding to care for, and are completely out of the question if you live in an apartment like I do.
@@animaloriginsWalaikum assalam Bro this is awesome I’ve been watching your videos for a very long time now and I never expected you to be another Musulman
If I could suggest a video subject, I would be interested about a video like this but about humans. Describing humans like other animals such as how the teeth are the way they are etc. Maybe aprils fool could be decent publishing day if one would need to be picked.
I am a Muslem and i don't eat pork meat. BUT i love Boar meat. Specially those in warmer countries like Iran taste extremely different from the pork meat you buy from supermarket in the Europe! Believe me if you eat wild pig meat you will never get it at grocery store! Now i live in the europe and i miss that original taste 😔
Tetraconodontidae are NOT generic pig relatives. They contain some of the largest known pigs, and there's evidence to suggest a higher level of carnivory in their diets. The true issue is there isn't much info on many ancient pig families🥲
There is plenty of domestic pig in China, even some Muslim in local know some well clean pig are good for health purposes and took some as benefits. Although first domesticated pig is origin in Middle East but failed due to dry desert, many pig die and poor hygiene. So most we know right now is other part of the world not dry land, that's what make domesticated pig successful.
Is the real reason why pigs are haram or non-kosher in various Abrahamic religions because they are omnivorous? There seems to be a general dislike for eating carnivorous or omnivorous animals.
This video is very incorrect, there are now twenty-five extant pig species under eight genera and a single extant subfamily that is further split into three tribes, based on here, the Sus genus is polyphyletic, the only eight extant pig species belonging to the Sus genus are now the Wild Boar (Sus scrofa (cladistically including the Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domesticus))), the Mediterranean Hog (Sus meridionalis), the Barbary Pig (Sus algirus), the Black-Footed Hog (Sus nigripes), the Crested Hog (Sus cristatus), the Banded Pig (Sus vittatus), the Formosan Hog (Sus taivanus), and the Japanese Pig (Sus leucomystax), while the pygmy hog, two species of bearded pig, and five species of warty pig are all removed from the Sus genus, the pygmy hog now belongs to the monotypic genus Porcula with its scientific name now being Porcula salvania, the two species of bearded pig being the sunda bearded pig and palawan bearded pig both now belong to the genus Chaetorhinus with their scientific names now being Chaetorhinus barbatus and Chaetorhinus ahoenobarbus respectively, and the five species of warty pig being the javan warty pig, sulawesi warty pig, visayan warty pig, east philippine warty pig, and mindoro warty pig all now belong to the genus Verrucophorus with their scientific names now being Verrucophorus verrucosus, Verrucophorus celebensis, Verrucophorus cebifrons, Verrucophorus philippensis, and Verrucophorus oliveri respectively While the pygmy hog (Porcula salvania) of the monotypic genus Porcula is truly a sister taxon to the Sus genus, the bearded pigs (genus Chaetorhinus) and warty pigs (genus Verrucophorus) are not closely related to the Sus genus at all, the former is more closely related to the babirusas (genus Babyrousa) while the latter is more closely related to the forest hogs (genus Hylochoerus), river pigs (genus Potamochoerus), and warthogs (genus Phacochoerus) Within the subfamily Suinae, which is the only surviving pig subfamily, the tribe Suini that contains the Pygmy Hog (Porcula salvania), Wild Boar (Sus scrofa (cladistically including the Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domesticus))), Mediterranean Hog (Sus meridionalis), Barbary Pig (Sus algirus), Black-Footed Hog (Sus nigripes), Crested Hog (Sus cristatus), Banded Pig (Sus vittatus), Formosan Hog (Sus taivanus), and Japanese Pig (Sus leucomystax) is the most basal, while the two most derived tribes are Babyrousini that contains the Sunda Bearded Pig (Chaetorhinus barbatus), Palawan Bearded Pig (Chaetorhinus ahoenobarbus), Buru Babirusa (Babyrousa babyrussa), Bola Batu Babirusa (Babyrousa bolabatuensis), North Sulawesi Babirusa (Babyrousa celebensis), and Togian Babirusa (Babyrousa togeanensis) and Phacochoerini that contains the Javan Warty Pig (Verrucophorus verrucosus), Sulawesi Warty Pig (Verrucophorus celebensis), Visayan Warty Pig (Verrucophorus cebifrons), East Philippine Warty Pig (Verrucophorus philippensis), Mindoro Warty Pig (Verrucophorus oliveri), Giant Forest Hog (Hylochoerus mlokosiewiczi), Bushpig (Potamochoerus larvatus), Red River Pig (Potamochoerus porcus), Plains Warthog (Phacochoerus africanus), and Desert Warthog (Phacochoerus aethiopicus)
Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
Thank God for evolution which gave humanity Sus Bacon and Ham which isn't at all suss! And eggs from Jungle Fowl which aren't foul at all! A more perfect combination cannot be found.
