Episode #429 from 15:51

Black caiman

We've seen a lot of different kinds of sizes, we've seen a baby one, a bigger one. Tell me about these 16-foot plus, apex predators of the Amazon rainforest. The big bad black caiman, which is the largest reptilian predator in the Amazon except for the Anaconda, they kind of both share that notch of apex predator. They were actually hunted to endangered species level in the seventies, 'cause they're leather, black scale leather. But they're coming back, they're coming back and they're huge and they're beautiful. And I was walking near a lake and I never understood how big they could get except for, I was walking near a lake last year and I was following the stream. And it's like when you're following a little stream and there's just a little trickle of water, and all of a sudden this river otter had been running the other direction on the stream. River otter comes up to me and I swear to God, this animal looked at me and went, "Hey," and I went, "Hey." And he was like, "Didn't expect to see me there." And he turned around, he like did a little spin, started running down the stream, then he turned around and you could tell he was like, "Let's go." And I'm not anthropomorphizing here, the animal was asking me to come with him.

Why this moment matters

We've seen a lot of different kinds of sizes, we've seen a baby one, a bigger one. Tell me about these 16-foot plus, apex predators of the Amazon rainforest. The big bad black caiman, which is the largest reptilian predator in the Amazon except for the Anaconda, they kind of both share that notch of apex predator. They were actually hunted to endangered species level in the seventies, 'cause they're leather, black scale leather. But they're coming back, they're coming back and they're huge and they're beautiful. And I was walking near a lake and I never understood how big they could get except for, I was walking near a lake last year and I was following the stream. And it's like when you're following a little stream and there's just a little trickle of water, and all of a sudden this river otter had been running the other direction on the stream. River otter comes up to me and I swear to God, this animal looked at me and went, "Hey," and I went, "Hey." And he was like, "Didn't expect to see me there." And he turned around, he like did a little spin, started running down the stream, then he turned around and you could tell he was like, "Let's go." And I'm not anthropomorphizing here, the animal was asking me to come with him.

Starts at 15:51
People and topics
All moments
Black caiman chapter timestamp | Paul Rosolie: Jungle, Apex Predators, Aliens, Uncontacted Tribes, and God | EpisodeIndex