Wallaby Count. Kangaroo Island Australia
How many wallabies can you count? This is my drive back at night from Remarkable Rocks to the YHA on Kangaroo Island, Australia. Saw many kangaroos, wallabies, koala bears, echidnas, snakes and possums on this drive.
Platypus, Kangaroo Island, Australia
Platypus
Kangaroo Island, South Australia
[3/6/2003]
Snake Encounter Kangaroo Island
Snake Encounter Kangaroo Island
Vlog: 19
Emma and I decided to head out to kangaroo island for 6 nights and see what its all about. The very first night was super exciting with an awesome tiger snake encounter. This vlog is filmed a bit different with some cinematic montages throughout the vlog. Lemme know what you think, may continue this style.
Kangaroo island was super fun, lots of wildlife and crazy places to visit. Some of my favorite places were pennington bay, stokes bay, remarkable rocks, and Admirals Arch. We also visited Seal Bay, look out for these awesome destinations in my next upcoming videos / vlogs.
IFAW Australia Kangaroo Island 2013 survey overview
This is a brief overview of the 2013 Kangaroo Island marine survey from the IFAW office in Sydney, Australia. More info at
Kangaroo Island
A video of our trip to kangaroo island, which was amazing! We stayed for three nights, and sped around each day trying to fit everything in! We arrived by ferry, and first drove down to the Raptor Domain ( Then we went to Seal Bay. We then drove to our hotel, Kangaroo Island Wilderness Retreat (
The other days that we were there, we went to Vivonne Bay, The Admiral's Arch, Cape Borda, Tiger Trails horse riding, Paul's Place, Island Honey... There was so much to do!
Fossil tracks on Kangaroo Island: reveal existence of Tassie demons, thylacines and giant wombats.
Fossil tracks on Kangaroo Island: reveal existence of Tassie demons, thylacines and giant wombats.
Scientists from South Australia have discovered what they are calling one of the most diverse fossil track sites ever since the Pleistocene era. Aaron Camens, a professor of paleontology at Flinders University at the Sunday Mail that tracks are able to tell scientists things they would never know just with skeletal fossils. The Australian pathways of vertebrate fossils are extremely rare and this project was the first of its kind in Australia Dr. Camens. Tracks are better than bones because they show animals interacting. With footprints we have records of animals living in an environment together. We may also have preserved footprints in an environment where the bones are not preserved.
Dr. Camens is part of a team that has studied more than 6,500km of coastline from Victoria to Western Australia. We have the so-called Jurassic Park in Western Australia where 21 different types of dinosaur tracks in a 25km stretch were discovered earlier this year and other dinosaur footprints in Queensland, and we are now discovering important vertebrates of the Pleistocene Megafauna tracksites in the south of Australia Dr. Camens. On Kangaroo Island, we discovered a fossil trail preserving hundreds of individual trails made by several extinct animals, including thylacines or Tassie tigers, large quadrupeds most likely diprotodontids, short face sthenurine kangaroos along with opossums, Tasmanian devil, goannas, shorebirds And a variety of kangaroos.
Admirals Arch & Remarkable Rocks - Kangaroo Island
Admirals Arch & Remarkable Rocks - Kangaroo Island
Vlog: 21
Music:
Kangaroo Island Wildlife Adventure
Join us for a 2 day, 1 night Kangaroo Island Wildlife Adventure tour. See all the best sights that the island has to offer.
Tasmania Island | Kangaroos & Dingoes
Yet again, perhaps the real disaster for the marsupial wolf came three thousand years ago, with the appearance of its worst enemy: the dingo.
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▶ Documentary Tasmania. Devils and Tigers
No one knows how they arrived in Australia, but they are true canines, descended from the Asian wolf. Their strength lies in numbers, as they hunt in packs, and give birth to large litters of pups.
The Tasmanian tigers, solitary and less prolific, suffered not only from the competition for the same resources, but were also themselves hunted by hordes of these newly-arrived yellow dogs.
Since then, the dingoes have been the biggest land carnivores in Australia, attacking large animals such as kangaroos, as well as wombats, and even lizards and smaller prey.
When the first sheep were brought to Australia, the dingoes were here, ready to attack. And, of course, this slaughter was also blamed on the Tasmanian tigers, one more supposed crime to add to what was already a long list.
The dingoes are still a problem today – so much so that the largest fence in the world has been built to keep them away from the sheep – 3307 miles of barbed wire!
The great strength of the dingo is the same as that of all wild canines – their ability to adapt to almost anything. The large packs can quickly disperse when necessary, and they then become solitary hunters – like this one. No protein is wasted, and when a dingo finds a dead body, he simply eats it, like any other scavenger.
In a land where every man had a rifle, like Australia at the time of the first colonists, this was a very useful way of adapt.
