If it is a highly social animal, there may be a clear hierarchy.
You can't survive on friends alone. There are always loners.
In the midst of all this, the chacma baboons appeared like a gust of wind.
They move in groups of friends, and as a result, they move in a single line, forming a huge line to keep the ferocious carnivores of Africa in check... perhaps.
Of course, there are individuals that don't get along, but as long as they stay apart and form groups, there's no problem.
And moving in groups itself leads to protecting the group.
What a beautiful story. Friendship saves the world.
However, the most dangerous position at the front is basically taken by loners.
Furthermore, it is also loners who act as the rear guard of the group.
No matter how hard they put their bodies on the line, loners who are taken away by African wild animals before they know it never hear any words of thanks.
The only words that always reach them are "Itadakimasu (thank you for the meal)."
The kid in the middle of the group won't even get to see his heroic final performance.
Is this a beautiful story? A beautiful story?
Be more proactive, chacma baboon. If you don't take action, you'll always be on the edge of the group.
Will that kid in the middle of the line turn his head someday?
Don't be so dependent, this is the savanna. The wild animals will turn first.
Well, do your best, you edge kid.
It's a once in a lifetime opportunity, so why are you holding back?
I'm always on the sidelines. Even pickled radish and shrimp tempura taste best on the sidelines, don't they?
The sidelines have their own charm.
But that's basically not popular, so
first go after the ones with unusual tastes near the center of the group.
You can blend in little by little from there.
I've graduated from the edge of the pack, and it's time to make everyone except the wild animals smile.
I'm at the front of the pack, waiting for someone to talk to me.
That was a long introduction.
Now, please see the details in the description.
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This channel aims to create videos that pack in a lot of useless knowledge in a short amount of time.
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This time's details
Chacma baboon
Surprisingly, the monkey that lives the furthest north, excluding humans, is the Japanese macaque that lives in Japan.
So, what is the monkey that lives the furthest south?
That is the chacma baboon and the vervet monkey, monkeys with bright blue testicles, as you all know.
The natural enemies of the chacma baboon are carnivores such as lions and cheetahs that live in Africa.
To fight off such natural enemies, male chacma baboons have sharp canines and large bodies.
Basically, the group is a matriarchal group dominated by females, and males leave the group where they were born and join another group.
Naturally, there is a leader in the group, and since they move as a group and the loner takes the lead, the leader of the group often moves around the center.
They are omnivorous and will eat anything they can, including insects and flowers.
They move in a procession during the day to head to feeding grounds and in the evening to return to their sleeping place.
The procession is not completely random, but is arranged in a more or less fixed order.
The contents of this video were discovered through research conducted to investigate the mystery of this order.
Although there seems to be some reason behind the behavior of animals,
there is not necessarily a clear intention behind it, and it may just be that way.
Or rather, I think that's generally how animal evolution works.
The mystery of chacma baboon behavior is not an action to protect the group, but rather each individual seeks a comfortable environment, which leads to the answer that it leads to protecting the group.
However, of course, we did not ask them directly, so humans have merely anthropomorphized them and concluded from our own interpretation.
Perhaps they are lining up with a clear intention of their own,
Whatever the reason, it makes you want to cheer on the individuals at the front and back of the line, who are of low status.
Good luck, chacma baboons.
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