I'm not sure that they're acidic, they taste a lot more gross in the basic kind of way. Do not ask me how I know, it would not intentional it is never intentional when that happens! They are super gross.... Yeah just double checked its alkaloid not acid. Did taste buds do not lie!
@@darcieclements4880 As someone who's home got a massive ladybug infestation one year, I'm reasonably sure how you know. That was not a particularly fun summer of my childhood.
My nomination for common animal that's way weirder than people think is shrews. Specifically the Eurasian shrew since it manages to have all the weird traits that make shrews so bizarre in one species. Some crazy traits about Eurasian shrews in escalating order of weirdness: - They're insanely voracious predators. They need to consume 200% to 300% percent of their body weight in food every day! They have will starve if they don't eat every few hours. They're like the tiny murder machine version of hummingbirds. - They have red teeth due to having iron in them! - They use echolocation and are one of the few terrestrial mammals do so! - They're venomous! - They can't hibernate due to being too small to store enough fat to keep up with their crazy metabolism. To survive their skull, brain, and other organs shrink in size during the winter! Their brains gets up to 30% smaller! - Weirdest of all, different populations of Eurasian shrews have different numbers of chromosomes! Some of the different "chromosomal races" still interbreed with each other too.
I'm always torn between finding them cute and getting pissed at them ruining leaves/petals. And this whole reproductive cycle feels familiar, but I had forgotten about it. Hella weird for real.
If you'd had to trim my parents' hedge, and looked at your arms only to find them covered in aphids, you probably wouldn't think they were cute anymore. 😂 Wow. That was nearing 40 years ago and I still feel traumatized. Lol 😅
One animal I’d wanna see is the Hiekegami, also known as the samurai crab, the reason they exist is because of people selectively catching crabs that didn’t have a face on their carapace (in summary: crabs with faces on their backs are believed to be fallen samurai warriors). So over the years they literally gained a face on their back because people went “ewww it has a face on it”.
If we're talking about commonly known animals that are way weirder than people realize, may I point you all to the Sperm Whale. They have sonic beam attacks, subsist on the flesh of krakens, sleep vertically underwater in groups like alien monoliths, have flammable oil lubricating their skulls- like it's almost weird that there isn't already a bizarre beasts episode on these Eldritch Beasts
Damn you're right, and now I REALLY hope they make and episode about them. Whales in general are cool, but Sperm whales have a lot going for them even discounting their hilarious names.
I have known the fact, 'aphids are born pregnant', since before I can remember (probably passed to me by one of my three older brothers; all of us soaked up cool facts as kids). I probably learned about ants 'farming' them for sugar around the same time. But all the other stuff you explained here was entirely new to me. I'm glad I don't have a garden I work hard in, so I can just look at aphids and think, 'Cute little buggers; eat away!'
I was so confused by why so many ants were on one of my friend's plants until I looked closer and realized they were farming aphids. So wild to finally see it in person
Ok! The surprise ugly laugh of pure delight I made at “pea aphids only have hot girl summers” was a rare treat. Thank you as always for the neato info, and in this case specifically, for making me laugh so hard my body *literally* was not ready!
The only reason this video didn’t make me hate aphids any more than I already do is because I’m already saturated with aphid hate and there’s simply no way to hate them more.
Let me help you with that. Because of cannabis agriculture becoming legal. The trading and selling of rooted cuttings being the main reason why, Rice Root Aphids are becoming endemic to Every states agriculture. They are incredibly difficult to treat and almost impossible to eradicate as they also, are born pregnant. They live in the soil. They eat from the roots. They have both winged and non winged life stages. They also, are Ben pregnant.
I feel like it would be neat to point out that pea aphids live only around 30 days (according to a quick google), so they go through a bunch of generations in a year using these different strategies depending on when in the year they live
The haploid sex determination for males being haploid is true for all hymenopterans, not just ants. And NO aphids are not haplodiploid, their sex determination is X0 instead. Males have one less sex chromosome, but their autosomes are diploid like females.