And while you can train a dog or cat to behave inside an apartment in a large apartment building a pig will do as it wants. Eat the furniture, tear up the floor, scratch their hide on the furniture....
I feel sorry for people who do not eat pork. You’ve never had bacon. You’ve never had a rack of fall off the bone St. Louis style ribs slathered in delicious barbecue sauce. You never had a barbecue pulled pork sandwich. You’ve never had a taco Al Pastor. Never had pernil … Very sad.
In case everyone should know, pigs are descended from carnivorous hoofed mammals, therefore, entelodonts are very much closely related to pigs, peccaries, and hippos, pigs, peccaries, and hippos along with their extinct relatives such as sanitheres, doliochoerids, anthracotheres, entelodonts, and andrewsarchids belong to one of the only two valid suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals (order Artiodactyla), with the suborder that the pigs, sanitheres, peccaries, doliochoerids, hippos, anthracotheres, entelodonts, and andrewsarchids constitute being named Bunodontia, members of the Bunodontia suborder are mainly omnivorous and officially have upper incisors, unlike the more diverse suborder Selenodontia, where its members are all exclusively herbivorous and possess dental pads on their upper jaws instead of upper incisors, andrewsarchids and entelodonts are both considered basal offshoots of the Bunodontia suborder, whereas the pigs, sanitheres, peccaries, and doliochoerids constitute the infraorder Suina and the hippos and anthracotheres both in the infraorder Ancodonta, the Suina infraorder is further split into the superfamilies Tayassuoidea for both the extant peccaries and extinct doliochoerids and Suoidea for both the extant pigs and extinct sanitheres.
How have advances in genetic and morphological research refined our understanding of the relationships between basal offshoots of Bunodontia, such as entelodonts and andrewsarchids, and their modern descendants like pigs and peccaries?
Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@Dr.Ian-Plect, even-toed hoofed mammals are divided into eleven extant families under nine superfamilies, six infraorders, and two suborders The eleven extant families of even-toed hoofed mammals are Tragulidae (Chevrotains), Hydropotidae (Yoyongs and Fossil Relatives), Moschidae (Kasturis and Fossil Relatives), Giraffidae (Giraffes and Okapi), Antilocapridae (Pronghorn and Fossil Relatives), Cervidae (Deer), Bovidae (Bovids), Camelidae (Camels), Tayassuidae (Peccaries), Suidae (Pigs), and Hippopotamidae (Hippos) The nine extant superfamilies of even-toed hoofed mammals are Traguloidea (Chevrotains and Fossil Relatives (contains Tragulidae)), Moschoidea (Kasturis and Yoyongs (contains Hydropotidae and Moschidae)), Giraffoidea (Giraffes, Okapi, and Pronghorn (contains Giraffidae and Antilocapridae)), Cervoidea (Deer and Fossil Relatives (contains Cervidae)), Bovoidea (Bovids and Fossil Relatives (contains Bovidae)), Cameloidea (Camels and Fossil Relatives (contains Camelidae)), Tayassuoidea (Peccaries and Fossil Relatives (contains Tayassuidae)), Suoidea (Pigs and Fossil Relatives (contains Suidae)), and Hippopotamoidea (Hippos and Fossil Relatives (contains Hippopotamidae)) The six infraorders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Tragulina (Chevrotains and Fossil Allies (contains Tragulidae)), Vampyrodonta (Kasturis, Yoyongs, and Fossil Relatives (contains Hydropotidae and Moschidae)), Pecora (Bovids, Deer, Giraffes, Okapi, and Pronghorn (contains Giraffidae, Antilocapridae, Cervidae, and Bovidae)) And the two suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Selenodontia (contains Tragulidae, Hydropotidae, Moschidae, Giraffidae, Antilocapridae, Cervidae, Bovidae, and Camelidae) and Bunodontia (contains Tayassuidae, Suidae, and Hippopotamidae)
@@AncientWildTVbunodontian isn't even a real clade many of the animals he listed were rather wippomorphs(whales hippos and allies) or suinans(pigs and allies)
A crazy thing, is that pigs left to go feral, almost immediately revert back into the appearance of boars. It's like they have an auto-switch into boar-mode
Cats do something similar, reverting to a form similar to the African wildcat, their direct ancestor.
