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  • Good morning, John. It's time for another Bizarre Beasts!

  • This is a project I'm doing over the next twelve months where every month I talk about

  • a weird animal in the world,

  • and this time I get to talk about a weird animal who I know personally!

  • In a way, this is the animal who inspired this idea, because back many years ago on SciShow,

  • he came to visit me, and I - one, I looked very - I looked younger.

  • And two, I freaked out because, like, if a spaceship in my backyard, and this thing came out,

  • that would seem perfectly normal, aside from there being a spaceship in my backyard.

  • He is a prehensile-tailed porcupine, of which there are many species.

  • This is a Brazilian porcupine in particular.

  • “I… have not ever seen anything... like that.”

  • And even more specifically, this individual is Kemosabe, who lives with my friends Jessi and Augusto

  • here in Montana at Animal Wonders, which is a permanent home and safe haven

  • for exotic animals and native animals that can't return to the wild.

  • Now, Kemo is a bit of an internet celebrity, partially because of how he looks.

  • There's just that giant tail and there's all the spines and that very good, weird marshmallow nose.

  • But also because of how he sounds. Now, there are cuter animals in the world,

  • but I don't know if there are cuter-sounding animals. Let's take a minute, just give it a listen.

  • [COOING SOUNDS FROM KEMOSABE]

  • [JESSI:] Why don't you just listen to him?

  • It's a little bit reminiscent of like a baby cooing.

  • Also, of

  • [YOSHI NOISES]

  • Right?

  • But they also just like sound kind of human, like this is a noise that would be easy for me to make.

  • [IMITATES KEMOSABE COOING SOUNDS]

  • And hearing like this human sound come out of this very not human-looking organism is, you know,

  • a little bit exhilarating, it's very cute.

  • It's also a little unsettling.

  • And those emotions don't often come together at the same time.

  • Animal Wonders has a YouTube channel at Animal Wonders Montana

  • that we actually help produce at Complexly.

  • It's wonderful and so adorable, and you can learn so much! Go subscribe to it.

  • There's links all over the place, wherever you might think you'd find one.

  • Now for a weird thing aboutporcupines.”

  • That word includes a number of different species.

  • They include the ones that we have here in the U.S. and also down in Central and South America,

  • like prehensile-tailed porcupines.

  • And then there are the European and African and Asian porcupines,

  • the Old World porcupines, and they are TOTALLY NOT RELATED!

  • I mean they are, they're both rodents, but their quills evolved separately.

  • They evolved from a common ancestor that didn't have quills.

  • They're only both calledporcupinesbecause they're bothspine pigs.

  • Like pigpork. Spinepine. Porkpine

  • That's really where their name comes from.

  • They're thorn pigs! [SQUEES]

  • But because their quills evolved separately, they actually function completely differently!

  • And it isn't the only time this has happened. Hedgehogs and echidna also have spines

  • that evolved completely separately because, like, it's just not a terrible idea to be really unpleasant to bite.

  • Prehensile-tailed porcupines live in trees.

  • That's why they have their prehensile tails, and they are very good climbers.

  • Indeed, when a porcupette is born (and yes, that is the proper word for a baby porcupine)

  • they are soft and fuzzy and can't very well be carried around by their big, thorny mamas,

  • so they have the same muscular tails and functioning claws as their mamas, and they can climb from day one!

  • I'm very happy to have been able to feature one of my good friends on - in the Bizarre Beasts segment.

  • Everybody go subscribe to Animal Wonders. The work they do is amazing!

  • They're such wonderful people, and their videos are very good.

  • And yes, I know my company does produce them. I'm biased! Who cares!

  • Thanks everybody for a wonderful Project for Awesome.

  • We had over a thousand more donors than we had in previous years.

  • We beat all of our previous Project for Awesomes. It was such an amazing time!

  • John, I'll see you on Tuesday.

Good morning, John. It's time for another Bizarre Beasts!

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