my understanding was that crocodiles could be differentiated from alligators by the feature that the latter will see you later whereas the former will see you in a while
@@novedad4468here usually used together, one in response to the other Someone says "see you later, alligator" and the other says "in a while, crocodile" Rhyming puns!
I love this so much. You don't cut out mistakes, you include good and enough information, you make jokes, and DON'T USE A CRAPPY AI VOICE, thank you, subscribed.
id love to see a video exploring the groups of birds, kinda like your mammal one but instead of being mammals its birds, either way i love your content please do more!
The best pronunciation of araripesuchus I’ve ever heard from (what I presume to be) a native English speaker. The Rs in it are supposed to have a vibrato sound that doesn’t exist in English and is made by slightly vibrating the tongue against the roof of the mouth
I'm so glad that you put Iharkutosuchus in this video, I would not expect that you even know this specie. But to tell a fun fact, (ok, I just want to seem cool) the paleontologyst who found and named that croc teached me at university🤗🤗
who else what's a remake of the documentary When Crocs ate Dinosaurs that takes place from the Triassic to Pleistocene and covers all the fantastic crocodylomorphs throughout prehistory.
They look how they did then, unlike chickens lol I hate people that pretend chickens are more Dinosaur that Crocodilians. It's beyond laughable and untrue.
Why is the archosaur branch called Pseudosuchia if it includes the living crocodiles? That name would fit with whatever convergently evolved the appearance and niche of crocodiles.
Pseudosuchia as originally defined only included non-crocodilians. Unfortunately phylogenetic analyses resolved crocodiles as deeply nested within this cluster of archosaurs and the name Pseudosuchia has priority over alternative names for this clade. Kind of the same situation when birds were discovered to be deeply nested within Dinosauria = birds are now terrible lizards, while crocodiles are now false-crocodiles.
"I think you left out the Sebecids. They're the third clade of Crocodilians that made it through the K-Pg line and they were fully terrestrial" - no, not left out. They are not a clade of crocodilians, nor are they within Crocodilia at all
Amazing how things so primitive are still here. Although I wonder how modern species are able to get by since they require so much sunning time and many have to drag prey underwater to drown them. Obviously they don't have many predators but still seems inefficient to me
Why don’t you get to think of a suggestion and creating of another TH-cam Videos that’s all about The Evolution Of The Hyenas on the next Animal Origins coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
Corrections: Pseudosuchia is an invalid clade. By definition archosaurs are crocs + dinos (including birds). These two are sister clades with bipedal ancestors, like Scleromochlus, Pseudhesperosuchus and Junggarsuchus. (Where are they?) So that shuts out all the other traditional pseudosuchians using the last common ancestor method. Poposauria is the outgroup to the Archosauria. Turfanosuchus is the last common ancestor. Other archosauriformes (Euparkeridade, Erythrosuchia, Rauisuchia, Aetosauria, etc) are outgroups to these three. Litargosuchus and Terrestrisuchus were obligate bipeds with really long legs, but your illustrations show them to be rather short-legged quadrupeds. Kayentasuchus is known from a skull, and it is closely related to Litargosuchus. So toss out your current illustration. Hemiprotosuchus is basal to aetosaurs, so not related to croc relatives.
Crocodiles are one of the most infamous reptiles and they are closely related to the dinosaurs and it's been 65 million years since they first exist in the planet.
Crocodilians are reptiles that constitute the order Crocodilia, they are known for their elongated snouts, semi-aquatic lifestyle, and very sharp teeth used for catching prey, there are four extant families of crocodilians: Alligatoridae (Alligators), Caimanidae (Caimans), Crocodylidae (Crocodiles), and Gavialidae (Gharials), while both crocodiles (family Crocodylidae) and gharials (family Gavialidae) are the only extant families of the superfamilies Crocodyloidea and Gavialoidea respectively, both alligators (family Alligatoridae) and caimans (family Caimanidae) belong to the superfamily Alligatoroidea, where alligators and caimans are the crown families of alligatoroids.
Beware of a commenter below called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism.
@cholachanthyes9191, caimans are in the superfamily Alligatoroidea, but not the family Alligatoridae, just like pygmy and dwarf sperm whales are in the superfamily Physeteroidea but not the family Physeteridae, caimans constitute the family Caimanidae as one of the two crown families of alligatoroids, much like how the pygmy sperm whale and dwarf sperm whale are the only two extant members of the family Kogiidae, which is one of the two crown families of physeteroids.