@@beastmaster0934even in North America?
@@beastmaster0934 but pigs go ful transformation , they start growing fur and tusks , if there are a domesticated animal that would be just ok if we desapear is the pig
@Colin.71 everywhere but it doesn't happen as fast as boars they still do insane damage to the enviroment that foes unnoticed because they look like house pets many islands that have small fauna have had their ecosystem turned upside down as cats have become the apex predators on a lot of islands from off the the coast of antartica to Hawaii but even in mainland continents they threaten several bird species' extinction and are believed to have already causes several's demise
@@bowerpower2160 yeah I know about boars in America. I was just wondering about the wildcat claim.
I think Hell Pigs are the scariest extinct mammal. They aren't the biggest, but I give them the "most likely to randomly kill you" award.
They aren’t pigs they are closer to horses
@@michaelblevins1651 nope to whales and hippos
@@ewaszot1243 Well since the query regards 'closer to' without further qualification, that is not hippos or whales either. Those 2 are only the closest among living groups. There are many extinct taxa that are closer.
Yeah... Extreme case of judging by the cover. We know a little bit less than nothing about their behaviour yet you already think they will "randomly kill" you. Simply pathetic coward.
@@ewaszot1243hippos? Makes sense
ok the last thing i expected to hear in a vid like this was touhou music, a surprise to be sure but a welcome one
He did it a few times allready
Recognize the names?
After seeing those peckeries fight I can see how they're related to hippos. Must be a family thing.
Molecular analysis would prove otherwise about hippos being related to pigs
Evolution of ducks and other waterfowl next?
yeah more BS
He finally remembered his TH-cam password
Most modern studies show Suina (Pigs and Peccaries) to be the sister group to a clade containing whippomorphs ( whales, hippos Entelodonts and kin) and ruminants. Within the artiodactyla, camels and kin (tylopods) are the out-group, not pigs.
Nope, even-toed hoofed mammals are divided into two suborders based on both dietary grounds and the structure of their upper jaws
The two suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Selenodontia and Bunodontia, the former includes all species with an exclusively herbivorous lifestyle and the possession of dental pads rather than upper incisors in the front of their upper jaws while the latter has all species with a primarily omnivorous lifestyle and the possession of upper incisors in the front of their upper jaws
The suborder Selenodontia has four major groups, which are the infraorders Tragulina, Vampyrodonta, Pecora, and Tylopoda while the suborder Bunodontia has two major groups, which are the infraorders Suina and Ancodonta
For the Selenodontia suborder, chevrotains (family Tragulidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Traguloidea and the infraorder Tragulina, the yoyongs (genus Hydropotes) and kasturis (genus Moschus) are the only extant genera of the families Hydropotidae and Moschidae respectively, both these monotypic families constitute the superfamily Moschoidea, which is the only extant taxon of the infraorder Vampyrodonta, the Pecora infraorder is split into three superfamilies, which are Giraffoidea for the families Giraffidae (Giraffes and Okapi) and Antilocapridae (Pronghorn and Fossil Relatives), Cervoidea for only the deer (family Cervidae), and Bovoidea for only the bovids (family Bovidae), and the camels (family Camelidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Cameloidea and the infraorder Tylopoda
For the Bunodontia suborder, the Suina infraorder is split into two superfamilies, which are Tayassuoidea for only the peccaries (family Tayassuidae) and Suoidea for only the pigs (family Suidae) and the hippos (family Hippopotamidae) are the only extant family of both the superfamily Hippopotamoidea and the infraorder Ancodonta
@indyreno2933 dude... you just made up the names Bunodontia and Selenodontia, they literally don't even show up in a Google search.
Regardless of the names, the classification you're citing is an obsolete one. It's clear from the fact that you didn't even include whales anywhere in it.
@chingizzhylkybayev8575, nope, whales do not belong to Artiodactyla or anywhere else under Ungulata, whales (order Cetacea) are the sole extant order of both the mirorder Pancetacea and the grandorder Cetaceomorpha, Ungulata and Cetaceomorpha are sister taxa, both constitute Cetungulata
Even-toed hoofed mammals (order Artiodactyla) are divided into only two suborders (Selenodontia and Bunodontia) based on both dietary grounds and the structure of their upper jaws, just like carnivorans (order Carnivora) are divided into only two suborders (Caniformia and Feliformia) based on the structure of the auditory bullae and rodents (order Rodentia) are divided into only three suborders (Caviomorpha, Sciuromorpha, and Myomorpha) based mainly on the structure of the jaw musculature.