Apparently, the Tasmanian tigers not only were not scavengers, but what is more, they ate only part of the animals they themselves had hunted, leaving the rest behind.
But, what with the wild dogs, the farmers, and the dingoes, the only place a Tasmanian tiger is safe is here: behind glass in a museum.
At least we still have these old pictures of the last survivors in captivity. A great loss to zoology.
When this specimen died in 1936, the Tasmanian government finally decided to declare it a protected species….but this was the last one.
The Tasmanian tiger was protected and exterminated on one and the same day.
Since then, zoologists from all around the world have tried to find a living example in the isolated jungles of western Tasmania. People claim to have identified the marks of their enormous jaws on the heads of dead sheep, but they remain, for the moment, merely a legend.
So many changes, so many invasions of the land of the marsupials, had disastrous consequences, as we have seen.
Nonetheless, the disappearance of forest areas to make way for open field, the increased diversification of pasture, with the introduction of new types of grass, and the creation of watering holes for the cattle, have led to increases in the population of some animals, such as the wallabies and the kangaroos. Inevitably, with so many kangaroos around, eating the grass, the farmers soon got angry, and went to get their shotguns.
Outside the wildlife reserves, the majority of kangaroos live on private land, where, despite legal protection, it is very difficult to prevent poaching..
Many are now asking why the farmers should kill the kangaroos, in order to breed sheep, which simply add to the world surpluses of wool and meat, when surely the profitable thing to do would be to simply breed kangaroos.
They may look adorable, and they are; but, for a farmer they are simply giant rats; there are too many of them, and they eat the grass intended for the cattle.
And the shotgun is not the only way to kill them.
Modern Australia presents a different threat to the children of Gondwana. Vast plains, straight roads, and excessive speeds.
The black night, the sudden dazzle of headlamps, and the result is there for you to see: more bodies to feed the scavengers.
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Spotting Wild Koalas And Kangaroos in Canberra Australia - Day 7 | VLOG 41
VLOG 41 - We went to Tidbinbilla in Canberra to look for wild koalas, wild kangaroos and many more. Tidbinbilla is a nature preserved park that consists of wild animals.
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Platypus spotted in wildlife of Tasmania 2016
spotted in a greek, recorded in HD
Don't copy right ;)
This Video is under property of paulpanther.de
Kangaroo fights off three dingoes and survives
Sunday, 21 February 2016
Dingos x 3 vs 1 Kangaoroo
Banka Banka , Northern Territory , Australia.
The Kangaroo got away and survived
Thylacine & Red Kangaroo
The Tasmanian Tiger once roamed the western Arnhemland forests. This is a short film about health from Manmoyi central western Arnhemland.
Kangaroo encounter on the way home
Encountered a couple of kangaroos on the way home, which is not uncommon.
Near White Shark Attack on Kangaroo Island (Trash Movie)
Almost got eaten by a white shark on Kangaroo Island (Australia). Fortunately it turned out to be not a shark...
The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course (8/10) Movie CLIP - The Ride of Our Lives (2002) HD
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
Steve Irwin gets yanked into the water by a crocodile he just roped.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
Crikey! Following a brief cameo in Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001), hyperactive, high-energy cable television star and native Australian naturalist Steve Irwin parlays his success as a confronter of all things scaly, fanged, and venomous into this feature-film adventure. Irwin and his wife Terri Irwin play themselves as animal activists who rescue an endangered crocodile, not realizing that the critter has swallowed a downed top-secret satellite beacon that's the subject of an intense search by CIA personnel. Believing that the spies are poachers out to steal the animal's precious hide, the Irwins evade their pursuers while attempting to get the crocodile to safety in a remote area of the Outback, adopting an orphaned joey (a baby kangaroo), and grappling with bird-eating spiders and poisonous snakes along the way. In the meantime, the secret agents mistakenly believe the Irwins are enemy operatives trying to steal their highly valuable technology. The real-life Irwins donated all of their fees from The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course (2002) to wildlife conservation efforts.
CREDITS:
TM & © MGM (2002)
Cast: Steve Irwin, Terri Irwin
Director: John Stainton
Producers: Judy Bailey, Caroline Bonham, Arnold Rifkin, John Stainton, Bruce Willis
Screenwriters: John Stainton, Holly Goldberg Sloan
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Kangaroos, Wallabies & Monotremes
Walkabout Australia is officially open, so hop to! Wallabies, cassowaries, marsupials, & monotremes. Come experience wonders from another hemisphere.
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Spotting Australian wildlife in Flinders Chase National Park on Kangaroo Island
via YouTube Capture
Platypus at Flinders Chase National Park
Platypus
Flinders Chase National Park in Kangaroo Island
Kangaroo Island, Australia
Taking off in Cessna, Kangaroo Island
One of the best things I've done, your of KI with Bill Buttrose, very grateful!