@cholachanthyes9191, actually, there are officially now four extant families of crocodilians based solely on name: Alligatoridae (Alligators), Caimanidae (Caimans), Crocodylidae (Crocodiles), and Gavialidae (Gharials), the former two constitute the superfamily Alligatoroidea, while the latter two are the only extant families of the superfamilies Crocodyloidea and Gavialoidea respectively.
mate.. 'inside' and 'in' are distinct terms.. inside requires an objective place with a defined interior. you cant be inside water, it's just in. likewise it's in the clade, not inside.. like you could say in or inside a cell, but it's just in cellular chemistry, or.. inside/in the house, but it's always just in the town, you can't be inside a town even if it's it's got medieval walls around it... because then you're in the town *within the walls,(aye , within, not in _or_ inside them. )
my understanding was that crocodiles could be differentiated from alligators by the feature that the latter will see you later whereas the former will see you in a while
Ha, ha, hardy ha.
Could you explain the meme for the non-english natives? I get the "See u later, alligator", but what does crocodile have to do with "while"?
@@novedad4468 while sort of rhymes with crocoDILE
i thought it was "been a while, crocodile"
@@novedad4468here usually used together, one in response to the other
Someone says "see you later, alligator" and the other says "in a while, crocodile"
Rhyming puns!
Thank you for not being an AI script/voice and actually having a very detailed analysis on the subject.
Great video, subscribed.
9808
I love this so much. You don't cut out mistakes, you include good and enough information, you make jokes, and DON'T USE A CRAPPY AI VOICE, thank you, subscribed.
This is a certified crocodile classic!
id love to see a video exploring the groups of birds, kinda like your mammal one but instead of being mammals its birds, either way i love your content please do more!
There are an overwhelming number of them. That's a long video
@@ButterBallTheOpossumCrazy that even 66 Million Years Later Dinosaurs still outnumber mammals two to one. Extremely successful linage.
@@ButterBallTheOpossum i know but it will be cool for one to appear however
Birds are pretty much mammals
The best pronunciation of araripesuchus I’ve ever heard from (what I presume to be) a native English speaker. The Rs in it are supposed to have a vibrato sound that doesn’t exist in English and is made by slightly vibrating the tongue against the roof of the mouth
Ara Ara!
@@LimeyLassengolden response lol
Why leaving out purussaurus? Possibily the largest crocodilian ever to stalk the earth, strange choice
It kinda bother me that they didn't name it Purrusuchus.
Purusaurus is closer to Caimans and gators than Crocs. Yeah,I wanted to see them mentioned also. They had to have the strongest bite of all.
@@JeffBezos-pb1zv But he mentioned Deinosuchus, which is also closer to alligators than to crocodiles.
Crocodiles are on my top five favorite animals so evolution video was pretty cool 🐊
What animals evolved from the earliest Archosaurs?
Well, dinosaurs, birds, and after ‘while, crocodiles.
Pterosaurs.
@@sauron6977 Petersaurs*
Petah, the hoarse is back again
I always see araripesuchus in different prehistoric animal addons for minecraft
Could you do a video on the evolution of reptiles in general and their different groups ?
Best video to date not just because Crocodiles are my favorite animal
They're not animals
What's your first favorite animal??
What do you think we're animal. Snakes animals. Crocodiles are animal dummy
@@JeffreyBenzodiazepinesyeah they are?
The Crocodile of evolution
I'm so glad that you put Iharkutosuchus in this video, I would not expect that you even know this specie. But to tell a fun fact, (ok, I just want to seem cool) the paleontologyst who found and named that croc teached me at university🤗🤗
who else what's a remake of the documentary When Crocs ate Dinosaurs that takes place from the Triassic to Pleistocene and covers all the fantastic crocodylomorphs throughout prehistory.
WAKE UP BABE ANIMAL ORIGINS DROPPED
Birds aren't just the relatives of dinosaurs... they are dinosaurs.
@emptyglass7867 He didn't say otherwise, and he actually stated that!
Then call crocodiles crocosaurs species
Ty I been trying to find out the evolution of crocodiles 🐊
the touhou outro music has yet to not catch me off guard
crocodilians are funky animals indeed!
The evolution of the Crocodile
thr Evolution Of The crocodile
The evolution of the crocodile
The evolution of the crocodile
Combo breaker?
The evolution of the crocodile
I would love to see video on on Mekosuchus the small terrestrial crocodiles from certain pacific islands
As always, Amazing
2:03 Could you not find a cuter picture, it's so CUTE ❤.
Nice evolution
You forgot to mention the Purussaurus when you brought up the Caiman lineage.