Genes can be passed on but be inactive, or be turned on or off like halfway through an organisms life, I forget the term for it. Oncogenes I think? Very whacky but cool stuff, and I'm guessing something similar applies to aphids
I hope you'll do a video on the black olm/proteus. Look them up! They look kinda like longer black axolotls, and are endemic only to a tiny portion of a tiny country, Slovenia.
I got shown that episode as a kid and just thought "it would be never ending! babies in babies in babies!" D; and it turns out the concept of "born pregnant" really DOES result in a matryoshka from hell! D;
Since other people have mentioned tribbles, I'm going with plan B. Did you know there is a song that mentions parthenogenesis? It's "Nemesis" by Shriekback. It also mentions prehistoric animals. Since I've studied both, it's my theme song.
Here in California I see Aphids on Rose plants most often but I also see a different dark colored type on the fresh growing bits of Ivy growing around the borders of our yard. They show up SO quick and it's like they come outta nowhere. 😆👍
I'm all about the "boring" animals. They're only boring because they live where we live and we see them all the time. To people in different parts of the world, the animals we consider boring are exotic and vice versa.
Fireflies and cicadas come to mind. Weird to think some ppl don't have bugs with beep beep lights in their butts, or trees that don't scream in Summer 😂
@@StonedtotheBones13Don't forget opossums. The only marsupials native to the Americas! They have more teeth than most mammals! They have a lower body temperature than most mammals! (Making them mostly immune to rabies.) They eat stuff that you don't want in your backyard! (Rodents, snakes, insects/grubs that would damage plants/gardens, even small carrion.) They play dead, and can expel a poo/rotten smelling liquid, as a defense tactic! Weird. They have 13 nipples. That's an odd number!
My biggest surprise here is that you guys haven't reported on this before. I like how they're just little Russian nesting dolls. There's definitely a species that well I'm sure you cover it in the video so I'm just going to watch this for funsies and maybe I shouldn't comment before I actually watch but then again comments increase the algorithms happiness.
Edit: more, dig deeper. Dig deeper into the depths that is aphid and relatives! The pea aphid is a great starting point because there's a lot of information on it, but there are some out there that are suspected to be even weirder! I cannot remember but there's a species that is born with the embryos of the next generation which also have embryos of the generation after that in them. Can't remember which one of the aphids it was, this is really dumb but all I remember is that one of the colors they come in is pink. And then there's the ones that spontaneously produce versions that are so morphically different from the rest of the colony that when we see them we don't even realize what species they are initially because they're so rare that they didn't get documented. I encountered one of those and I still don't know what kind of aphid it was because I have never been able to find anything in the literature that matched this little freak. Unfortunately I tripped while carrying it and lost it so I couldn't propagate it to see what it was😢 it had two very long balancing projections off on either side fuzz not unlike a wooly apple aphid except definitely not the same as what you see in a wooly apple aphid, and the ability to just sort of hover suspended in mid-air. Definitely an aphid, never seen anything like it before or since. I found absolutely nothing on aphids that have those long balancing strands. I even ended up looking in other insect groups just in case it looked like an aphid and wasn't, nothing. Imagine a perfectly symmetrical little puff that resembles a seed with two long strands about 4 in long hanging off to other side that just hovers in space. It's like a freaking fairy.
Aphid predators are super interesting too. Like parasitic wasps that drill into the back of aphids and lay their eggs inside, only to eat their way out 👀
I don't know how I didn't know about this channel... I confess, I no longer watch every edutainment vid DFTBA puts out, but I watch quite a lot. But we're 54 vids in and The Algorithm (Blessings and Peace be upon it) is only now pointing out that Hank has yet another project. Wild.
Every year when the ivy grows I look forward to Aphids. Watching ants use them like crops-on-a-farm is outright fascinating!!! Next time you see specs on ivy, take a closer look and see if there's ants farming goo. Hank, you are amazing! Thanks again!
