Agriculture

Animals | 60 Minutes Marathon



From 2020, Bill Whitaker’s report on grizzlies in Montana. From 2019, Whitaker’s report on sharks off of New England. From 2011, Bob Simon’s report on jaguars. From 2022, Scott Pelley’s visit to Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique. From 2018, Lesley Stahl’s report on Zoos engaging in matchmaking for their animals. From 2014, Anderson Cooper’s report on “The Smartest Dog in the World.” From 2022, Cooper’s report on how cancer treatments for dogs could also lead to breakthroughs for humans. From 2012, Stahl’s report on efforts to protect turtles and tortoises from poachers. From 2022, Sharyn Alfonsi’s report on a state prison rehabilitating inmates by training wild horses. From 2013, Pelley’s report on two people who are working to save the humpback whale. From 2023, Cecilia Vega’s report on sperm whales off the coast of Dominica. Also from 2023, Pelley’s interview with scientists who say the planet in the midst of sixth mass extinction and that Earth’s wildlife is running out of places to live. And from 2022, Whitaker’s report on a nonprofit’s effort to transform grassland into the largest nature reserve in the lower 48 states.

#animals #wildlife #world

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0:00 Intro
0:11 Grizzlies (October 11, 2020)
13:36 Great White (September 29, 2019)
27:02 In Search of the Jaguar (January 30, 2011)
40:15 Return to Gorongosa (December 4, 2022)
53:30 At the Zoo – Part 1 (May 13, 2018)
1:06:09 At the Zoo – Part 2 (May 13, 2018)
1:19:28 The Smartest Dog in the World (September 20, 2015)
1:31:34 Comparative Oncology (November 27, 2022)
1:45:29 The Race to Save the Tortoise (December 9, 2012)
1:58:23 Wild Horses (November 20, 2022)
2:11:32 Return of the Humpback (October 20, 2013)
2:24:00 Sperm Whales of Dominica (May 14, 2023)
2:37:14 The Vanishing Wild (January 1, 2023)
2:50:33 American Prairie (October 23, 2022)

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30 Comments

  1. For millennia those bears ate us for lunch, finally we got the upper hand and now this. SMH.
    I want to see you when one of those shows up inside your house. 😂

  2. I love how they blame the bears for the selfish gains of people. How about stop moving where bears live as it is their habitat, not humans. The human race is so selfish. There are plenty of places for people to start living in, yet, they insist on going where they know danger exists. STOP living where dangerous wildlife exists. They are to be protected and not killed for what they naturally do to survive.

  3. 1:25:15

    This demonstration did not prove that the dog was responding to the point.

    The current design of the test is flawed. It does not single out the pointing as the cause of the dog choosing the correct cup, therefore it is unsuitable for addressing the question of whether the dog is responding to the point in the same way as the toddler. The design flaw occurs because only one of the cups is concealing an item, and that the item is a food treat which is not disguised by the cup. Unlike a human toddler, a dog can smell the location of objects. Placing an edible treat under the cup will make an olfactory beacon that any dog could find.

    Almost any dog can be trained to sit and wait, then get a treat and when verbally or visually prompted. Placing the treat under a cup would present an obstacle so small as to be insignificant in this task.

    The test design could be easily improved by the replacing the treat. Each cup should contain a similar object, with the same scent. Perhaps differentiated by colour. Then the objects be placed under separate but identical cups. Then, if the correct object were chosen after the pointing cue, the test would be more reliable.

  4. My Aussie does the same thing that Border Collie does. We named all of her toys and she will get them when we tell her to "go get *name*" She will also put them in her toy box at night. She knows paw, nose, and bring (his take). They are like toddlers, they know a lot a learn like toddlers. When you have a child if you do not want them to touch something because it hurts you will mimic touching it and act like it hurt you, I can do the same thing with my Aussie and she understands that it hurts and she shouldn't touch it.

  5. Madagascar needs to develop eco tourism people would come to see the unique animals that would be a supportive industry and save the wildlife. Asians need to change and stop the extinction of animals for traditional medicine that has been proven scientifically that rhino horn and turtles don’t have any medicinal benefit. There won’t be anything left.

  6. The reality of the re-introduction of the grizzly is it can’t coincide with ranching. What to do with the landowning cattle ranchers? In this case I have to side with the grizzlies. I have strong beliefs regarding private property, but returning the grizzly to the habitat trumps private property rights. The ranchers are going to have to lose. Plenty of beef producers will easily pick up the slack.

  7. It warms my heart to see a billionaire pouring his heart and money into something not designed for maximum personal profit, but rather for the benefit of less fortunate people and animals.

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