I feel personally attacked that I'm not allowed to have a tiny Spenosuchia or Gobiosuchus as a little lap pet.
Could you cover the wastebasket taxon Edentata?
They look how they did then, unlike chickens lol I hate people that pretend chickens are more Dinosaur that Crocodilians. It's beyond laughable and untrue.
It would be really cool if you made a video talking about the evolution of frogs.
Great video 👏👏 thanks
Somebody had fun with editing while making this video
Hi please make a video on evolution of four chambered stomach... 🙏🏻
I love the evolution of anything. Humans should be next
Mmm 🤔
SINCE YOU COMPLETELY IGNORED THEM IN YOUR EVERY MAMMAL FAMILY VIDEO!!!!!!
What sound does a sea cucumber make?
I find hilarious how Crocodiles and Alligators are less related than many Mammals species.
inane
Sick Thumnail. Fell bad for the Dino tho
Aww no purussaurus but great video though
Oh please your right we need a vidoe on notosuchians and other members of pseudosuchia
5:14 That's a cute-o-dile.
Do an episode on Ostritches.
Why is the archosaur branch called Pseudosuchia if it includes the living crocodiles? That name would fit with whatever convergently evolved the appearance and niche of crocodiles.
well, stuff like this happens a lot.
Pseudosuchia as originally defined only included non-crocodilians. Unfortunately phylogenetic analyses resolved crocodiles as deeply nested within this cluster of archosaurs and the name Pseudosuchia has priority over alternative names for this clade. Kind of the same situation when birds were discovered to be deeply nested within Dinosauria = birds are now terrible lizards, while crocodiles are now false-crocodiles.
You sholud cover the evolution of birds species someday
good show
So dissapointing how the 10m+ caiman Purussaurus never gets a mention in these types of videos
Cool thing is crocodiles are more closely related to birds than to any other reptile
Just a little request: Can you make the evolution of sharks?
Excellent video! 😊
The difference between them is an alligator will see you later,
a crocodile will see you in a while!
If possible could you do a video on extant cheetah species and consequences of their bottle necks?
I think you left out the Sebecids. They're the third clade of Crocodylomorphs that made it through the K-Pg line and they were fully terrestrial
"I think you left out the Sebecids. They're the third clade of Crocodilians that made it through the K-Pg line and they were fully terrestrial"
- no, not left out. They are not a clade of crocodilians, nor are they within Crocodilia at all
@@Dr.Ian-PlectYeah I meant Crocodylomorpha. I corrected it
@@Katepuzzilein ok
learning!!!
Albino don't go to a lake 😊
funny thing is that false gharials are closer related to gharial than any other crocodilian. so its really just the other gharial species.
No, the closeness of relationship doesn't make them 'the other gharial species'. They are distinct species in distinct genera.
Can please make a video of evolution of wolf to dogs ❤❤❤❤❤🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
purusaurus??
my favorite animal!!!11!!1!!!1111!!!!
animal origins can you do evolution of hyenas
❤❤❤
Hyenas are very interesting species to research
Amazing how things so primitive are still here. Although I wonder how modern species are able to get by since they require so much sunning time and many have to drag prey underwater to drown them. Obviously they don't have many predators but still seems inefficient to me
Reptiles can go weeks or months without eating. If anything mammals are the inefficient ones.
It's extremely energy efficient. They don't consume much, let the sun power them and the water kill their prey.
Left out my boy Kaprosuchus. Wish they would have survived.
Why tf you type this twice😂😂😂
Dude, you forgot the herbivore croc! 🌱🐊
He actually mentioned it
Please come back to TH-cam bro
YES!
Dude where are you D':
2:25 - *Litargosuchus, not "Litargosaurus."
Why don’t you get to think of a suggestion and creating of another TH-cam Videos that’s all about The Evolution Of The Hyenas on the next Animal Origins coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
🤗
The last of thr archosaurs!
Evolusuchus
If humans dont destroy the planet i bet salt water crocs will evolve flippers in the next several million years
Nope
no
It’s not impossible, just not likely given the fact that there is already a strong large predatory marine presence
I wonder why crocodiles eat dinosaur that look just alike them or copy. Even crocodiles eat other crocodiles when find no food today
If that mess of wording is stating crocs are dinosaurs, they are not. Nor do they care what their meal is.
💯🔥👍🏽
Where Brachiosuchus kebabishensis 😭
Purusaurus is lost too
Try evolution of snakes
Bipedal croc is creepy lol
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
crodocile moment
I appreciate you making these but I survived crappy jazz saxophone from the 80s and 90s and there's no way I will put up with it now.