This sounds super interesting but it was explained a little too fast for me! I didn’t understand everything at the end. I feel like parthenogenesis could have been explained longer and I didn’t understand why and how there suddenly were male pea aphids.
How about an episode about springtails/Collembola. A globular springtail pin would look great. Wonderful little detritivores. They are extremely common, but most people never notice them.
My skin is crawling a bit but other than that, then you very much for this fascinating education. I've always wondered about some having wings and others not.
Just got my pea aphid pin today. I absolutely love it. It's adorable even if I have to sic my ladybugs/ladybird beetles on them in my spring garden. Thanks again Hank and BB!
Otter shrews are a weird mammal. I mean, they swim by moving their tail side to side. They also superficially look like otters but are actually more closely related to golden moles, which are not even true moles, and elephants
my pitch for the hat is beaver beetles they are one of the only parasitic beetles and they are flightless witch is very weird for a beetle their life cycle is quite weird to very fun critters
Hey, maybe I'm not getting something critical here so I would love some help if anyone knows. What happens with males that would be born from the overwinter eggs? Do phemale aphids lay female-only eggs after the last sexual intercourse? Do would-be males hatch later or just die? If all aphids are female in summer, how does the genetic information provided by males at the end of the season get integrated into the next generation of females in spring?
Funny, I just watched an Eons video on dinosaurs possibly being parthenogenic like some birds and crocs. No need for amphibian DNA like in the original Jurassic Park.
I heard we used to think human men worked that way, and one could figure out when the world would end by how many nested layers there were. Not sure whether it's true that anyone believed that though.
you can't say we know nothing of bizarre beasts in our sugestions, cover the Portuguese man o' war, they are very common and incredibly strange (like all siphonophors).
Wilson’s phalarope is quite the unique bird. They look relatively normal, with a colourful drake and a drab female. Or is it a male? It’s not. The female is more colourful and will court the less colourful males. When one successfully mates with a male, she leaves him with the eggs. He will have to incubate and raise them by himself. Imo it’s weird because the sex roles for this bird are reversed.
I remember one day in grade 3 or 4, my teacher let us have outside class so we could study the outdoors (it was just a field haha) But me and my friend found aphids and thought they were so cute.
I got a bizarre beast to suggest: potato bugs. IDK what their scientific designation is, but I grew up on a farm in Minnesota and every year we had to protect our potato plants from bugs. And we couldn't just remove them; since they were *specifically* there for the potato plants, we had to squish 'em or feed them to the fish ma kept [ and the tiger oscars LOVED grubs fresh from the garden but there's only so much they can eat in a day XD ]. When we squished them, the goo that came out was bright orange, and smelled like someone passed gas during severe intestinal distress of some kind. Ma called em potato bugs so I do too. They came round every summer, so they were common in my life XD
Okay, so now do how weird a common aphid predator, the ladybug, is. I mean, they’re defense mechanism is shooting acidic blood out of their knees!
I'm not sure that they're acidic, they taste a lot more gross in the basic kind of way. Do not ask me how I know, it would not intentional it is never intentional when that happens! They are super gross.... Yeah just double checked its alkaloid not acid. Did taste buds do not lie!
They also have some fun genetic stuff with their patterning!
@@darcieclements4880 "Do not ask me how I know" - nah, so how DO you know? 😋
@@darcieclements4880 As someone who's home got a massive ladybug infestation one year, I'm reasonably sure how you know.
That was not a particularly fun summer of my childhood.
To them, it's normal
My nomination for common animal that's way weirder than people think is shrews. Specifically the Eurasian shrew since it manages to have all the weird traits that make shrews so bizarre in one species.
Some crazy traits about Eurasian shrews in escalating order of weirdness:
- They're insanely voracious predators. They need to consume 200% to 300% percent of their body weight in food every day! They have will starve if they don't eat every few hours. They're like the tiny murder machine version of hummingbirds.
- They have red teeth due to having iron in them!
- They use echolocation and are one of the few terrestrial mammals do so!
- They're venomous!