@@indyreno2933 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@@chingizzhylkybayev8575 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
I really liked the Orangutan in the "these guys are kinda generic" section it's amusing how a face so devoid of emotion can convey so much. And to your point... yeah a pig's a pig usually 💀
I bet there's bacon in Antarctica.
Thanks for an excellent video.
7:54 A modern Genesis of pig escaping his wild counterpart.
Please keep these videos up man. I miss back when you were uploading more often, your voice and choice editing are perfect. Don't stop the beat
Pigs are high on my list of animals that would thrive during the cretaceous period. Small enough to avoid the big boys, mean enough to not be worth it for the small ones and a super sense of smell and a taste for eggs.
6:28 when the basal artiodactyl is sus
Pigs are an incredible animal group! Absolutely incredible!!
Pigs being so successful was really surprising! They seem so unassuming...
high intelligence, highly adaptable, quick growing and rapid breeding.
@@bskec2177
And of course, an omnivorous diet.
Put all those traits together, and you get an animal that can survive and thrive just about anywhere.
Have you seen the babies!? So cute!
The pigs came a long way from the scariest creatures in the world from the world's friendliest farm animals to humans.
I was waiting for this episode! Pigs are so interesting creatures!
Id say im here for the bacon but some of these beasts would say the same, sending me running and squealing back home.
Oh this was perfect timing! My favorite pig is from the Black cauldron. Her name is Hen wen and she can tell the future!! She's an oracle.
Nice video, quite educational and entertaining. I love the use of the Knuckles Chaotix music at the beginning.
I’m always excited when I see you posted!
I have a suggestion for the next evolution video, The Evolution of the Deer!
1:26 Missed opportunity to call them Hell Hogs
Door Into Summer and pigs is a combo I wasn't expecting
Pretty fascinating video. Maybe you can do a video on cows, possibly one of the most important animals ever domesticated by people. Most things i find start at the Aurochs but where did the aurochs come from?
In case you should know, aurochsen are defined by the Bos genus as a whole, therefore Bos acutifrons and Bos buaiensis are aurochsen and the modern aurochs is now two separate species: the Paleotropical Aurochs (Bos namadicus (cladistically including the Zebu (Bos namadicus indicus) and Sanga (Bos namadicus africanus))) and the Palearctic Aurochs (Bos primigenius (cladistically including the Taurine Ox (Bos primigenius taurus) and Mandarin Ox (Bos primigenius mandarinus))) just like hartebeests are now two separate species: the Northern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus) and the Southern Hartebeest (Alcelaphus caama).
@@indyreno2933 Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@Dr.Ian-Plect, there are now currently 166 extant species of bovids under 72 genera, 10 subfamilies, and 3 major clades.
@Dr.Ian-Plect, there are now 166 extant species, 72 extant genera, 10 extant subfamilies, and 3 major clades of bovids
The 72 extant genera of bovids are Arabitragus (Arabian Tahr (contains 1 species)), Nilgiritragus (Nilgiri Tahr (contains 1 species)), Hemitragus (Himalayan Tahr (contains 1 species)), Rupicapra (Chamoises (contains 4 species)), Capricornis (Serows (contains 8 species)), Naemorhedus (Gorals (contains 4 species)), Oreamnos (Mountain Goat (contains 1 species)), Budorcas (Takin (contains 1 species)), Ovibos (Muskox (contains 1 species)), Hippotragus (Horse Antelope (contains 2 species)), Addax (Addaxes (contains 2 species)), Oryx (Oryxes (contains 4 species)), Beatragus (Hirola (contains 1 species)), Damaliscus (White-Fronted Damalisks (contains 2 species)), Elaphops (Black-Fronted Damalisks (contains 4 species)), Alcelaphus (Hartebeests (contains 2 species)), Connochaetes (Wildebeests (contains 3 species)), Pelea (Rhebok (contains 1 species)), Kobus (Waterbuck (contains 1 species)), Adenota (Kob and Puku (contains 2 species)), Onotragus (Lechwes (contains 4 species)), Redunca (Reedbucks (contains 3 species)), Tetracerus (Chousingha (contains 1 species)), Boselaphus (Nilgai (contains 1 species)), Tragelaphus (Bushbucks (contains 2 species)), Bongo (Bongo and Sitatunga (contains 2 species)), Nyala (Nyalas (contains 2 species)), Strepsiceros (Kudus (contains 2 species)), Taurotragus (Elands (contains 2 species)), Pseudoryx (Saola (contains 1 species)), Anoa (Anoas (contains 2 species)), Bubalus (Asiatic Water Buffalo and Mindoro Dwarf Buffalo (contains 2 species)), Syncerus (Modern African Buffalo (contains 2 species)), Bibos (Gaur, Banteng, and Kouprey (contains 3 species)), Bos (Aurochsen (contains 2 species)), Poephagus (Yak (contains 1 species)), Bison (Bison (contains 2 species)), Ammotragus (Aoudads (contains 2 species)), Pseudois (Bharals (contains 4 species)), Ovis (Twsiter-Horned Sheep (contains 6 species)), Brachyceros (Turs (contains 2 species)), Aegoceros (Markhor (contains 1 species)), Capra (Ibexes (contains 6 species)), Procapra (Palearctic Gazelles (contains 3 species)), Trachelocele (Groitered, Arabian Sand, Cuvier's, and Rhim Gazelles (contains 4 species)), Gazella (Mountain, Arabian, and Indian Gazelles (contains 3 species)), Tarandrovis (Dorcas and Speke's Gazelles (contains 2 species)), Eudorcas (Red-Fronted, Mongalla, Thomson's, Red, and Eritrean Gazelles (contains 5 species)), Nanger (Dama, Grant's, and Soemmerring's Gazelles (contains 3 species)), Ammodorcas (Dibatags (contains 2 species)), Litocranius (Gerenuks (contains 2 species)), Pantholops (Tibetan Antelope (contains 1 species)), Saiga (Saiga Antelope (contains 1 species)), Antilope (Blackbuck (contains 1 species)), Antidorcas (Springbok (contains 1 species)), Aepyceros (Impala (contains 1 species)), Sylvicapra (Grey Duiker (contains 1 species)), Philantomba (Maxwell's and Walter's Duikers (contains 2 species)), Cyanotragus (Blue Duikers (contains 2 species)), Balantelaphus (Brooke's, Ruwenzori, and Weyns's Duikers (contains 3 species)), Merycotigris (Zebra Duiker (contains 1 species)), Cephalophus (Yellow-Backed, Abbot's, and Jentink's Duikers (contains 3 species)), Eucephalophus (Red Forest, Peter's, Ogilby's, Black, White-Bellied, and Bay Duikers (contains 6 species)), Neocephalophus (Black-Fronted, Red-Flanked, and Aders's Duikers (contains 3 species)), Raphicerus (Steenbok (contains 1 species)), Parvovis (Grysboks (contains 2 species)), Ourebia (Oribis (contains 2 species)), Dorcatragus (Beira (contains 1 species)), Oreotragus (Klipspringers (contains 2 species)), Nesotragus (Suni and Bates's Antelope (contains 2 species)), Neotragus (Royal Antelope (contains 1 species)), and Madoqua (Dik-Diks (contains 4 species))
The 10 extant subfamilies of bovids are Ovibovinae (Muskox, Takin, Gorals, Mountain Goat, Serows, Chamoises, and Tahrs), Hippotraginae (Grazing Antelope), Alcelaphinae (Hartebeests, Wildebeests, Damalisks, and Hirola), Peleinae (Rhebok), Reduncinae (Reedbucks, Lechwes, Kob, Puku, and Waterbuck), Bovinae (Cattle, Spiral-Horned Antelope, Nilgai, and Chousingha), Caprinae (Goats and Sheep), Antilopinae (True Antelope and Gazelles), Cephalophinae (Duikers), and Neotraginae (Dwarf Antelope)
The 3 major bovid clades are the primitive clade consisting of the subfamilies Ovibovinae, Hippotraginae, and Alcelaphinae, the cattle-like clade consisting of the subfamilies Peleinae, Reduncinae, and Bovinae, and the goat-like clade consisting of the subfamilies Caprinae, Antilopinae, Cephalophinae, and Neotraginae
I love pigs! Thanks for the video
Outrageous video, well done.
Angry pig-like monster related to hippos.
Related to E. coli.
With the body of a buffalo, a head that looks like a combination of a hippo and a boar’s head, and the eating habits of a grizzly bear.
@@Dr.Ian-Plect Are you going to keep spamming this comment section, jackass?
Man last time I tried to search for a pig it didn't work
I tried searching pigs evolution man
I love how pigs took the generalist feeder omnivorous niche that the first ungulates had and just, never moved away from it. Sure they did get better over time with hooves for better traversal of terrain, nose pads to help them root and tusks to help in defense but they just kept the same lifestyle they always had for 50ish million years.
I like the warthogs
Wild boars 🐗
Babirusas
&
Red river hogs
Is the name "suinae" related to the classic hog call? SOOO-EEE!
