You Have Never Seen These Animals Looking Like Newborns

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Published 2020-04-30

All Comments (21)
  • @chowdachops736
    Chameleon expert here Red: stop Green: go Yellow: proceed with caution
  • @MeCooper
    Snake babies are honestly just one of the cutest things in existence!
  • I Owned a Veiled chameleon for a few years, different species of chameleon have different color ranges. They change based on more or less mood. My chameleon (like most veiled) ranged from a bright almost neon green to a dull dark brown. If it was too cold he would be closer to the brown side which I figured was due to not liking the cold which makes sense. Panther chameleons are usually the most expensive with colors ranging from bright blues to red.
  • @chowdachops736
    Father hippo: Son, you need to start paying some bills around here! Mother hippo: Earl, he's just a child!
  • @oshawott2113
    "Elphants are the largest mammals" whales: Am I a joke to you?
  • The mother panda looked so terrified when her baby was walking towards her 🤣🤣
  • @squid4399
    The best part is, the falling from a giraffe birth is actually needed to start the baby’s heart. Edit: My apologies! I confused the heart with the lungs XD. The fall actually encourages the baby to take it’s first breath! On top of that, it’s needed to snap the babies umbilical cord. The more you know!
  • @WingedHassar
    Baby elephants remind me of drunk human adults trying to get to their car
  • @lionelmax2953
    Random fact: A group of pandas are called an ‘embarrassment’.
  • @entrapta8049
    When that baby panda started squealing, I felt that.
  • @velonzz
    When the polar bear cub was laying with that plushy, I might have died for a second
  • @claramiki7723
    I could die for all of them I'm in literal tears this is the cutest thing I've seen this week
  • WATOP thank you for this great video, was having a down day and seeing all these babies makes me so happy!
  • @troygunness3447
    Chameleons Black: cold Brownish blue: mad Bright green: happy
  • Chameleons actually fluctuate their colors mostly based on mood and temperature in their surroundings in order to regulate body temperature (they get darker if they’re cold to absorb more light, lighter colored if they’re hot to reflect more light)