- They can't hibernate due to being too small to store enough fat to keep up with their crazy metabolism. To survive their skull, brain, and other organs shrink in size during the winter! Their brains gets up to 30% smaller!
- Weirdest of all, different populations of Eurasian shrews have different numbers of chromosomes! Some of the different "chromosomal races" still interbreed with each other too.
My cat is named Schrewbert and he's available to make a vid on
Just... Wow!!! 😮
Wow, they're really an unique Biomachine, why they need to evolve like that?
Another fun fact:
Some women pay doctors to inject shrew venom into their faces. The venom paralyzes the skin and helps hide wrinkles.
I keep forgetting they’re one of the only mammals that are venomous, besides the Loris and the platypus
I'm always torn between finding them cute and getting pissed at them ruining leaves/petals.
And this whole reproductive cycle feels familiar, but I had forgotten about it. Hella weird for real.
If you'd had to trim my parents' hedge, and looked at your arms only to find them covered in aphids, you probably wouldn't think they were cute anymore. 😂
Wow. That was nearing 40 years ago and I still feel traumatized. Lol 😅
Black Dragon fish are weird, especially the babies. Their eyes are on this ling stalks and their...anuses.......trail behind their tail fin
One animal I’d wanna see is the Hiekegami, also known as the samurai crab, the reason they exist is because of people selectively catching crabs that didn’t have a face on their carapace (in summary: crabs with faces on their backs are believed to be fallen samurai warriors). So over the years they literally gained a face on their back because people went “ewww it has a face on it”.
"Near as I can tell, they're born pregnant, which appears to be a great time-saver!"
-Dr. Leonard McCoy, "The Trouble With Tribbles"
This was my first thought.
If we're talking about commonly known animals that are way weirder than people realize, may I point you all to the Sperm Whale.
They have sonic beam attacks, subsist on the flesh of krakens, sleep vertically underwater in groups like alien monoliths, have flammable oil lubricating their skulls- like it's almost weird that there isn't already a bizarre beasts episode on these Eldritch Beasts
Damn you're right, and now I REALLY hope they make and episode about them. Whales in general are cool, but Sperm whales have a lot going for them even discounting their hilarious names.
The sperm whale, the wild ass and the great tit. Three fascinating animals ruined by questionable names.
There is it’s called ‘Dishonored’.
Lol sperm
I have known the fact, 'aphids are born pregnant', since before I can remember (probably passed to me by one of my three older brothers; all of us soaked up cool facts as kids). I probably learned about ants 'farming' them for sugar around the same time. But all the other stuff you explained here was entirely new to me.
I'm glad I don't have a garden I work hard in, so I can just look at aphids and think, 'Cute little buggers; eat away!'
I was so confused by why so many ants were on one of my friend's plants until I looked closer and realized they were farming aphids. So wild to finally see it in person
Ok! The surprise ugly laugh of pure delight I made at “pea aphids only have hot girl summers” was a rare treat. Thank you as always for the neato info, and in this case specifically, for making me laugh so hard my body *literally* was not ready!
The only reason this video didn’t make me hate aphids any more than I already do is because I’m already saturated with aphid hate and there’s simply no way to hate them more.
My feelings exactly.
Let me help you with that. Because of cannabis agriculture becoming legal. The trading and selling of rooted cuttings being the main reason why, Rice Root Aphids are becoming endemic to Every states agriculture. They are incredibly difficult to treat and almost impossible to eradicate as they also, are born pregnant. They live in the soil. They eat from the roots. They have both winged and non winged life stages. They also, are Ben pregnant.
Aphids are the only animal I hate :D I can't keep the little parthenogenetic f*rs away from my chillies if even one is left alive
I feel like it would be neat to point out that pea aphids live only around 30 days (according to a quick google), so they go through a bunch of generations in a year using these different strategies depending on when in the year they live
So glad to see a new video from you Hank!
who?
bot, ignore and report
Ok, but I wanna know how the genetics behind that works. Is it like with ants, where only "half" a genome is needed to make a male?