It is not a real animal orgin video, with the jazz style touhou arrangment in the background.
SubhaanAllah,
This is power of Islam,
How Prophet Muhammad Sallahuwalewasallam evolved is very exiting ,
MashahAllah
tripe
Hakuna Matata!
OINK OINK
Megalochoerus was a beast, and you should make a video about it before the entolodons
Awesome! The pig is my favorite animal!
Mine too 😋
@@melanimatejak6821 Really!? I really ever hear other people say that pigs are their favorite animal!
@MatthewTheWanderer Actually,, many people keep pigs as pets these days. They can be quite cute, especially smaller breeds. But my interest is mainly gastronomical 🥩🥓🍖 🙃
@@melanimatejak6821 I've known about pigs as pets for decades. I don't think it's any more common now than it used to be. I'd love to have one as a pet, but they are difficult and demanding to care for, and are completely out of the question if you live in an apartment like I do.
@@MatthewTheWanderer There are pigmy breeds that don't grow so big.
Awesome video!
❤🤍💙 all your video's mate👍
Thanks a lot for sharing!
1:18 minecraft hoglin looking ahh
7:25 is animal origins Muslim or is this just a joke
We’re Muslim out here, Assalamualaikum
@@animalorigins oh cool! I didn’t know sorry
@@animaloriginsWalaikum assalam
Bro this is awesome I’ve been watching your videos for a very long time now and I never expected you to be another Musulman
@@animalorigins Unsubbed
@@animalorigins Tear Our Wrist. Ray Pissed.
If I could suggest a video subject, I would be interested about a video like this but about humans. Describing humans like other animals such as how the teeth are the way they are etc. Maybe aprils fool could be decent publishing day if one would need to be picked.
I am a Muslem and i don't eat pork meat. BUT i love Boar meat. Specially those in warmer countries like Iran taste extremely different from the pork meat you buy from supermarket in the Europe! Believe me if you eat wild pig meat you will never get it at grocery store! Now i live in the europe and i miss that original taste 😔
Mashallah Brother!
In what part of evolution did they start wearing uniforms
For some reason the bgm reminds me of Takanashi Kiara's bgm during her streams.
I’m still unclear where javelinas fit in here… some say they’re closer to hippos, some say they’re closer to domestic pigs. 🤷🏻♂️
MEILING MENTIONED 🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣
No Miss Piggy cameo…🐷
🙁
What a delicious video 😋
nice video
If a peccary and an armadillo have a peccadillo , their offspring are peccadillos
Pigs are the reason I became vegetarian :3
Tetraconodontidae are NOT generic pig relatives. They contain some of the largest known pigs, and there's evidence to suggest a higher level of carnivory in their diets. The true issue is there isn't much info on many ancient pig families🥲
Bro. is that Under Night Ost I hear?
3:45 bokoblins but real
Robert Baratheon’s killer finally get a video
Has anyone tried doing a survey of ancient mammal dna found in samples and create a family tree based on that?
They also taste really good
Animal origins next the evolution of t rex evolution of spinosaurus and evolution of triceratops
dang pigs really got nerfed like that
Hell pig whould make for a great death metal band
Can all the various contemporary pigs be cross-bred?
Man, I never knew the evolution of Kermit's girlfriend was so fascinating.
Edit: You people in the replies are why we can't have nice things...
Man, I never knew the evolution of police officers was so fascinating.
@@cainenovak6131 Low-testosterone joke...
@@cro-magnoncarol4017blue lives matter keep america white brother 👴🏻🇺🇸 TRUMP 2024
@@pi20p Uh-huh...
*capitalists
Woho let’s go bacon fatty fat fat bacon 🎉🎉
Sorry
0:23 cetaceans are also artiodactyls
Love pigs!!!!
nice
Mmmm, pork chops and bacon 🥓!!!
Sussy ahh group
The genus name Sus comes from sus, the Latin word for pig. Sounds like a snort.
@@stevielease7952 they also play AmongUs
@@stevielease7952 they too played AmongUs
Didn’t mention how pigs are #6 smartest animals
Did the new world have pigs? Or wild boars?
Oink
Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
Many have been saying this!
the ungulates that are the most likely to survive a mass extinction
They remind me of fluffies
The largest none mixed with domestic, wild pigs are the Russian wild boars, that Siberian tigers hunt..
cool
S u s
There is plenty of domestic pig in China, even some Muslim in local know some well clean pig are good for health purposes and took some as benefits.
Although first domesticated pig is origin in Middle East but failed due to dry desert, many pig die and poor hygiene.