Is it just me or are crocs just hype???
They're not just hype. They have the strongest bite force of all land animals with a bite force of over 3500 psi.
Corrections: Pseudosuchia is an invalid clade. By definition archosaurs are crocs + dinos (including birds). These two are sister clades with bipedal ancestors, like Scleromochlus, Pseudhesperosuchus and Junggarsuchus. (Where are they?) So that shuts out all the other traditional pseudosuchians using the last common ancestor method.
Poposauria is the outgroup to the Archosauria. Turfanosuchus is the last common ancestor. Other archosauriformes (Euparkeridade, Erythrosuchia, Rauisuchia, Aetosauria, etc) are outgroups to these three.
Litargosuchus and Terrestrisuchus were obligate bipeds with really long legs, but your illustrations show them to be rather short-legged quadrupeds. Kayentasuchus is known from a skull, and it is closely related to Litargosuchus. So toss out your current illustration. Hemiprotosuchus is basal to aetosaurs, so not related to croc relatives.
Damn, you in school right now for this?
@@ElectronFieldPulse Ignore that guy, he is infamous in the paleontology community for having wildly unscientific pet theories
@@domesticus2958 - Thanks for the heads up!
@@domesticus2958 - Thanks for the heads up!
Crocodiles are one of the most infamous reptiles and they are closely related to the dinosaurs and it's been 65 million years since they first exist in the planet.
No, crocodiles appeared about 90-100mya
@@Dr.Ian-Plect Oh sorry
@@JJ-oq3tz Thumbing up your own comment?
So why have the crocs stopped evolving?
What makes you think they stopped evolving?
@@Calvin_Barnesafter millions they are still crocodiles☠️😂. They might have had minor adaptations...but they're still crocodiles.
@@prestonhartlief You have no idea of your ignorance of the subject.
@@Dr.Ian-Plect lol Dinosaurs became chickens. That makes perfect sense. Your intelligence is just beyond us dumb people 😂
@@prestonhartlief Indeed, muted.
:D
Crocodilians are reptiles that constitute the order Crocodilia, they are known for their elongated snouts, semi-aquatic lifestyle, and very sharp teeth used for catching prey, there are four extant families of crocodilians: Alligatoridae (Alligators), Caimanidae (Caimans), Crocodylidae (Crocodiles), and Gavialidae (Gharials), while both crocodiles (family Crocodylidae) and gharials (family Gavialidae) are the only extant families of the superfamilies Crocodyloidea and Gavialoidea respectively, both alligators (family Alligatoridae) and caimans (family Caimanidae) belong to the superfamily Alligatoroidea, where alligators and caimans are the crown families of alligatoroids.
Beware of a commenter below called Indy Reno posting nonsense taxonomy and other flawed info. He does this all the time and stubbornly ignores criticism.
Ill will have to confirm to you caiman are in the class alligatoridae not there own family
@cholachanthyes9191, caimans are in the superfamily Alligatoroidea, but not the family Alligatoridae, just like pygmy and dwarf sperm whales are in the superfamily Physeteroidea but not the family Physeteridae, caimans constitute the family Caimanidae as one of the two crown families of alligatoroids, much like how the pygmy sperm whale and dwarf sperm whale are the only two extant members of the family Kogiidae, which is one of the two crown families of physeteroids.
@@indyreno2933 your getting confused with subfamily and family
@cholachanthyes9191, actually, there are officially now four extant families of crocodilians based solely on name: Alligatoridae (Alligators), Caimanidae (Caimans), Crocodylidae (Crocodiles), and Gavialidae (Gharials), the former two constitute the superfamily Alligatoroidea, while the latter two are the only extant families of the superfamilies Crocodyloidea and Gavialoidea respectively.
𓆊 𓆊 𓆊 𓆊𓆊 𓆊
mate.. 'inside' and 'in' are distinct terms.. inside requires an objective place with a defined interior. you cant be inside water, it's just in. likewise it's in the clade, not inside.. like you could say in or inside a cell, but it's just in cellular chemistry, or.. inside/in the house, but it's always just in the town, you can't be inside a town even if it's it's got medieval walls around it... because then you're in the town *within the walls,(aye , within, not in _or_ inside them. )
A picayune criticism. Most people wouldn't even bat an eye at "inside a clade" or "inside a town" regardless.
Left out my boy Kaprosuchus. Wish they would have survived.
Those fcking galloping swamp dogs. The worst thing about Ark