Zygotes are created directly from mother tissue I guess
The haploid sex determination for males being haploid is true for all hymenopterans, not just ants.
And NO aphids are not haplodiploid, their sex determination is X0 instead. Males have one less sex chromosome, but their autosomes are diploid like females.
Genes can be passed on but be inactive, or be turned on or off like halfway through an organisms life, I forget the term for it. Oncogenes I think? Very whacky but cool stuff, and I'm guessing something similar applies to aphids
"Near as I can tell, Jim..."
Not deterred. I maintain that you should cover flying squirrels. They're more bizarre than people give them credit 😉
I'd watch. 🙋♀️
Had one jump on me as a child. Still horrified and I'm in my 30s 😅
Oh, wow. Real life tribbles!
🖖 😊
Fantastic pin💚 Insects never cease to amaze me!
Ah aphids, the bane of every gardener’s existence
I had no idea there were more than 1 kind of aphids... I do know that they drive my mom crazy on the roses in our front garden!
I hope you'll do a video on the black olm/proteus. Look them up! They look kinda like longer black axolotls, and are endemic only to a tiny portion of a tiny country, Slovenia.
I laughed at the credit: Hank Green photo 😂 stay strong, cherry tree!
They're like tribbles!
Lol 👍 🖖
I got shown that episode as a kid and just thought "it would be never ending! babies in babies in babies!" D;
and it turns out the concept of "born pregnant" really DOES result in a matryoshka from hell! D;
@@OriginalCreatorSama LOL!
Since other people have mentioned tribbles, I'm going with plan B. Did you know there is a song that mentions parthenogenesis? It's "Nemesis" by Shriekback. It also mentions prehistoric animals. Since I've studied both, it's my theme song.
Here in California I see Aphids on Rose plants most often but I also see a different dark colored type on the fresh growing bits of Ivy growing around the borders of our yard.
They show up SO quick and it's like they come outta nowhere.
😆👍
That’s a great design for the pin!
Pea Aphid: Hot girl summer only 😎
Aphids. Because tribbles are only fictional.
Looking good, Hank! Hope you're doing better.
One of the great Bizarre Beasts! Excellent pea aphid coverage!
Looking good man looking healthy glad you're doing well
I love this show. TH-cam! Send me more notifications! I clicked the bell a long time ago! Anyway, I love this show. ❤
It's so complex! The evolutionary pressures leading to this must have been quite varied.
“Why didn’t anybody tell me that pea aphids were keeping a secret.”
We thought you knew! Sorry, Hank. Also nice to see you with hair again!
He definitely knew since he has covered this on SciShow before. Probably just a line that was written for him.
Aphid 1: Your baby is fat!
Aphid 2: Hey! They baby's not fat! She's pregnant!
I had not just an aphid infestation on my habanero plant, but a aphid farm being run by some enterprising ants.
I'm all about the "boring" animals. They're only boring because they live where we live and we see them all the time. To people in different parts of the world, the animals we consider boring are exotic and vice versa.
Fireflies and cicadas come to mind. Weird to think some ppl don't have bugs with beep beep lights in their butts, or trees that don't scream in Summer 😂
@@StonedtotheBones13Don't forget opossums. The only marsupials native to the Americas!
They have more teeth than most mammals!
They have a lower body temperature than most mammals! (Making them mostly immune to rabies.)
They eat stuff that you don't want in your backyard! (Rodents, snakes, insects/grubs that would damage plants/gardens, even small carrion.)
They play dead, and can expel a poo/rotten smelling liquid, as a defense tactic! Weird.
They have 13 nipples. That's an odd number!
My biggest surprise here is that you guys haven't reported on this before. I like how they're just little Russian nesting dolls. There's definitely a species that well I'm sure you cover it in the video so I'm just going to watch this for funsies and maybe I shouldn't comment before I actually watch but then again comments increase the algorithms happiness.