So most we know right now is other part of the world not dry land, that's what make domesticated pig successful.
Thank you bacon animals. We love you. ❤😂
Bad piggies🐽🐗
3:45 unicorn-pig is true pig
Tapirs? They're perissodactyls!
Why did you make that comment?
The muslims loved this video.
As a muslim yeah it is a good video 😂
Muslims don't believe in Evolution
Please loose the background music
The pig is a genetically modified crossbreed between a rat, a dog and a cat originally made for medical experiments.
Sus
Mmmmm The evolution of my favorite food bacon
Is the real reason why pigs are haram or non-kosher in various Abrahamic religions because they are omnivorous? There seems to be a general dislike for eating carnivorous or omnivorous animals.
Animal Origins you're not Catholic!?
is lame people dont eat pig bc theyre the only non-ruminant artiodactyl. the whole argument against eating them is dumb
Man said climate change once in a reference to thousands of years ago and the liberals still put up the fact bubble lmao
This video is very incorrect, there are now twenty-five extant pig species under eight genera and a single extant subfamily that is further split into three tribes, based on here, the Sus genus is polyphyletic, the only eight extant pig species belonging to the Sus genus are now the Wild Boar (Sus scrofa (cladistically including the Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domesticus))), the Mediterranean Hog (Sus meridionalis), the Barbary Pig (Sus algirus), the Black-Footed Hog (Sus nigripes), the Crested Hog (Sus cristatus), the Banded Pig (Sus vittatus), the Formosan Hog (Sus taivanus), and the Japanese Pig (Sus leucomystax), while the pygmy hog, two species of bearded pig, and five species of warty pig are all removed from the Sus genus, the pygmy hog now belongs to the monotypic genus Porcula with its scientific name now being Porcula salvania, the two species of bearded pig being the sunda bearded pig and palawan bearded pig both now belong to the genus Chaetorhinus with their scientific names now being Chaetorhinus barbatus and Chaetorhinus ahoenobarbus respectively, and the five species of warty pig being the javan warty pig, sulawesi warty pig, visayan warty pig, east philippine warty pig, and mindoro warty pig all now belong to the genus Verrucophorus with their scientific names now being Verrucophorus verrucosus, Verrucophorus celebensis, Verrucophorus cebifrons, Verrucophorus philippensis, and Verrucophorus oliveri respectively
While the pygmy hog (Porcula salvania) of the monotypic genus Porcula is truly a sister taxon to the Sus genus, the bearded pigs (genus Chaetorhinus) and warty pigs (genus Verrucophorus) are not closely related to the Sus genus at all, the former is more closely related to the babirusas (genus Babyrousa) while the latter is more closely related to the forest hogs (genus Hylochoerus), river pigs (genus Potamochoerus), and warthogs (genus Phacochoerus)
Within the subfamily Suinae, which is the only surviving pig subfamily, the tribe Suini that contains the Pygmy Hog (Porcula salvania), Wild Boar (Sus scrofa (cladistically including the Domestic Pig (Sus scrofa domesticus))), Mediterranean Hog (Sus meridionalis), Barbary Pig (Sus algirus), Black-Footed Hog (Sus nigripes), Crested Hog (Sus cristatus), Banded Pig (Sus vittatus), Formosan Hog (Sus taivanus), and Japanese Pig (Sus leucomystax) is the most basal, while the two most derived tribes are Babyrousini that contains the Sunda Bearded Pig (Chaetorhinus barbatus), Palawan Bearded Pig (Chaetorhinus ahoenobarbus), Buru Babirusa (Babyrousa babyrussa), Bola Batu Babirusa (Babyrousa bolabatuensis), North Sulawesi Babirusa (Babyrousa celebensis), and Togian Babirusa (Babyrousa togeanensis) and Phacochoerini that contains the Javan Warty Pig (Verrucophorus verrucosus), Sulawesi Warty Pig (Verrucophorus celebensis), Visayan Warty Pig (Verrucophorus cebifrons), East Philippine Warty Pig (Verrucophorus philippensis), Mindoro Warty Pig (Verrucophorus oliveri), Giant Forest Hog (Hylochoerus mlokosiewiczi), Bushpig (Potamochoerus larvatus), Red River Pig (Potamochoerus porcus), Plains Warthog (Phacochoerus africanus), and Desert Warthog (Phacochoerus aethiopicus)
Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@Dr.Ian-Plect, the pig taxonomy here is now correct.
Thank God for evolution which gave humanity Sus Bacon and Ham which isn't at all suss!
And eggs from Jungle Fowl which aren't foul at all!