Edit: more, dig deeper. Dig deeper into the depths that is aphid and relatives! The pea aphid is a great starting point because there's a lot of information on it, but there are some out there that are suspected to be even weirder! I cannot remember but there's a species that is born with the embryos of the next generation which also have embryos of the generation after that in them. Can't remember which one of the aphids it was, this is really dumb but all I remember is that one of the colors they come in is pink. And then there's the ones that spontaneously produce versions that are so morphically different from the rest of the colony that when we see them we don't even realize what species they are initially because they're so rare that they didn't get documented. I encountered one of those and I still don't know what kind of aphid it was because I have never been able to find anything in the literature that matched this little freak. Unfortunately I tripped while carrying it and lost it so I couldn't propagate it to see what it was😢 it had two very long balancing projections off on either side fuzz not unlike a wooly apple aphid except definitely not the same as what you see in a wooly apple aphid, and the ability to just sort of hover suspended in mid-air. Definitely an aphid, never seen anything like it before or since. I found absolutely nothing on aphids that have those long balancing strands. I even ended up looking in other insect groups just in case it looked like an aphid and wasn't, nothing. Imagine a perfectly symmetrical little puff that resembles a seed with two long strands about 4 in long hanging off to other side that just hovers in space. It's like a freaking fairy.
Aphid predators are super interesting too. Like parasitic wasps that drill into the back of aphids and lay their eggs inside, only to eat their way out 👀
That first animal was a Pallas Cat, the OG grumpy cat.
Huh cool pin with that Russian doll look
I don't know how I didn't know about this channel...
I confess, I no longer watch every edutainment vid DFTBA puts out, but I watch quite a lot. But we're 54 vids in and The Algorithm (Blessings and Peace be upon it) is only now pointing out that Hank has yet another project. Wild.
Every year when the ivy grows I look forward to Aphids.
Watching ants use them like crops-on-a-farm is outright fascinating!!!
Next time you see specs on ivy, take a closer look and see if there's ants farming goo.
Hank, you are amazing! Thanks again!
This sounds super interesting but it was explained a little too fast for me! I didn’t understand everything at the end. I feel like parthenogenesis could have been explained longer and I didn’t understand why and how there suddenly were male pea aphids.
ah, yes, the inspiration for my next scifi sapient alien species
How about an episode about springtails/Collembola. A globular springtail pin would look great. Wonderful little detritivores. They are extremely common, but most people never notice them.
0:12 Who’s that Pokémon?
omg greer is one of my fav artists!! gotta get that calendar!
My skin is crawling a bit but other than that, then you very much for this fascinating education. I've always wondered about some having wings and others not.
okay but the pin design this month is hella dope. Aphids all the way down!
Just got my pea aphid pin today. I absolutely love it. It's adorable even if I have to sic my ladybugs/ladybird beetles on them in my spring garden. Thanks again Hank and BB!
Integrated Pest Management Specialist here: Lacewing larvae are bizarre aphid killers, often called "aphid lions"!
Tribbles = aphids
Otter shrews are a weird mammal. I mean, they swim by moving their tail side to side.
They also superficially look like otters but are actually more closely related to golden moles, which are not even true moles, and elephants
How do aphids reproduce?
Aphids: yes
Awesome information 👏 👌 👍
So, insect tribbles?
my pitch for the hat is beaver beetles they are one of the only parasitic beetles and they are flightless witch is very weird for a beetle their life cycle is quite weird to very fun critters
hank is looking healthy
Yessss great video watch excited
Aphids are gosh darn nuts
White dwarf isopods do a similar parathogensis
I am so excited for this pin. My invertebrate enamel pin collection *expands*....
I’ve been stinked by a ladybug once and the stink was from a smelly liquid it shoots when handled or when in a tight situation
They're born pregnant?
TRIBBLES ARE PLAUSIBLE!!!
Every single clip of aphids raises my blood pressure with an urge to immediately scrape them off my screen. It's a very visceral plant-mom reaction.
I physically smiled preparing myself to watch this episode
Hey, maybe I'm not getting something critical here so I would love some help if anyone knows. What happens with males that would be born from the overwinter eggs? Do phemale aphids lay female-only eggs after the last sexual intercourse? Do would-be males hatch later or just die? If all aphids are female in summer, how does the genetic information provided by males at the end of the season get integrated into the next generation of females in spring?
Bug fables has a spinoff april fools title that lets you raise aphids.
How do I use this to stop them from destroying my roses in the early spring?
“Why didn’t anybody tell me that pea aphids were keeping a secret?”
BECAUSE THEN IT WOULDN'T HAVE BEEN A SECRET. Duh.
I'd love to see a video on snailfish.
Cottony cushion scale is very neat, it has androdioecy as a reproductive system, no females, just males and hermaphrodites
Cool bizarre aphids
Thanks 👍
That’s very complicated. It’s difficult to keep to whole cycle in your head at once.
Funny, I just watched an Eons video on dinosaurs possibly being parthenogenic like some birds and crocs. No need for amphibian DNA like in the original Jurassic Park.
Aphids are born pregnant? So are Tribbles from Starting Trek. Cool!
YES AN INSECT PIN LETS GOOOOO
I heard we used to think human men worked that way, and one could figure out when the world would end by how many nested layers there were. Not sure whether it's true that anyone believed that though.
3:52, I be feeling like aphids
Ahah! Now I know where the idea for the "born.pregnant " Tribbles (Star Trek... TOS) came from.
you can't say we know nothing of bizarre beasts in our sugestions, cover the Portuguese man o' war, they are very common and incredibly strange (like all siphonophors).
Y'all should have guest hosts for this show specifically mndiaye and Lindsay Nikole
I needed an infographic to follow that string of if/thens of aphid sexual chaos.
I'm confused - considering their limited mobility, how do females ever reach other plants if they never grow wings?
i hate them for ruining plants and dropping honeydew on my car but theyre very interesting at least
I got two bizarre beasts sticker packs. My PC looks so pretty now with animals all over it!
Well, Hank, if somebody had told you then it wouldn't BE a secret anymore, would it?
Dunno man, this doesnt seem half as bizarre as the Peach Wasp
These made a nest in my brothers hair one time.
Bees and fire ants could be good bizarre beasts as well
Hey! I suggest winged wasps/ants. Every 3rd generation has wings and each generation born already had the eggs and such of the grandkid generation 🤯
Wilson’s phalarope is quite the unique bird.
They look relatively normal, with a colourful drake and a drab female. Or is it a male? It’s not. The female is more colourful and will court the less colourful males. When one successfully mates with a male, she leaves him with the eggs. He will have to incubate and raise them by himself.
Imo it’s weird because the sex roles for this bird are reversed.
While I knew this one already, I still like hearing the weird parts of common animals the best ^.^
But how do i get rid of these critters? They got in my house and are destroying my house plants 😢
Not everything is one way or another in biology - so fascinating
They are literally a "bug" ie an insect with suction mouth parts.
Ooooooo... Science Statham dropped a new vid! Lemme get comfy!
I remember one day in grade 3 or 4, my teacher let us have outside class so we could study the outdoors (it was just a field haha) But me and my friend found aphids and thought they were so cute.
Its like a Tribble
Do one on grain or rice weevils. Cos alot of ppl don't know about them
So, they are like tribbles!
I got a bizarre beast to suggest: potato bugs. IDK what their scientific designation is, but I grew up on a farm in Minnesota and every year we had to protect our potato plants from bugs. And we couldn't just remove them; since they were *specifically* there for the potato plants, we had to squish 'em or feed them to the fish ma kept [ and the tiger oscars LOVED grubs fresh from the garden but there's only so much they can eat in a day XD ]. When we squished them, the goo that came out was bright orange, and smelled like someone passed gas during severe intestinal distress of some kind.
Ma called em potato bugs so I do too. They came round every summer, so they were common in my life XD
So there's a baby in the baby?