A more perfect combination cannot be found.
brother, may i have some oats?
As a vegetarian I will argue pigs are good pets. They're loyal, intelligent, fun and very trainable. Disadvantage is, they stink.
Go vegan
And while you can train a dog or cat to behave inside an apartment in a large apartment building a pig will do as it wants. Eat the furniture, tear up the floor, scratch their hide on the furniture....
@@dustinfisher29 no,you can train pigs
I feel sorry for people who do not eat pork. You’ve never had bacon. You’ve never had a rack of fall off the bone St. Louis style ribs slathered in delicious barbecue sauce. You never had a barbecue pulled pork sandwich. You’ve never had a taco Al Pastor. Never had pernil … Very sad.
I feel sorry for the pigs
In case everyone should know, pigs are descended from carnivorous hoofed mammals, therefore, entelodonts are very much closely related to pigs, peccaries, and hippos, pigs, peccaries, and hippos along with their extinct relatives such as sanitheres, doliochoerids, anthracotheres, entelodonts, and andrewsarchids belong to one of the only two valid suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals (order Artiodactyla), with the suborder that the pigs, sanitheres, peccaries, doliochoerids, hippos, anthracotheres, entelodonts, and andrewsarchids constitute being named Bunodontia, members of the Bunodontia suborder are mainly omnivorous and officially have upper incisors, unlike the more diverse suborder Selenodontia, where its members are all exclusively herbivorous and possess dental pads on their upper jaws instead of upper incisors, andrewsarchids and entelodonts are both considered basal offshoots of the Bunodontia suborder, whereas the pigs, sanitheres, peccaries, and doliochoerids constitute the infraorder Suina and the hippos and anthracotheres both in the infraorder Ancodonta, the Suina infraorder is further split into the superfamilies Tayassuoidea for both the extant peccaries and extinct doliochoerids and Suoidea for both the extant pigs and extinct sanitheres.
How have advances in genetic and morphological research refined our understanding of the relationships between basal offshoots of Bunodontia, such as entelodonts and andrewsarchids, and their modern descendants like pigs and peccaries?
Don't forget hippos.
Beware of a commenter called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism. Further, when confronted, he frequently replies; 'actually' followed by a wall of even more flawed taxonomy, none of which addresses the first round of nonsense.
@Dr.Ian-Plect, even-toed hoofed mammals are divided into eleven extant families under nine superfamilies, six infraorders, and two suborders
The eleven extant families of even-toed hoofed mammals are Tragulidae (Chevrotains), Hydropotidae (Yoyongs and Fossil Relatives), Moschidae (Kasturis and Fossil Relatives), Giraffidae (Giraffes and Okapi), Antilocapridae (Pronghorn and Fossil Relatives), Cervidae (Deer), Bovidae (Bovids), Camelidae (Camels), Tayassuidae (Peccaries), Suidae (Pigs), and Hippopotamidae (Hippos)
The nine extant superfamilies of even-toed hoofed mammals are Traguloidea (Chevrotains and Fossil Relatives (contains Tragulidae)), Moschoidea (Kasturis and Yoyongs (contains Hydropotidae and Moschidae)), Giraffoidea (Giraffes, Okapi, and Pronghorn (contains Giraffidae and Antilocapridae)), Cervoidea (Deer and Fossil Relatives (contains Cervidae)), Bovoidea (Bovids and Fossil Relatives (contains Bovidae)), Cameloidea (Camels and Fossil Relatives (contains Camelidae)), Tayassuoidea (Peccaries and Fossil Relatives (contains Tayassuidae)), Suoidea (Pigs and Fossil Relatives (contains Suidae)), and Hippopotamoidea (Hippos and Fossil Relatives (contains Hippopotamidae))
The six infraorders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Tragulina (Chevrotains and Fossil Allies (contains Tragulidae)), Vampyrodonta (Kasturis, Yoyongs, and Fossil Relatives (contains Hydropotidae and Moschidae)), Pecora (Bovids, Deer, Giraffes, Okapi, and Pronghorn (contains Giraffidae, Antilocapridae, Cervidae, and Bovidae))
And the two suborders of even-toed hoofed mammals are Selenodontia (contains Tragulidae, Hydropotidae, Moschidae, Giraffidae, Antilocapridae, Cervidae, Bovidae, and Camelidae) and Bunodontia (contains Tayassuidae, Suidae, and Hippopotamidae)
@@AncientWildTVbunodontian isn't even a real clade many of the animals he listed were rather wippomorphs(whales hippos and allies) or suinans(pigs and allies)